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More than 10,000 North Carolina students unaccounted for :: WRAL com
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More than 10,000 students unaccounted for in North Carolina
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JEFFERSON â A special meeting was held on Tuesday, Dec. 15 between members of the Ashe County Board of Education, Ashe County Board of Commissioners and architect Larry Greene.
The purpose of the meeting was to discuss the proposed plans for the new middle school. Arrangements for this meeting were made following the BOE meeting on Dec. 7, where several members of the board expressed an interest in holding such a meeting in an effort to be âon the same page.â
To comply with the state regulations governing the number of persons allowed to gather indoors due to COVID-19, the meeting was available for those interested to view via Zoom Communications.
RALEIGH â The North Carolina Department of Public Instruction and the Wake County school system have been ordered to make changes that advocates hope will improve services for children with dyslexia.
DPI has found several districts, including Wake and Bladen counties and the agency itself, not to be in compliance with federal requirements for identifying children eligible for special-education services. DPI is requiring changes designed to reduce the roadblocks that may have kept some children from getting the help they need.
The changes come after Literacy Moms N.C. filed 18 complaints against the state and individual school systems accusing them of not being in compliance with the Child Find provisions in the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
The North Carolina Department of Public Instruction has been ordered to make changes that advocates hope will improve services for children with dyslexia. The News & Observer of Raleigh reports the department has found several school districts and the agency itself were not in compliance with federal requirements for identifying children eligible for special-education services. DPI is requiring changes designed to reduce the roadblocks that may have kept some children from getting the help they need. Literacy Moms N.C. filed 18 complaints against the state and individual school systems accusing them of not being in compliance with the Child Find provisions in the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
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