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Page 11 - ந்ஸீ துறை ஆஃப் பொது அறிவுறுத்தல் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

COVID vaccine live updates: Here s what to know in North Carolina on April 9

COVID vaccine live updates: Here s what to know in North Carolina on April 9 Simone Jasper, The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.) Apr. 9 We re tracking the most up-to-date information about the coronavirus and vaccines in North Carolina. Check back for updates. Case count reaches 926,000 At least 926,897 people in North Carolina have tested positive for the coronavirus and 12,224 have died since March 2020, according to state health officials. The N.C. Department of Health and Human Services reported 2,087 new COVID-19 cases on Thursday, up from 1,380 the day before. Twenty-three additional coronavirus-related deaths were reported Wednesday. Deaths don t all occur on the day the state reports them, and the state health department revises its daily figures as information becomes available.

Legislature sends Cooper bills designed to address learning losses - Carolina Journal

Two bills sitting on Gov. Roy Cooper’s desk are designed to remediate learning losses for K-12 students left behind by classroom closures caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The first House Bill 82, Summer Learning Choice for N.C. Families would require all public school districts to offer a minimum of six weeks of in-person summer school this year. For K-8 students, the curriculum includes reading, math, science, and at least one enrichment activity such as sports, music, or the arts. For high school students, the focus is on end-of-course subjects and one elective course. The bill gives precedence to at-risk students.

N C legislature passes far-reaching measures on reading, summer school

RALEIGH — The General Assembly on Thursday finalized a pair of public education measures designed to get more intensive help to children learning to read and to those who have fallen behind during the COVID-19 pandemic. Before going home for a spring recess, the GOP-controlled House and Senate approved both bills by overwhelming margins. They now go to Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper. A statement from Cooper’s office didn’t directly address whether he’d sign the measures, which have received praise from other Democrats. Federal COVID-19 relief funds will help defray some of the cost of the bills’ implementation. One bill pushed by House Speaker Tim Moore would require all school districts to offer at least six weeks of summer school designed to help K-12 students who’ve failed to flourish with virtual learning since the pandemic shut down schools in March 2020.

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