CHARLESTON, W.Va. – There were a lot of questions, but not many answers — at least not publicly — during the interims meeting on Sunday of the West Virginia Legislature s
Education Reporter Chris Schulz sat down with Sen. Amy Grady, R-Mason, the Senate Education Committee chair, and Del. David Elliot Pritt, D-Fayette, the minority vice chair of the House Education Committee, to learn more about what is being done to secure the state's future.
Karen Hall, a teacher’s assistant in Fayetteville’s elementary school, helps her first-graders learn how to read, focusing on helping them learn words like “the,” “to,” and “my.” Her favorite part
Lawmakers want to put thousands of helpers in classrooms to improve reading scores. Hiring could be difficult as the state faces a teacher shortage exacerbated by low pay and PEIA