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Shaken by post-pandemic disruptions, some states take a harder line on school disciplineJuvenile Justice Information Exchange

Parents in Boone County, Kentucky, were outraged this past January when a ninth grader who had been suspended a year earlier for threatening violence against his fellow students returned to class as soon as his punishment time was up. The parents packed a school board meeting, excoriating the county superintendent and other officials for the decision and calling for change. By March, change had come from the state capitol in Frankfort: Kentucky enacted a new school discipline law that makes it easier to suspend students and harder for them to get back into the classroom. “The kid had a ‘kill list’ which named students friends he was going to kill,” Republican state Rep. Steve Rawlings, who represents Boone County and championed the new law, said in an interview with Stateline. “The superintendent felt pressure to return him to class after a one-year suspension.” Kentucky is one of several states to enact stricter punishments for disruptive students amid a post-pa

John Angotti & Friends raise funds for scholarships

Celebration of Life concert in Clarksburg to benefit social work endowment for minority students at WVU

The Race-Neutral Admissions Policy that Elite Schools Won t Use

Coverage under social welfare schemes in faceless, transparent manner through online mode: DC Srinagar

Srinagar: In order to review the implementation of welfare schemes run by ICDS & Social Welfare Department and extension of benefits of different Government schemes in District, a meeting was held under the Chairmanship of Deputy Commissioner Srinagar, Mohammad Aijaz Asad here at Meeting Hall of the DC Office Complex. At the outset, the Deputy Commissioner took a Project wise appraisal

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