JLG Architects selected to design proposed K-8 campus on city s north side. Written By: Pamela D. Knudson | 9:03 pm, May 24, 2021 ×
The Mark Sanford Education Center, headquarters of Grand Forks Public Schools. (Grand Forks Herald photo)
The Grand Forks School Board on Monday, May 24, approved the teacher-negotiated contract agreement for the next two school years and also the selection of JLG Architects to design the proposed K-8 campus and two other local architectural firms to carry out other facilities projects, if voters approve an $86 million bond referendum election next month.
The board approved the teacher contract, which for year one calls for a 0.5% increase in each cell of steps for experience and lanes for academic credits earned, and a 0.75% increase in each cell for year two. The increases amount to $1.156 million for the 2021-22 school year and $1.316 for the 22-23 school year, for a total two-year cost of $2.472 million.
The region s teachers caught in political push-pull in civics classroom pinejournal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pinejournal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Social studies and civics teachers are at the center of some of the most difficult conversations in the country. That debate isn’t just about how to build a generation of smart, upstanding voters, but about the nature of American history itself.
Region’s teachers caught in political ‘push-pull’ in civics classroom
Social studies and civics teachers are at the center of some of the most difficult conversations in the country. That debate isn’t just about how to build a generation of smart, upstanding voters, but about the nature of American history itself.
Written By:
Sam Easter | ×
Eli Zerr, an eighth-grader at South Middle School in Grand Forks, works on homework at his south Grand Forks home on Wednesday, May 12, 2021. Photo by Eric Hylden/Grand Forks Herald
On Jan. 6, the world watched as President Donald Trump spoke to a crowd of supporters in Washington.
Grand Forks students win awards in statewide art competition
High school and middle school students have earned prizes in the annual North Dakota Juried Student Art Show. Written By: Pamela D. Knudson | 3:00 pm, May 4, 2021 × Running Free, an artwork by Brooke Beckstead, a student at Valley Middle School, earned an award in the annual North Dakota Juried Student Art Show, sponsored by the Taube Museum of Art in Minot. (Submitted image)
Twenty-one
Grand Forks high school and middle school students have earned prizes in the 2021-22 North Dakota Juried Student Art Show, sponsored by the Taube Museum of Art in Minot.