Food for the Summer delivered over 48,000 meals to students
Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools serve roughly 3,000 children and teens, or 25 percent of their student body, on the free and reduced lunch program, as of 2015.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Daily Tar Heel's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
492 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools serve roughly 3,000 children and teens, or 25 percent of their student body, on the free and reduced lunch program, as of 2015.
Kyesha Clark is scared for her younger siblings.
More than one hundred concerned Chapel Hill and Carrboro community members gathered at the United Church of Chapel Hill Saturday to discuss racial equity in public schools.
Ephesus Elementary PTA president Kristen Stewart is concerned about the impact of new apartments on her family’s school district.
Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools and a local nonprofit have responded to the growth of North Carolina’s under-18 Hispanic population by expanding language programs.
Today is the last day for Carrboro High School students to donate to their Winter Links fundraiser benefiting the nonprofit organization Positive Impact for Kids.
Three local businessmen are continuing the philanthropic work they started three years ago and are now expanding to other parts of the United States.
The Board Applicant Information Session take place at 6 PM at Chapel Hill Carrboro City Schools on Feb.2. Tom Forcella, from CCCS, is talking about the Long-Range Plan of the school board.
The Board Applicant Information Session take place at 6 PM at Chapel Hill Carrboro City Schools on Feb.2. There are some applicants taking notes.
The Board Applicant Information Session take place at 6 PM at the Lincoln Center of Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools on Feb.2. Todd LoFrese, from CCCS, is talking about teachers' salaries and support services of the school at the information session while applicants are listening to him.
With the roads cleared and the ice mostly melted, Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools reopened Wednesday with regular hours and activities.
The Inter-Faith Council for Social Service and Piedmont Health Services pitched the idea to Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools last month of including their respective services in the redevelopment of the Lincoln Center.
McDougle Elementary School hosted its very first Family Reading Partners event to help families come together to explore the benefits of reading.
Ten teachers in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools system received National Board Certification from the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. North Carolina has 20,677 National Board Certified teachers — the highest number of teachers in a state with board certification in the country.
Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools became the largest certified organization in Orange County to pay all full-time and part-time employees a living wage.
Tiny homes are becoming a viable housing option for homeless people with mental illness.
Vaccine-preventable diseases pose risks for possible outbreaks in schools in Orange County — and the rates reflect that risk.
David Bennett and his wife live in the last house that falls in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools district — the last house before Chapel Hill turns into Pittsboro. That’s the closest to his workplace that Bennett, a Chapel Hill High School history teacher, could afford.
UPDATED 10:00 p.m.
Students living in the South Estes housing district of Chapel Hill now have an after-school program to help meet grade-level standards.