Featured
Killian Elected President of Oakland Paramount Board
Oakland attorney Clinton Killian has been elected president of the Oakland Paramount board of directors.
“I am excited by the opportunity to serve this wonderful theater. As we continue to be a valuable asset for the city of Oakland and the Bay Area region,” said Killian, whose term runs until September 2014. .
“The Paramount will continue to bring diverse and quality entertainment to downtown Oakland for all the Bay Area to see and enjoy experience and enjoy.”
Oakland’s Paramount Theatre, located at 21st and Broadway streets in downtown Oakland, is one of the finest remaining examples of Art Deco design in the U.S.
Designed by San Francisco architect Timothy L. Pflueger and completed in late 1931, it was one of the first Depression-era buildings to incorporate the work of numerous creative artists into its architecture and is noteworthy for its successful orchestration of the various artistic disciplines into a harmonious whole.
After its initial glory as a “movie palace” in the 1930s, the auditorium suffered three decades of neglect and decline until its rescue by the Oakland Symphony, the City of Oakland and private donors.
The building was purchased by the Board of Directors of the Oakland Symphony Orchestra Association in 1972. An authentic restoration was completed in 1973, and the theatre was entered in the National Register of Historic Places on August 14 of that year.
Restored to its original splendor and upgraded to modern technical standards, the Paramount now serves all the arts. The Paramount Theatre is the home of the Oakland East Bay Symphony and, as one of the San Francisco Bay Area’s premiere performing arts facilities.
Located at 2025 Broadway in Oakland, the theatre can be reached at (510) 465-6400 and www.paramounttheatre.com
California Black Media
What Are Schoolteachers Thinking? Report Gives Insights
What teachers think and experience in the public education system is explored in a new report by the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools (NAPCS). The Harris Poll, a market research and consulting firm, carried out the survey of over 1,200 public schoolteachers from both charter and district schools for the report.

By Antonio Ray Harvey
California Black Media
What teachers think and experience in the public education system is explored in a new report by the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools (NAPCS).
The report, named “Listen to Your Teacher: An Analysis of Teacher Sentiment on the State of Public Education,” was authored by NAPCS’s vice president of Communications and Marketing, Debbie Veney.
The Harris Poll, a market research and consulting firm, carried out the survey of over 1,200 public schoolteachers from both charter and district schools for the report.
“I think the results of The Harris Poll raises the important point that the teacher’s voice is critical in determining the challenges we face in education, particularly in the aftermath of the pandemic,” said Leona Matthews, Senior Director of Literacy Programs for Green Dot Public Schools California.
Green Dot Public Schools is a non-profit organization whose mission is to help transform public education, so all students graduate prepared for college, leadership and life. The U.S. Department of Education has featured Green Dot as a national leader in school turnarounds.
“It makes it clear that charter schools provide the kind of small school, values driven environment that empowers teachers to meet the diverse needs of the students we serve.”
The NAPCS commissioned the survey to gain more insight into the teachers’ experiences, opinions, and motivations for entering, staying in, or leaving the profession.
The research was conducted online from May 10 to May 30, 2023.
“Next to parents, teachers are the backbone of education. It is valuable to have insight into how they feel in today’s climate and find out how we can better support their heroic work in and outside the classroom,” stated Nina Rees, president and CEO of the NAPCS. “Although we certainly have a special interest in charter schoolteachers, we care deeply about the experience of all public schoolteachers.”
Based on the study, 10 Los Angeles-based Green Dot Public Schools helped students increase proficiency rates in both math and English during the 2022-2023 year. Four schools exceeded their pre-pandemic proficiency rates.
Charter schools are publicly funded independent schools established by teachers, parents, or community groups under the terms of a charter with a local or national authority.
They are governed under a legislative contract — a charter — with the state, school district, or another entity, according to the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), a statistical agency of the U.S. Department of Education (USDE).
In April 2020, the NCES and Institute of Education Sciences released a 71-page report that Black educators were 11% of the teachers in the country’s charter schools during the 2017-2018 academic year.
Overall, Black educators make up 11% of the teachers in city schools but only 5.5% of the teachers in suburban schools and 3.6% in rural schools. The nation’s average of Black educators in the classroom is 6.3%, according to the report.
Veney participated in a podcast focused on the study. She said that the importance of the survey was to get the 1,211 teachers to provide their perspectives (811 school district teachers and 400 charter school educators).
“This is the most important topic right now facing public education. We’re hearing all these headlines about teacher shortages, teacher resignations, and teacher dissatisfaction,” Veney said. “It really felt like we were not listening enough to what teachers were actually saying about this (or) if there was a lot of talk about teachers but not enough talk to teachers.”
The key data from the survey indicate the following trends:
Teachers Agree Families and Students Should Have Education Choice — About 4 out of 5 teachers agree that regardless of its politicized nature, public school choice is important for both families and teachers (79% of all public schoolteachers; 87% of charter schoolteachers and 78% of district schoolteachers).
Something Has to Change — Public school teachers cite student behavior and discipline issues (74%) as the top challenge they believe teachers currently face, followed by pay (65%).
There’s Something Special About the Experience of Charter Schoolteachers — Eighty percent of charter schoolteachers say they are as or more motivated than when they initially entered the profession (vs. 34% among public school teachers).
Aligning with Culture — Ninety-six percent of charter schoolteachers report feeling aligned with their current school’s culture in terms of values and beliefs about education. About 75% of district schoolteachers feel this way.
Keep Politics Out of the Classroom — Teachers say they just want to teach (94%) and report feeling like they are caught in the crossfire of a culture war (91%).
“It amplifies a needed conversation about our educational system, how we can best support teachers, and ultimately our students.” Matthews said of the report.
Charter schools historically serve proportionately more students of color and more students from low-income communities than district schools. For a stretch of 16 years (2005-06 to 2020-21 school years), charter schools have consistently had a higher portion of students of color compared to district schools, according to the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools (NAPCS).
During the 2005-2006 school year, a total of 196,851 students were enrolled in California charter schools, according to data provided by NAPCS. The movement continued each year as enrollment reached 692,783 pupils by the end of the 2020-2021 calendar year.
As of the beginning of the 2022–23 school year, more than 1,300 charter schools and seven all-charter districts are operating in California, according to the California Department of Education (CDE).
Alameda County has 80 charter schools; San Bernardino County has 52; Los Angeles County has 275; San Diego County has 124; Sacramento County has 56; and San Francisco has 16 public charter schools, according to CDE.
“I am really delighted to say that a lot of what we found is consistent and similar across both types of school settings,” said Veney, referring to the charter schools and district schools.
California Black Media
Sen. Steve Bradford Introduces Historic Reparations Legislation
Sen. Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) has proposed that the state should create a system of redress for injustices committed against Black Californians. Senate Bill (SB) 490, introduced by Bradford on Aug. 21, would amend Title 2 of the state government code to establish a new state agency called the California American Freedman Affairs Agency (CAAFAA).

