Prince William County schools plan for fall includes in-person learning 5 days a week
Prince William County schools finalizing plan for fall
Prince William County schools are finalizing plans for the 2021-2022 school year, which will accommodate in-person learning five days a week.
MANASSAS, Va. - The reopening plan for this fall for Prince William County schools was released Wednesday night – and it includes details for how the district will accommodate state law and offer in-person learning five days a week.
Full-time, in-person learning will be the default once fall arrives – but families will still have the option of choosing virtual learning.
School board names first woman, Black school superintendent
cbs19news.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cbs19news.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
School board names first woman, Black school superintendent
washingtontimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from washingtontimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
5,800 more teachers set to receive coronavirus vaccines A Prince William County Public Schools teachers receives a coronavirus vaccination at Unity Reed High School outside Manassas. [Uriah Kiser/PLN]
The push continues to return children to classrooms in Prince William County.
Over the weekend, school officials partnered with Novant Health/UVA Health Prince William Medical Center to vaccinate 2,500 teachers who work for the school division in preparation to return all children to in-person learning early next month.
Students in grades 4 through 12 who haven’t set foot in a classroom since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic last year are set to return in early March, the o county School Board decided last month. Following suit, Fairfax County the state’s largest school division yesterday announced plans to return to allow students to return to in-person learning.
School children across Prince William struggling with reading, new data show Jeanine Lawson and Peter Candland were two of three members of the Prince William Board of County Supervisors to shuffle out of a School Board training session on Implicit bias, a section of a larger training on Critical Race Theory.
With tens of thousands of children out of a classroom, School Board focused instead on racism training
Prince William County’s youngest and most vulnerable students are struggling to read.
New Phonological Awareness Literacy Screening data for the Prince William County School Division obtained exclusively by PLN show an alarming increase of students from kindergarten through third grade who need reading help. The test, required by the Virginia Department of Education to be given to children in the aforementioned grade levels, is used to identify gaps that could hinder the development of a child’s reading skills.