Two candidates announced for Stapleton Elementary School principal in Framingham
FRAMINGHAM The district has announced two finalists for principal at the Stapleton Elementary School.
Sara Costa Yuen and Caitlin Shelburne are each vying for the position, according to a statement from the schools.
Yuen is principal of the Phoenix Charter Academy Chelsea in Chelsea. She is former program director for the nonprofit Portuguese Language School of the MetroWest Mission Hub (ProGente Connections). Before that, Yuen taught math and English Language Arts in the Phoenix Charter Academy in Chelsea and social studies in Lawrence Public Schools.
Yuen holds a bachelor s degree in international relations with a minor in Latin American Studies from Boston University. She also holds a master s degree in education policy and management from Harvard University.
Latin returns from the dead in $148M Framingham school budget
FRAMINGHAM At Framingham High School, Latin is the 2,700-year-old comeback kid.
School Committee members voted unanimously Wednesday to pass the district s fiscal 2022 operating budget. District leaders restored Latin personnel into the $148,232,945 spending package since the committee s last meeting.
Originally, the budget cut the hours of an employee in the Latin program. School officials had planned to phase out the language by no longer allowing incoming freshmen to choose Latin when they sign up for classes. Current students would have been able to continue their Latin studies until graduation.
The reinstatement means that the courses Greek and Roman Civilization and Latin for Academic Success will be taught during the 2021-22 school year.
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Local superintendents, union presidents urge Baker to reclassify educators for COVID-19 vaccinations
Local superintendents and union presidents are urging Gov. Charlie Baker to reclassify educators and make them eligible to receive COVID-19 vaccinations during the earlier part of Phase Two.
In a letter to the governor dated Monday, the Tri-County Superintendents Roundtable, a professional association comprised of school districts and special education collaboratives, outlined the basis of their request, noting that the state is encouraging more in-person learning and that vaccinations would help facilitate that. Given the societal need for in-person public school not just public school via Zoom and the expectations set by your office and DESE, educators should be vaccinated immediately and without delay so that they can perform their duties safely and securely and without fear for their own lives and the lives of their own families by simply coming to work, the letter read