By Joe W. Bowers Jr. and
Edward Henderson
California Black Media
Sen. Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) has proposed that the state should create a system of redress for injustices committed against Black Californians.
Senate Bill (SB) 490, introduced by Bradford on Aug. 21, would amend Title 2 of the state government code to establish a new state agency called the California American Freedman Affairs Agency (CAAFAA).
The agency would be responsible for managing the reparations process for Black Californians as determined by the Legislature and Gov. Gavin Newsom.
“This historic legislation lays the groundwork for the future,” Bradford stated. “My fellow task force members and I have documented the harm, detailed its generational impact, and determined the way forward to right these wrongs.
“The Freedman Affairs Agency will establish the instrumental infrastructure California will need as our state takes responsibility for the historical harms that have been committed.”
The task force completed a two-year study and submitted its final, 1,075-page report to the Legislature on June 28 and one of the recommendations was to create the CAFAA.
Black History
Negro Leagues Baseball Museum to Induct Pitchers Mike Norris, Vida Blue
Mike Norris and the late Vida Blue, baseball legends who are also both known for supporting youth athletes in the local community, were recently named to the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum’s (NLBM) seventh “Hall of Game” induction class.

The Richmond Standard
Mike Norris and the late Vida Blue, baseball legends who are also both known for supporting youth athletes in the local community, were recently named to the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum’s (NLBM) seventh “Hall of Game” induction class.
The NLBM is inducting five pitchers who were part of the iconic group known as the “Black Aces,” a term coined by the late Jim “Mudcat” Grant that celebrates 15 African American pitchers who won 20 games or more in a Major League Baseball season.
The five members headlining the 2023 Hall of Game Class include Norris, Blue, Al Downing, Dwight Gooden, and Dontrelle Willis.
“Dave Stewart, who will accept on behalf of Blue, his former Oakland A’s teammate, Ferguson Jenkins, J.R. Richard, and Mudcat Grant, were inducted into the Hall of Game in previous years,” the NLBM states. “CC Sabathia and David Price had schedule conflicts and will be inducted in a subsequent class.”
The 2023 Hall of Game, presented by Hy-Vee, will be held at 8 p.m., Saturday, Sept. 9 at the Gem Theater in Kansas City, MO.
The West Contra Costa County community is intimately familiar with Norris and Blue, who both played for Bay Area MLB teams and gained a reputation for supporting local youth ball players.
Blue died in May of last year. Norris remains involved locally, helping youth via participation in The Mike Norris Baseball Academy and San Pablo Baseball Association.
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