Local educator receives Essential Worker Award from City of Colorado Springs
Mark Carlson, the Dean of Students at Banning Lewis Ranch, received the Essential Worker Award for his efforts to keep students and staff safe in the classroom.
and last updated 2021-01-20 23:44:53-05
COLORADO SPRINGS â A Colorado Springs educator was recognized Wednesday by the City of Colorado Springs.
Mark Carlson, the Dean of Students at Banning Lewis Ranch, received the Essential Worker Award for his efforts to keep students and staff safe in the classroom.
Carlson credits the school s success to his colleagues going above and beyond during unprecedented times.
A complaint was received by VPSO in relation to alleged inappropriate conduct between an educator and student.
Detectives investigated the allegations, Greene was arrested and booked into the VPSO jail yesterday on three counts of Prohibited Sexual conduct between an educator and student and two counts of Indecent behavior with juveniles.
Bond has not been set and Greene remains in the VPSO jail.
Hawke s Bay educators concerned about Government daycare food regulations
21 Jan, 2021 04:22 AM
5 minutes to read
Under the new guidelines rice crackers are excluded as a high risk food and items such as grapes should be halved or quartered to help prevent choking. Photo / File
Under the new guidelines rice crackers are excluded as a high risk food and items such as grapes should be halved or quartered to help prevent choking. Photo / File
A Hawke s Bay early childhood educator says new Government regulation of lunches in early childhood centres should be a matter of partnership not policing . And another centre manager is concerned about the timeframe given to
OKLAHOMA CITY — Even as Oklahoma City Public Schools announced plans Tuesday to hold a vaccination clinic for school staff, state health officials said it’s too soon to know when
One of Pike Countyâs longest tenured public servants recently wrapped up over 45 years of work in the community.
Blaine Beekman has entered retirement, a state he sarcastically called âperfectâ, because there isnât much to do these days but turn on the news and view all the chaos that is taking place.
For a man who has kept as busy for as long as Beekman has, retirement will likely be a significant change of speed, but given the broad and lasting effect he has had on his community, it is a well deserved break.
Beekman began his career as an educator- the occupation in which he says his true identity is found. His first teaching job was at Southeast Community College in Cumberland Kentucky as a Political Science teacher.