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Page 18 - இந்தியானா நிலை ஆசிரியர்கள் சங்கம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Hoosiers all lose : Former state superintendents come out against voucher expansion

Three former state education chiefs have come out against plans for major expansions in Indiana’s school choice landscape and the larger-than-advertised price tags that come with them. Former superintendents of public instruction Suellen Reed Goddard, Glenda Ritz and Jennifer McCormick issued a letter opposing three proposals — all sponsored by Republicans in the Indiana General Assembly — to expand the state’s private school vouchers and create a new Education Scholarship Account program, allowing parents to receive the state dollars that would be spent on educating their children on a debit card to spend on education expenses like tuition, supplies or uniforms.

GOP bill would force yearly teacher action on union dues

Bill Targeting Teacher Union Dues Advances To Senate Floor

1:01 The bill would make teachers sign forms each summer allowing their union to automatically deduct dues from paychecks. The forms would include bold-font language informing them of their rights to not join a union and if teachers forget to renew, their membership would lapse.  Senators voting for the measure said it would help teachers make “informed decisions” about their dues and membership. Testimony from anti-union groups suggested teachers could forget about the automatic paycheck deductions and end up paying them against their will. Join the conversation and sign up for the Indiana Two-Way. Text Indiana to 73224. Your comments and questions in response to our weekly text help us find the answers you need on COVID-19 and other statewide issues.

Priorities for vaccinations anger teachers | Statehouse

When will NWI teachers receive a COVID-19 vaccine? Educators, administrators hope sooner rather than later

SCHERERVILLE — Donna Spivak has been a teacher for 37 years, and in a school year guided by the coronavirus pandemic, the longtime educator said she feels invisible.  Spivak, who is 58, told The Times she recently secured an appointment to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, which she received after speaking to someone at the health department after explaining she is a teacher, and her husband is an elderly cancer survivor. I waited, I think it was almost a month, and then when I finally got there, they just said, No, we re not doing teachers. So they just turned me away, said Spivak, a fifth grade teacher at Grimmer Middle School in Schererville.

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