For fun, check out this entire piece from the LSU-specific site on Sports Illustrated: Related
The key to evaluating LSU versus Alabama recruiting battles is timing and location. Those two factors will be critical to the 2022 recruiting class for both football programs. Here’s a quick look at where each school stands with commitments, it’s desire to land top skill players, and how each program stacks up against one another along the recruiting trail as we head into the month of June, the first month the NCAA will allow official visits in over a year.
Total Commitments And National Scope
CMSD to move sixth graders to Hunt in 2022
Cherie Labat
For almost a year, Columbus Municipal School District has worked on its plans for the redevelopment of Hunt School with the understanding it would become the home of the district’s sixth-grade operations.
During Monday’s regular meeting, the CMSD Board of Trustees took its first official step in that transition, approving the move of sixth-grade students, faculty, support staff and equipment to the school for the beginning of the 2022-23 school year.
“This is just the first step in a pretty complicated process,” Superintendent Cherie Labat told the board. “I would say today, with this board action, we’re probably at about 3 percent of doing the things that need to be done. There are federal funds associated with the school, so it is an extensive process.”
EMCC hosted 2020 and 2021 graduation
On Friday at East Mississippi Community College, 2021 graduates got to walk across the stage to get their degree and the class of 2020 finally got the graduation they ve been waiting for.
Posted: May 9, 2021 9:17 PM
Updated: May 10, 2021 9:05 AM
Posted By: Taylor Tucker
SCOOBA, Miss. (WTVA) - Graduation season is full of traditions. Yet, some 2020 graduates are just now experiencing what a true graduation feels like.
On Friday at East Mississippi Community College, 2021 graduates got to walk across the stage to get their degree and the class of 2020 finally got the graduation they ve been waiting for.
For Abigal Parker, the graduation ceremony was a very special day for her.
EMCC among state community colleges making summer classes free
By Will Stribling and Molly Minta/Mississippi Today 6 hours ago
This story was originally published by Mississippi Today.
When COVID-19 hit Mississippi last spring, students at Northeast Mississippi Community College in Booneville flooded Michelle Baragona’s office to withdraw from their classes.
They cited similar reasons, said Baragona, the college’s vice president of instruction. Their parents were laid off, so they needed to work. They no longer felt safe attending class in-person.
As the year wore on, withdrawal requests kept coming in as students struggled to overcome pandemic-related academic challenges. In the fall semester, Baragona said one student requested to withdraw because his grades had suffered after he was exposed to COVID and quarantined four times.
By Will Stribling and Molly Minta
Apr 26, 2021 9:24 AM
When COVID-19 hit Mississippi last spring, students at Northeast Mississippi Community College in Booneville flooded Michelle Baragona’s office to withdraw from their classes.
They cited similar reasons, said Baragona, the college’s vice president of instruction. Their parents were laid off, so they needed to work. They no longer felt safe attending class in-person.
As the year wore on, withdrawal requests kept coming in as students struggled to overcome pandemic-related academic challenges. In the fall semester, Baragona said one student requested to withdraw because his grades had suffered after he was exposed to COVID and quarantined four times.