Jaguars Re-Sign Tight End James O Shaughnessy jaguars.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jaguars.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
I don’t know, I kind of want my kids to learn basic math and reading comprehension first before I turn them into social activists- really wish we are discussing getting the kids back into school.
This is just ill-timed…get the kids back in school- stick to the basics, because it’s sorely needed- math, reading comprehension. Dan u r having your “let them eat cake” moment. This shows the insensitivity and incomprehension of the realities of students right now
Personal Attacks Instead of Defending Their Ideas
The Federalist has attempted to contact keynote speaker Dena Simmons, as well as other speakers, multiple times for a statement. None have responded. Bridges and Assistant Superintendent Jayne Willard have dodged emails and calls, even after district employees connected The Federalist reporter to their direct line.
Updated 3/12/2021 6:32 AM
There was cheering in some classrooms and hallways when the announcement went out a year ago that Illinois schools were closing amid the spiraling COVID-19 pandemic.
But for many parents it was a gut check, while teachers and administrators looked down the logistical and technological abyss posed by remote learning.
I remember talking to our superintendent and saying, When we come back after spring break, recalled Lombard Elementary District 44 fifth-grade teacher Rebecca Gamboa. He said, We re probably not coming back for the rest of the year . and I laughed.
On March 13, 2020, Gov. J.B. Pritzker ordered Illinois schools to shut down in-person classes for two weeks to reduce the spread of the deadly virus. The temporary measure was extended with a statewide stay-at-home order enacted March 21.
About 97 percent of ninth graders in 2020 were "on track" to graduate at Naperville North High School, where the four-year graduation rate was 97 percent that year, according to the latest Illinois schools report card by the Illinois State Board of Education.
A spike in identity thefts tied to unemployment fraud caused Naperville’s crime rate to rise in 2020, according to police department data released this week.