The challenge of balancing family and school during COVID
Concord High School senior Frank Mucyo at his home at Royal Gardens in Concord where he helps out with his brother and cousins plus working at Walmart. Mucyo will be attending SNHU this fall. GEOFF FORESTER Monitor staff
Concord High School senior Frank Mucyo at his home at Royal Gardens in Concord where he helps out with his brother and cousins plus working at Walmart. Mucyo will be attending SNHU this fall. GEOFF FORESTER Monitor staff
Concord High School senior Frank Mucyo at his home at Royal Gardens in Concord, where he helps out with his brother and cousins when he’s not working at Walmart. Mucyo will be attending SNHU this fall. GEOFF FORESTER / Monitor staff
UpdatedThu, Mar 11, 2021 at 7:00 pm ET
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A committee has been formed to consider an upgrade to political speech policies at Concord High School after concern was raised about having a thin blue line flag in a classroom of the Concord Regional Technical Center. (Shutterstock)
CONCORD, NH Concerns about white supremacy and the display of a thin blue line flag in a classroom as well as other issues have led Concord High School to revisit its political speech policies.
Michael Reardon, the school s principal, informed parents on Thursday that about a month ago, a committee of students, parents, and administrators was formed to draft additional policy for the SAU 8 board of education to consider regarding broadly defined political speech in school. The issue came to be after concerns were raised about the display of a thin blue line flag in a classroom at the Concord Regional Technical Center. The flag, which is similar to an American flag, only with blue and w
Data shows moderate enrollment decline at Concord Schools this year
Concord School District Building Courtesy
Published: 12/20/2020 7:02:30 PM
This school year, Concord families have had to make tough decisions when choosing a learning model for their students that accommodates both student needs and parent work schedules. For some families, the option that worked best was to leave the public school district entirely.
The data reflects those decisions – a newly-released enrollment report shows a decline in enrollment for the Concord School District during this pandemic year.
Members of the Concord School board reviewed the district’s 2020 annual enrollment report at a joint meeting of the Concord School Board’s instructional and finance committees Wednesday night. The report shows the district lost 168 students at the elementary level, 44 from the middle school and about 70 from the Concord Regional Technical Center.