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Plain Local s Scott is Stark County s Teacher of the Year

The celebration, typically held in person, was canceled by the COVID-19 pandemic. Bobbi Scott is a rock in this district. She s compassionate, she s caring, and she does nothing but support the staff of GlenOak High School each and every day,  Plain Local Superintendent Brent May said when announcing to staff that Scott had won the honor. She s an ambassador to the teaching profession and to Plain Local Schools. Bobbi Scott is the perfect choice for this award.   Scott, 57, will retire at the end of this school year after a 35-year career as an English teacher, all with Plain Local Schools.

Learning Reinvented: Lessons Learned from Virtual Schooling During a Pandemic

/ Amie Payne s six-year-old daughter, a kindergartner at Findley Elementary, surrounds herself with some of her favorite fluffy friends as she learns remotely at home. Tricia Stanton, a third-grade teacher with Canton City Schools, pulls out all the stops to keep her students engaged as they learn from home on computer screens. From glittery gloves to bells, fancy wall drops and more she has it all. Tricia Stanton Tricia Stanton, a third grade teacher with Canton School s new Bulldog Virtual Academy, says that she has experienced growth since she began teaching virtually and has been able to spread her wings. Like Stanton, all the teachers in Canton were trained to teach physically in the classroom. But very quickly, over the past year, many have had to learn a whole different set of skills to teach virtually.

Canton City students will learn at home for two weeks in January

CANTON  It’s official: Students in the Canton City School District will kick off 2021 learning from home. The Canton City school board on Monday approved the district’s second-semester learning plan, which includes moving all students to remote learning for the two weeks following winter break. The students who have chosen in-person classes will return to school on Jan. 19, following the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. The board previously discussed the changes for the second semester, but had not yet formally approved the plan. Superintendent Jeff Talbert, who attended Monday’s board meeting virtually, said moving online for two weeks gives the district enough time to see who may have contracted COVID-19 during the break, as they should begin to display symptoms by then and can remain at home until medically cleared.

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