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School board approves two administrators

Jennifer Barnes HUNTSVILLE — Two Huntsville ISD assistant principals were promoted to administrative roles after unanimous action was taken by the Huntsville ISD Board of Trustees on Thursday. Jennifer Barnes was approved as the new principal of Scott Johnson Elementary, while Chris White will serve as the new director of the district’s Disciplinary Alternative Education Program. Barnes was the assistant principal at Scott Johnson last year, while White was previously the assistant principal at Mance Park Middle School. Both of the new school leaders will assume their new positions effective immediately. “With more than 17 years in education, Mrs. Barnes has a strong desire to help all students reach their full potential,” district leaders said in a release. “As the school’s assistant principal since 2017, she has developed a special bond and passion for the students, staff and parents at Scott Johnson Elementary. She is a calm and confident leader w

Dallas expected to be among first major districts to ban school suspensions as part of work to tackle racial disparities

Here s which Grand Prairie races will have runoffs and where and when to vote

Here’s which Grand Prairie races will have runoffs and where and when to vote Early voting begins May 24. Two City Council races will have runoff elections in Grand Prairie.(Juan Figueroa / Staff Photographer) Two city council races are headed to runoff elections June 5. For District 6, Kurt G. Johnson will face Jeff Wooldridge. Johnson received 49.4% of the votes, and Wooldridge got 38.6%, both short of the 50% threshold required to avoid a runoff. And for District 8, an at-large seat, Greg Giessner will face Steve “Junior” Ezeonu. Giessner won 40.9% of the votes, to Ezeonu’s 35.7%. Grand Prairie is in three counties, so where you should vote depends on your home county.

Black KISD students disproportionately disciplined, data shows

An African American student in the Killeen Independent School District is more likely to be placed in an alternative disciplinary setting than his Caucasian or Hispanic peers, according to data presented at the district’s board workshop meeting Tuesday. During an overview of KISD’s Disciplinary Alternative Education Program (DAEP), presented by Deputy Superintendent Eric Penrod, a series of inequitable statistics emerged. “When I look at the data, when I see 34% of our student body is African American, and I see 65% of our DAEP (Disciplinary Alternative Education Program) is African American, that is alarming to me,” Board secretary Brett Williams said Tuesday.

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