SC man graduates from college despite injuries, challenges sfgate.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sfgate.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
When Tiffany Bell graduated from Converse College last spring, she applied for a teaching position in Spartanburg School District 7, hoping to give back to the schools that had done so much for her family.
Bell was inspired to return to college by her son Justin Jackson’s admission to Spartanburg High School’s Viking Early College, a dual enrollment program that allows male students from underrepresented backgrounds to earn an associate’s degree while still in high school.
Starting in 2016, Bell attended Spartanburg Community College alongside her son for two years, and then transferred to Converse where she earned a bachelor’s degree in childhood education.
Spartanburg mother Tiffany Bell is living out her dreams at Cleveland Academy of Leadership tribuneledgernews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tribuneledgernews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Spartanburg County s seven school districts are reporting approximately 1,100 new cases of COVID-19 since Oct. 12, according to information obtained by the Herald-Journal.
The 1,100 cases are more than triple the estimated 350 cases reported during October for the first nine weeks.
The increase in cases is being reported at the same time as the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control reported on Tuesday that there were 210 new confirmed COVID -19 cases in Spartanburg County. Since the start of the pandemic, the county has had a total of 14,668 cases and 301 deaths.
To help school districts bring students back into the classroom full time and in a safe manner in January, the S.C. Department of Education announced Monday its plans to provide additional funding to all public school districts to support the reopening efforts. The SCDE promised an additional $84.3 million from the Coronavirus Relief Fund to be used to reimburse expenses incurred since July 1, and t
SC Education Dept. supports school re-opening with additional $84 million
The funds can be used for safety measures and personal protective equipment, hiring school nurses, hiring staff, and technology equipment to support online learning. Author: WLTX Updated: 11:32 PM EST December 14, 2020
COLUMBIA, S.C. On Monday, the S.C. Department of Education (SCDE) announced that it will provide $84,264,890 in additional federal Coronavirus Relief Fund (CRF) funding to all public schools districts and special schools to support reopening efforts.
The funding can be used for four specific purposes, including safety measures and personal protective equipment, hiring of school nurses, hiring of staff to provide one-on-one instruction and support services for struggling students, and technology equipment to support online learning.