Here's what you missed at last week's CHCCS Board of Education meeting
The Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Board of Education met Thursday to discuss filling the board’s vacant seat, construction updates and school discipline in the district.
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The Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Board of Education met Thursday to discuss filling the board’s vacant seat, construction updates and school discipline in the district.
For the 2017-18 school year, 87.2 percent of white students in grades 9 through 12 in Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools scored as "college and career ready" on their end-of-course exams, compared to 30.5 percent of Black students, 45.5 percent of Native American students and 45 percent of Hispanic students.
Pamela Baldwin, superintendent of Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools, and her leadership team delivered the district’s second annual State of the Schools address Wednesday night, introducing and explaining initiatives that hope to improve the district.
The North Carolina Association of Educators is organizing a “Day of Action” on May 1 in Raleigh, almost a year after thousands of teachers attended the “March for Students and Rally for Respect."
The Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Board of Education discussed three pressing topics at its meeting on Thursday: updates on plans for Glenwood Elementary,approval of budget requests for the 2019-2020 fiscal year and a plan to fill the vacancy on the school board.
Washing small towels and toys, playing guitars and picking up milk, parents contribute to the Chapel Hill Cooperative Preschool with more than tuition.
A quarter of millennials have not heard of the Holocaust, and nearly 50 percent of Americans cannot name a concentration camp. Only 10 states mandate Holocaust and genocide education, but North Carolina could become the 11th.
After multiple developments in the push for the recall of three Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools school board members, including the resignation of chairperson Margaret Samuels and the creation of a counter-movement called Stop the Recall, the recall movement has come to an end.
The proposed Mandarin Dual Language Magnet Program at Glenwood Elementary School, approved by the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Board of Education on Sept. 20, has raised concerns of racial inequity and improper planning.
Joal Broun is the new chairperson of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Board of Education.
Margaret Samuels, chairperson of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Board of Education, resigned Tuesday amid a recall effort against her, sparking varying reactions from the community and fellow board members.
Margaret Samuels, chairperson of the Chapel-Hill Carrboro City Schools Board of Education, announced her resignation this morning.
A group of Chapel Hill and Carrboro parents and citizens are petitioning for three members of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City School Board of Education to be recalled over ethics violations concerning the vote to make Glenwood Elementary a Mandarin dual-language magnet school. The group organizing the petition to recall board members Pat Heinrich, James Barrett and Margaret Samuels has a website at boardrecall.com that displays their mission, which is the “removal from office of three CHCCS school board members who are believed to have failed in their duty to adhere to Policy Codes that govern the Board.” Heinrich has been accused of sharing non-public information with the Mandarin Advisory Committee, a group consisting of parents with children in the MDL program, which supports the expansion of the MDL program at Glenwood. The website contains screenshots of emails between Heinrich and members of the committee, including some sent to the board about different stances and the names of teachers that had written the board expressing their anti-conversion opinions.
Erin Schwie Langston was shaped by her experience in public schools.
The N.C. Special Committee on School Shootings presented its report on school safety to Gov. Roy Cooper last week, which included 33 recommendations for making North Carolina schools safer.
The Mandarin Magnet Implementation Committee presented the future of Glenwood Elementary School's Mandarin magnet program during a Board of Education meeting on February 7.
Politics was never part of the plan. Neither was breast cancer. But, both came into Sydney Batch’s life in the past year.
If you have ever noticed the flocks of middle schoolers who periodically venture to UNC’s campus and wondered why they were here, you can finally get an answer.
A new set of report cards are out, and they don’t show good marks for many school districts across North Carolina.
Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools adopted a resolution at its Thursday board meeting to voice the members' desire to allow individual school districts to control calendars.