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	<title>Articles - CORE Districts</title>
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	<description>Continuous learning, innovation, and transformation in California&#039;s public schools.</description>
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		<title>CORE Districts Awarded $750,000 by California Collaborative for Educational Excellence to Advance Secondary School Redesign</title>
		<link>https://coredistricts.org/2025/12/19/core-districts-awarded-750000-by-california-collaborative-for-educational-excellence-to-advance-secondary-school-redesign/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=core-districts-awarded-750000-by-california-collaborative-for-educational-excellence-to-advance-secondary-school-redesign</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 19 Dec 2025 20:11:39 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[CORE Districts Awarded $750]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://coredistricts.org/?p=2325</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[CORE Districts (CORE), a collaborative of nine of California’s largest and most diverse urban school systems, has been awarded a two-year, $750,000 grant from the California Collaborative for Educational Excellence (CCEE) as part of the Secondary School Redesign Pilot Program (SSRPP). CORE joins a statewide network of partners committed to rethinking secondary education so every  ...]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>CORE Districts (CORE), a collaborative of nine of California’s largest and most diverse urban school systems, has been awarded a two-year, $750,000 grant from the California Collaborative for Educational Excellence (CCEE) as part of the Secondary School Redesign Pilot Program (SSRPP).</p>
<p>CORE joins a statewide network of partners committed to rethinking secondary education so every student is known, supported, and prepared for a rapidly changing world. This grant strengthens that collective work while supporting transformation efforts already underway in CORE districts.</p>
<p>CORE recognizes that this investment represents a starting point. Redesigning a secondary system built for another era will require sustained commitment, coherent policy, and significant long-term investment &#8211; far beyond a single grant cycle.</p>
<h3>A Collaborative Effort with Deep, Complementary Expertise</h3>
<p>A hallmark of CORE’s secondary redesign work is its unique collaboration with three partner organizations:</p>
<ul>
<li style="font-weight: 400;" aria-level="1"><b>National Equity Project (NEP)</b>, bringing liberatory design and equity-centered leadership to ensure students, families, and educators most impacted by inequities help shape the redesign;</li>
<li style="font-weight: 400;" aria-level="1"><b>Transcend Education</b>, providing nationally recognized expertise in community-based design, model development, and future-ready learning; and</li>
<li style="font-weight: 400;" aria-level="1"><b>Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE)</b>, offering research-practice partnership capacity and leveraging one of the most robust P–12 data infrastructures in the nation to support continuous learning and inform policy.</li>
</ul>
<p>Together with CORE’s system-level reach and more than a decade of cross-district governance infrastructure work, these partners form a collaborative engine uniquely positioned to help California learn how large systems redesign secondary education in ways that are equitable, coherent, and sustainable.</p>
<p>This integrated collaborative is central to the power and promise of CORE’s approach &#8211; and is a major reason CORE’s work is able to bridge system design, community-based innovation, equity leadership, research, and policy learning.</p>
<h3>Building on a Ten-Year Commitment to Future-Forward Secondary Systems</h3>
<p>In 2024, CORE launched <b><i>CORE Schools-Thriving Youth</i></b>, a decade-long commitment to build Future-Forward Secondary Education Systems. The first four districts leading this work &#8211; <b>Garden Grove, Santa Ana, Long Beach, and Oakland Unified School Districts </b>&#8211; are advancing secondary redesign through community-based design, data-driven learning, and systems-level alignment. As the work progresses, additional CORE districts have an opportunity to join, making this an expanding network rather than a closed pilot.</p>
<p>Across these four districts, <b><i>CORE Schools</i></b> focuses on designing systems that:</p>
<ul>
<li>Ensure every student is known and supported;</li>
<li>Redesign learning for deeper knowledge, skills, and purpose;</li>
<li>Advance pupil success and equitable outcomes;</li>
<li>Promote measurable growth in engagement and learning; and</li>
<li>Develop sustainable structures that endure beyond short-term initiatives.</li>
</ul>
<p>The SSRPP grant accelerates this agenda and links CORE’s local and cross-district learning to a broader statewide effort.</p>
<h3>What the Grant Will Support</h3>
<p>Over the next two years, SSRPP funding will allow CORE and its partners &#8211; NEP, Transcend, and PACE &#8211; to:</p>
<ul>
<li>Design and launch student experience pilots that strengthen belonging, deepen learning, and expand equitable supports;</li>
<li>Engage students, families, educators, and community members as co-designers of future-ready learning experiences;</li>
<li>Align central office conditions to ensure redesigned learning environments are supported and sustained;</li>
<li>Leverage CORE–PACE data systems to track belonging, readiness, and academic progress and inform continuous learning; and</li>
<li>Coordinate cross-district learning and statewide sharing, ensuring that insights contribute to broader policy and practice.</li>
</ul>
<h3>A Start, Not a Finish Line</h3>
<p>For CORE and its member districts, this grant represents foundational support for a much larger transformation effort. While it enables important early learning and coherence-building, full system redesign will require aligned policy, durable partnerships, and continued investment over the next decade.</p>
<h3>About CORE Districts</h3>
<p>CORE Districts is a nonprofit collaborative of nine of California’s largest and most diverse urban school systems: Fresno, Garden Grove, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Oakland, Sacramento, San Francisco, San Jose, and Santa Ana Unified School Districts. Together, these districts serve nearly one million students.</p>
<p>Founded on the belief that no district can solve systemic inequities alone, CORE uses innovation, continuous learning, data, and research to transform education systems for equity and excellence &#8211; so that every student can thrive.</p><p>The post <a href="https://coredistricts.org/2025/12/19/core-districts-awarded-750000-by-california-collaborative-for-educational-excellence-to-advance-secondary-school-redesign/">CORE Districts Awarded $750,000 by California Collaborative for Educational Excellence to Advance Secondary School Redesign</a> first appeared on <a href="https://coredistricts.org">CORE Districts</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
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