UCPS students will learn in-person five days a week starting April 12
The UCPS Board of Education met virtually on Monday, March 15 to discuss the district s plans for increasing in-person learning. Author: Emma Korynta Updated: 12:35 AM EDT March 16, 2021
UNION COUNTY, N.C. Starting Monday, April 12, all levels of Union County Public Schools students will switch to in-person learning all five days of the school week.
The UCPS Board of Education met virtually on Monday, March 15 to discuss the district s plans for increasing in-person learning. At the meeting, Superintendent Andrew Houlihan recommended schools recommended that 6th through 12th graders move to Plan A on April 12.
Union Co Board of Education votes to send all students back in-person five days a week wbtv.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wbtv.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Local districts to hold meeting Monday, discuss school reopening bill
Local districts to hold meeting Monday, discuss school reopening bill By Brandon Hamilton | March 14, 2021 at 11:31 PM EDT - Updated March 14 at 11:58 PM
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (WBTV) - With districts across North Carolina now required to open Grades K-5 for in-person learning under Plan A, the conversation now turns to middle and high school levels.
Several districts are meeting Monday to discuss Senate Bill 220 and the potential to move grades 6 to 12 to the same plan.
Delena Helms has three children in elementary schools and an eighth-grader in Union County Public schools.
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A North Carolina school district is apologizing for an assignment that encouraged fourth-grade students to create pro-slavery tweets and Twitter hashtags.
In a post that has since been deleted from the Facebook page of Waxhaw Elementary School in Waxhaw, North Carolina, students were given roles from the Civil War, then asked to write social media posts as their characters.
Part of a display at Waxhaw Eelementary School shows pro-slavery tweets posted in a hallway of the school. (Fox46).
The students came up with hashtags like #SlaveryforLife and #SlaveryForever.
One post read, “@dontStopSlavery.” Another read “you may not [agree] with slavery but I do and I’m honest about it,” according to Fox46.