Daily Light report
At a meeting called by the Waxahachie ISD Board of Trustees on Monday evening, Superintendent Dr. Bonny Cain announced her plans to “re-retire” this June.
“I was so happy to be chosen to lead this district, as daily the staff met higher and higher expectations for student performance, while simultaneously being charged with preparing students for jobs that lay in an unknown future,” Cain said. “These past three years have been a wonderful professional and personal growth experience. I am grateful that for 43 years I have been able to practice a profession that I truly love. I am confident that Waxahachie ISD has nothing but a bright and successful future ahead of it.”
Trustees will also consider pay structure modification, matter of contract abandonment
Waxahachie Daily Light
The Waxahachie Independent School District board of trustees will receive an update on the COVID-19 situation in the school district and will learn about early childhood literacy and math goals during Monday night’s regular monthly meeting.
In other action, the board will consider a modification to the pay structure scale related to a stipend. Trustees will also consider whether good cause does not exist for Alisa Marshall to abandon her employment contract mid-year with Waxahachie ISD and allow district administration to provide all appropriate notice to the Texas Education Agency.
District nurse coordinator says campuses aren’t causing large spread of COVID-19
Waxahachie Daily Light
Schools in the Waxahachie Independent School District do not appear to be huge vectors of spread for the COVID-19 virus, the WISD board of trustees were informed during Monday night’s regular monthly meeting.
WISD nurse coordinator Melissa Bousquet told trustees that campuses appear to be among the safest places for students to be, as strict district-wide measures are in place to prevent the spread of the virus.
“Even though case numbers are on the rise right now, at a pretty alarming rate really, it’s not at school that they’re getting it,” Bousquet said. “All these hard-working teachers and support staff and administrators and board, all of your hard work is really paying off.”
Harrison County (West Virginia) Schools reports 8 new COVID-19 cases Wednesday wvnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wvnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.