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As coronavirus cases fall, schools feel pressure to add more in-person learning

As coronavirus cases fall, schools feel pressure to add more in-person learning With vaccines on the horizon and many families pushing for more in-person time, Maine school districts still face challenges with staffing and meeting physical distancing requirements. Share Casey Curneil and her children, Aubrey Munson and Carter Munson, depart Ocean Avenue Elementary School in Portland on Friday afternoon. Curneil, whose son is a second-grader at Ocean Avenue, said she would like the schools to go to full-time in-person instruction. Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer As she’s watched coronavirus cases in Maine and around the country fall, Casey Curneil has been wondering when her son might be able to get more in-person time at school. Hybrid learning has been difficult, and she worries about the social and academic impacts of screen time and time away from peers.

Falmouth opening schools to more students in March

Falmouth opening schools to more students in March The school committee also passed a resolution asking the state to push Maine teachers to the front of the vaccination line. Share Superintendent Geoff Bruno said administrators are asking the state to prioritize Falmouth teachers for vaccinations, which will help staffing shortages created by educators quarantining after exposure to COVID-19. Contributed / Falmouth School Department FALMOUTH Falmouth students could be spending more time in the classroom as early as March 10. School administrators are working toward more in-person instruction for students after School Committee members and members of the public said prioritizing teachers for vaccinations “was not enough” to get students back in schools.

9 North Carolina Marines have been convicted of drug-related crimes since November

Fear of missing out? Sign up for the Marine Corps Times Daily News Roundup to receive the top Marine Corps stories every afternoon. Thanks for signing up. By giving us your email, you are opting in to the Marine Corps Times Daily News Roundup. Roughly 4,000 urinalysis tests were conducted by the division between the summer, when the new policy was implemented, and early December, the release said. The Marine Corps said fewer than a percent of those tested were found to be positive for the hallucinogenic drug. The Marine Corps did not say if these courts-martial were related to any positive LSD tests, citing concern for any other potential investigations.

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