Slauson Learning Center

Private | 2-9 | Nonsectarian | 56 students |  

PHONE: (310) 412-0520

HOURS: 6 hours per day

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260 N Locust

Inglewood, CA 90301

Los Angeles County | Map

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Inglewood's Slauson Learning Center is a private school. It is coed and nonsectarian, serving 56 students in grades 2-9.

The school community has reviewed this school and given it an average rating of 4 out of 5 stars.

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School highlights:

Coed; Nonsectarian; Special education
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Community Rating

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  • Principal leadership
  • Teacher quality
  • Parent involvement
Posted on Nov 20, 2011
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My son was diagnosed ED. He was at a diiferent NPS for about 2 years with rarely any success. He has now spent one full year and now on his second year he is already on dual-enrollment. The entire staff are like family and they really care about the kids, I hate to have to see my son go back to public school. The staff takes each child's success very personal and do what ever it takes to make your child succeed. The teachers my son has had are always available not just from 8 to 4. I recommend this school highly to everyone if you care about your child this is the place. It is like having a support team just for your child. I can't say enough about this school.
--Submitted by a parent

Posted on Jun 13, 2011
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This is a publicly funded "non-public" school for special education students, who have been abandoned by LAUSD. Most of the children are Black males, very few Black girls and Latino boys. Most of the children are here because they have ADHD or were labeled ED. The education here is sub-par; my child fell behind an additional 2 grade levels while here. He had the same teacher for two years, and his class worked on the multiplication tables the entire year. The reason given was that because new students kept coming in, they needed to be be up to speed before the entire class could move on. The one bright spot was the aides in the rooms. Most are male, most are Black males, and they worked wonders for my son. The Vice Principle is fantastic, and so are the office staff and counselors. But, overall, if you want your child to receive help for their learning disability/behavior problems AND learn, DO NOT send them to these types of schools. No matter what you are told, force your childs home school to find a way to accomodate them in the general population, in the least restrictive environment.
--Submitted by a parent


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