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  • LA: Lagging schools share cash

    Lagging schools share cash
    Grants for before- and after-school programs
    By Lisa M. Sodders, Staff Writer

    Los Angeles Daily News
    May 26 2004

    Forty-seven low-performing schools in Los Angeles Unified --
    including just four in the San Fernando Valley -- will share $27
    million in federal grants awarded to California schools for before-
    and after-school programs, officials said Tuesday.

    The federal grants were awarded by the State Department of Education
    under the 21st Century Community Learning Centers program, which
    seeks to establish or expand community learning centers for students
    at low-achieving or high-poverty schools.

    "I'm thrilled," said Joanna Kunes, principal at Madison Middle School
    in North Hollywood, one of the schools selected for the grant. "This
    is so welcome in this climate of budget-reductions. It couldn't come
    at a better time."

    The other three Valley schools were: Haddon, Sharp Avenue and Bertrand
    elementary schools.

    LAUSD will receive about $6.2 million from the grant, said John
    Liechty, associate superintendent for the LAUSD's Beyond the Bell
    branch, which handles after-school enrichment programs.

    Madison, a 2,200-student school, is 70 percent Hispanic and 20 percent
    Armenian, and has a 300-student health and medical careers magnet
    program, Kunes said. About half of the students are English-language
    learners and about 93 percent qualify for free and reduced lunches.

    Kunes has not been told how much Madison will receive, but she said
    the grant money will be used to support a variety of mentoring and
    enrichment programs, including computer labs and art classes.

    The money will also go toward tutoring to help students meet the
    state's math, science and reading requirements, the education
    department said in a statement.

    Most of the schools that received the grants are considered Program
    Improvement Schools under the federal No Child Left Behind Act, said
    Kevin Brown, manager of the after-school partnership office in the
    California Department of Education.

    Program Improvement Schools are those that have not met their student
    achievement goals for the past two consecutive years.

    "Local law enforcement and the FBI strongly support after-school
    programs because they help to reduce dropout rates and time spent in
    unhealthy behaviors such as drug use and gang activity," U.S. Sen.
    Barbara Boxer (D-California), author of the federal law providing
    funding for after-school programs, said in the statement released by
    the education department.
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