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Feb. 4, 2021 in Coronavirus, Education, News Northwest High School. Photo: Clarksville Now CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. (CLARKSVILLENOW) – A student at Northwest High School started a petition this week calling for the Clarksville-Montgomery County School System to not count students’ grades for the third quarter this school year on account of issues with remote learning. The change.org petition, called “Save Students Futures and Not Count N3 Grades for CMCSS schools,” was started on Tuesday evening by Aiden Carter, a 17-year-old junior who plays offensive and defensive line for the Northwest Vikings football team. By Thursday, the petition had garnered over 3,500 signatures. The petition

Clarksville-Montgomery County Seventh through 12th grades returning to in-person learning Feb 8

Hopkinsville, KY, USA / WHOP 1230 AM | News Radio Jan 30, 2021 8:55 AM Seventh through 12th graders in the Clarksville-Montgomery County School System will return to in-person instruction on Monday, February 8. A news release says although staffing issues and the substitute teacher shortage are expected to continue during the pandemic, COVID-19 related leave has continued to decrease as Clarksville-Montgomery County’s numbers continue to improve. The district’s Communicable Disease Team is hopeful that there will be limited disruptions to in-person learning, but the potential exists for future school-based or district-wide closures. Families are advised to have plans in the event that school buildings are closed and remote learning must take place. Additionally, the Tennessee Department of Health’s requirements for contact tracing and quarantines are still in place. Therefore, families should have plans in the event a child must transition to remote learning due to being a

APSU Virtual Industry Summit to showcase Leading in a Disruptive Environment

Clarksville Now CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. – Last year, the future looked promising in Clarksville-Montgomery County. The county was named Tennessee’s youngest community and the city earned the title of the best place to live in the country, while the entire state also was enjoying a record low 3.3 percent unemployment rate. Then, in March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic arrived. Within a month, Tennessee’s unemployment rate skyrocketed to 15.5 percent and by July, more than 1,100 businesses in the state reported they were closing permanently. The emergence of the coronavirus resulted in a once-in-a-lifetime disruptive event. On Feb. 11, Austin Peay State University will address these challenges during its third annual industry summit, “Leading in a Disruptive Environment.”

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