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Staff Directory

Our
Station
KLCS-TV -- The Education Station -- is a
noncommercial educational television station licensed to the Los Angeles
Unified School District and is a member of the Public Broadcasting
Service. A multiple Emmy® Award winner,
KLCS
broadcasts on channels 58.1 through 58.4 to over sixteen million viewers
throughout Southern California. KLCS
is also carried on DirecTV, Dish Network, and most cable systems.
Our
Mission
KLCS-TV is a multimedia education channel
that inspires learners of all ages to higher levels of achievement and
personal and professional growth through the use of programs and
services that educate, inform, and enlighten.
Our
Identity
KLCS-TV: The Education Station for all
Generations
Our
Coverage Area
Broadcasting from Mt.
Wilson, the KLCS coverage area extends from
Santa Barbara to San Diego, reaching a potential viewing audience of
over five million households in Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino,
Riverside, Ventura, and San Diego Counties. The Los Angeles DMA is
the second largest in the United States and is comprised of over
16,000,000 people; 6% of the U.S.
population. The daily school audience potentially includes over 1
Million LAUSD K-12 and Adult students and a staff of over 68,000
dedicated full and part-time employees.
KLCS instructional television (ITV)
programming reaches over 150 school districts throughout Southern
California.
Our
History
The Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) began to produce
instructional television programming for in-school viewing in October
1957. In 1963, LAUSD received the channel designation of UHF-58
and began the process of acquiring its own broadcast license from the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC). By the 1966-67 school
year, the LAUSD was producing over 700 television programs per year for
various broadcast outlets, and leasing airtime to televise 40 hours of
instructional programming week, Monday through Friday. The
objective to achieve quality tailored programming and to provide
in-school programs continued to grow. Teachers and administrators
who were impressed with the television medium’s effectiveness in
enhancing the classroom experience particularly expressed their support.
On July 1, 1967, the District submitted an application to the State
Department of Education and the U.S. Office
of Education under Title III of the Elementary and Secondary Education
Act of 1965, in order to build and equip an over-the-air broadcast
facility its own. This Act provided grants for the demonstration
of innovative programs in schools. In the summer of 1967,
advocates testified before the FCC in Washington, D.C. on behalf of the
District’s application for a unique instructional/educational Channel 58
franchise. Speakers attested to the benefits that would accrue to
the students as well as to staff, parents, and the community at large.
The District was subsequently granted a broadcast license for Channel 58
on March 3, 1972, and began broadcasting a single analog program stream
on November 5, 1973. The District’s success in obtaining the
license for Channel 58 opened up a myriad of opportunities to improve
instruction, in-service training, and cultural programming in
particular, and to provide the community at large with an opportunity to
acquire meaningful information about the Board of Education via the
broadcast of its meetings.
Our
Programming
A multiple winner of
Los Angeles Area Emmy® Awards, KLCS
broadcasts 12 hours of instructional programming each school day on
channel 58.1 in addition to the educational programming available on our
simultaneous channels dedicated to elementary (58.2), secondary (58.3)
and professional development channels (58.4). Evening and weekend
programming is targeted to the lifelong learner, featuring a wide
variety of documentaries, performing arts, history, news, sports,
travel, community meetings, how-to’s, and professional development
series.
Our
Local Productions
KLCS continues to produce over 700 original
television programs each year; more local non-news programs than any
other station in Los Angeles. Among the standouts in our local line-up
is the perennial favorite, Homework Hotline, the Emmy®
Award-winning, tutorial program for students, taught by National Board
Certified teachers. Other local productions include LAUSD Board
Meetings, On The Record, an opportunity to hear from the
Superintendent and other LAUSD Administrators about issues relevant to
the direction of LAUSD, LAUSD Memo, presenting video bulletins
with information for District stakeholders, Between the Lines, a
weekly interview series featuring noted authors, and In Their Own
Words, interviews with LAUSD policymakers. KLCS
also produces NewsBriefs, which highlights newsworthy events
occurring throughout LAUSD. Additionally, special events such as the
Video in the Classroom (VIC) Awards, the Academic Decathlon
SuperQuiz and Banquet, Superstars Conference,
Interscholastic Championships,
Superintendent’s Address to Administrators, and College Prepared
– Career Ready are produced by KLCS.
LAUSD Staff Development Series produced by
KLCS include The Teachers Hour, The Parent Connection,
Teachers & Their Coaches, and Hollywood Homeroom -
professional development series highlighting effective pedagogical
practices and constructive use of video in the classroom.
Our
Statistics
KLCS
is one of only six television stations in the nation licensed to a K-12
school district.
KLCS broadcasts 19 hours a day on its main
channel, achieving approximate annual totals listed in the following
categories:
*
3,000 hours of Classroom Instructional Television (KLCS’
Classroom Instructional Television (CITV) provides schools with direct
access to more than 140 curriculum-matched series and over 1600
individual program titles), including over:
*
500 hours of professional development for LAUSD teachers, administrators
and staff.
*
1500 hours of LAUSD Board of Education and County Board of Supervisors
meetings.
*
2000 hours of informational programming, continuing education, college
credit, how-to, self-improvement, personal development, entertainment,
documentaries, and specials.
KLCS broadcasts more Spanish-language
programming than any non-Spanish language television station in the Los
Angeles DMA.
KLCS productions are distributed to 15
other states, including Hawaii, New York, Illinois, Oregon, Georgia, and
Tennessee.
KLCS Magazine, a monthly schedule of
evening and weekend programming, is distributed to all schools and
offices and is available by subscription to Friends of
KLCS members.
KLCS provides an extensive outreach
program that includes hands-on workshops and the award-winning Video in
the Classroom (VIC) Awards program.
KLCS provides Secondary Audio Program
(SAP) capability, which enables Board meetings and other programs to be
simulcast in Spanish.
Our
Future
KLCS continues to seek the advice and
expertise of the District’s learning community in helping to shape its
role in the future. Focus groups provide input in determining the
most effective programs, schedules, and services.
KLCS will continue to: upgrade, reconfigure,
and augment its technology to improve the design and production of its
original series; increase the production of original, tailored
programming to blend State standards and the instructional and
professional development needs of the District; produce promotional
videos and interstitial material highlighting
KLCS
programs and services.
KLCS will continue to grow Knowledge Probe,
a comprehensive digital content distribution model to LAUSD campuses,
which enables teachers and students to access rich instructional media
content directly from their classroom or library computers via data
streaming so that individualized, tailored learning can occur.
Continued improvement of KLCS’ multicasting
and datacasting services will enable us to
simultaneously enhance the educational experiences of our students;
increase the resources available to our teachers; and provide even
greater programming choices and interactive capabilities for general
audiences in the greater Los Angeles community.
KLCS welcomes opportunities to partner with
other television production and distribution facilities, multimedia
designers, telecommunications providers, and other public and private
agencies to meet expanding broadcast demands. These partnerships
will assist KLCS in the areas of program
augmentation; revenue generating strategies including corporate
sponsorships, donations, and grants; increased local and national
viewership; and shared technological resources. |