Students reflect on a year of COVID, wonder how learning will continue to change
Students across central Ohio are preparing to head back into classrooms one year after changing the way they learn drastically due to COVID-19. Author: Krista Frost (WBNS) Updated: 7:31 AM EST March 9, 2021
Students across central Ohio are preparing to head back into classrooms one year after changing the way they learn drastically due to COVID-19.
“I was on the bus on my way home and we all got an alert on our phones saying students won’t be returning to school for another three weeks,” said senior at Columbus City Schools Breanna Lovelace.
Ohio History Connection to host panel to answer public's COVID questions dispatch.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dispatch.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
College and university news
The following students have been named to the Autumn Semester Dean’s List at
Columbus State Community College. To be named to the Dean’s List, a student must achieve a grade point average (GPA) of 3.5 or higher and be enrolled for six or more credit hours (Local):
Jackson, OH
Lucasville, OH
Timothy Miller, Skilled Trades Technology
Joshua Thurman, Skilled Trades Technology
Waverly, OH
Rio unveils tuition reduction of more than 27%
The University of Rio Grande introduces Affordability Plan that Lowers Tuition and Invests more in Holistic Student Services
RIO GRANDE, OH- With many colleges and universities facing uncertainty during the COVID-19 pandemic, The University of Rio Grande has taken the lead in providing an affordable pathway to a high-quality education. The Board of Trustees approved a tuition affordability plan on February 13, thus lowering tuition from $26,810 to $19,400 and lowering room and board from $11,166 to $10, 500. In a
Life briefs: Spelling bee, college honors
Mansfield News Journal
MOESC crowns Tri-County Spelling Bee champion
MANSFIELD - Twenty-six spellers were hungry for the win, but only one Kansas Huston, an eighth grader from Plymouth was able to spell her way to the crown with the word “sustenance.” It took 11 rounds until a champion and runner-up were finally crowned Feb. 25 during the Mid-Ohio Educational Service Center s Tri-County Spelling Bee.
Kansas spelled three championship words before she was named champion of the bee. The runner-up was Danica Staats, a sixth grader from Lexington.
The spelling bee had been postponed from Feb. 18 due to snowy weather. The top spellers in Crawford, Richland and Morrow counties, representing 10 school districts, competed in the virtual bee. The competition included spellers from Highland, Cardington, Lexington, Madison, Galion, Plymouth, Northmor, Ontario, Crestview, and Crestline in grades four-eight.
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