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(12/06/20 11:36pm)
Following a historic semester of fully remote learning, Orange County Schools and Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools are moving forward with plans to begin a hybrid learning model for the second semester.
(11/10/20 1:03am)
After months of remote learning, Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools is considering a transition to hybrid instruction for the spring.
(11/09/20 12:02am)
High schoolers in Chapel Hill and Carrboro empowered North Carolinians to vote through the MyVote Project, a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that provides policy platforms of candidates ranging from national to local elections.
(10/18/20 11:40pm)
Ruth Williams is in a strange situation.
(10/04/20 8:56pm)
“John News” isn’t like most news outlets. For this Youtube newscast, the job of anchor, reporter and weatherman falls to one Chapel Hill resident: second grader John Wortman.
(09/27/20 9:55pm)
The OC Voice is a portion of the OC Report newsletter where local residents may have a platform to talk about local issues they care about. Sonia Rao is a sophomore journalism and economics major and The Daily Tar Heel's City & State editor.
(09/23/20 12:50am)
Racial disparities in education and health persist in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro area, according to an annual report from the Chamber for a Greater Chapel Hill-Carrboro.
(09/14/20 1:37am)
Students in Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools will have to wait to receive school-sponsored driving instruction after suspension of the program due to coronavirus concerns.
(09/09/20 4:16am)
With the new remote learning system, students and families in local school districts have faced the challenges of connecting with teachers and peers virtually.
(09/08/20 2:57am)
Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools and the Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA opened learning centers Sept. 1 to provide school-day care and support for up to 100 elementary students.
(09/09/20 8:00pm)
Several months into the pandemic, child literacy organizations in the Triangle are still working to provide resources even as the school year starts.
(09/04/20 1:44am)
Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools and the district's Public School Foundation have received a $4.3 million grant from Oak Foundation, an international group that provides resources to the disadvantaged.
(08/17/20 1:24am)
Students and teachers across Orange County are preparing for the challenges associated with remote learning as local schools begin their academic year on Monday.
(08/16/20 10:46pm)
A coalition of minority students at Carrboro High School debuted the first episode of a podcast series that features anonymous students providing firsthand experiences of living through the COVID-19 pandemic.
(07/20/20 3:37am)
The Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Board of Education decided students will learn remotely for the first nine weeks of the fall semester at a July 16 meeting, following community backlash on a previous presentation that would favor hybrid education.
(07/19/20 9:18pm)
Our community faced an abrupt shift to stay-at-home orders and remote schooling this past spring, and we are continuing to experience the impacts of the pandemic and this summer’s restrictions. Now, many students who finished the school year online will find themselves logging back on to begin this fall.
(06/16/20 3:05am)
Students joined local activists on Friday to march from Carrboro Arts Center Plaza to McCorkle Place, where teachers and leaders from Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools discussed equity, race and changes they want to see in the local school district and beyond.
(06/12/20 1:28am)
Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools has announced former superintendent Jim Causby will return to the district as interim superintendent starting July 1.
(06/12/20 2:45am)
This year, the Food for the Summer program in Chapel Hill and Carrboro — a program launched in March to feed students during the COVID-19 pandemic — is relaunching under a new name: Food for Students.
(05/27/20 2:19am)
Vaeda Sumey used the money she earned working at her local grocery store during the school year to buy her cap and gown. She keeps it hung in her room, unsure when, if ever, she will wear it to walk across the stage to graduate in front of family and friends.