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Fort Smith junior high says goodbye to eighth, ninth graders - Arkansas Catholic
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Arkansas Catholic provides trustworthy reporting you need - Arkansas Catholic
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Dwain Hebda
Freshman Cole Carper reports early for classes at Catholic High School in Little Rock. The teen enjoys extreme sports such as water and snow skiing and mountain biking, despite a genetic condition that limits his eyesight.
Dwain Hebda
Freshman Cole Carper reports early for classes at Catholic High School in Little Rock. The teen enjoys extreme sports such as water and snow skiing and mountain biking, despite a genetic condition that limits his eyesight.
To the naked eye, there’s not much that distinguishes Cole Carper from the rest of his freshman peers at Catholic High School in Little Rock. The well-spoken 15-year-old weathers the hectic pace and academic rigor of high school while looking for ways to assert his independence.
In-person and livestreamed, with plans at the moment to limit attendance to immediate family
After a year of mask-wearing, social distancing and an endless supply of hand sanitizer, Catholic schools in Arkansas can see a glimmer of light on the horizon with vaccinations and an eye toward graduation.
Theresa Hall, superintendent for Catholic Schools, said the lessons learned from the 2020-2021 school year during the COVID-19 pandemic will be useful for the future.
“It has made us think what can we do, how can we do things a little bit different. Sometimes we’re creatures of habit and sometimes it’s easy to stay doing what we always do because it works, but this has made us think outside the box and what can we do differently,” Hall said. “This makes you stop and think, ‘This is working or this is not working.’ It makes us reevaluate what we’re doing and how we do things like fundraising, recess, sports, teaching.”
Catholic Schools Herald, April 2021
Catholic Schools Herald, April 2021
After a challenging year for schools during the thick of the COVID-19 pandemic, the semester is drawing to a close. In this section, the superintendent of Catholic schools looks back on the year. It explores how teacher vaccines have made an impact, as well as what graduations and the fall semester might look like. Principals have continued their educational growth despite the overwhelming trials of the year and schools are saying goodbye to longtime educators, including Steve Wells at Catholic High School.
By Dwain Hebda, Published: April 23, 2021
Steve Wells remembers his first day as a teacher at Catholic High School in Little Rock. The North Little Rock native had come to the painful decision not to return for his fourth year at Holy Trinity Seminary in Dallas and dropped in on his former principal Father George Tribou with the news. It was September 1983.
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