Posted By: Nicole Rodriguez January 26, 2021 @ 3:12 pm Local News, News
Springfield Public Schools is offering people the opportunity to drive a school bus to see if the career is right for them.
A hiring event hosted by the district will begin Wednesday and will go from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Springfield Schools transportation office on 2945 E. Pythian St.
Interviews will be conducted on site and staff will be on site to support applicants.
Previous Story
Credit Theresa Bettmann
High school students in Springfield Public Schools will go to class in person four days a week beginning February 1.
According to the district, high school classes will move to in-person for all students on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. Wednesday will still be a virtual learning day so facilities can be cleaned. Currently half of SPS high school students attend on Monday and Tuesday and half on Thursday and Friday.
District officials say the decision came after “a detailed review of COVID-19 health data following Winter Break” in collaboration with the Springfield-Greene County Health Department.
Those who are currently in full-time virtual learning will be able to continue that mode of education.
Antiracism Comes to the Heartland - American Renaissance amren.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from amren.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Oregon graduation rates reach new highs
Over the past six years, Oregon s graduation rate has gradually risen more than 10 percentage points
Posted: Jan 21, 2021 5:21 PM
Updated: Jan 21, 2021 7:28 PM
Posted By: Jacob Roberts
EUGENE, Ore. – Amid a pandemic, graduation rates for Oregon high school students reached an all-time high for the class of 2020.
According to the Oregon Department of Education, the statewide graduation rate for the class of 2020 notched 82.6%, the highest ever recorded in Oregon.
Over the past six years, Oregon s graduation rate has gradually risen more than 10 percentage points. ODE said many of those gains came among underserved groups, which generally saw better increases in graduation rates than the overall state average.
Newly released materials shed light on a training session in which Missouri middle school teachers were pressured to endorse certain ideas about race and told that "covert" white supremacy included things like "colorblindness."