Articles
-
3 weeks ago |
us9.campaign-archive.com | Mebane Rash |Hannah McClellan |Alli Lindenberg |Katie Dukes
In surprise announcement, NCASA honors superintendents for exemplary leadership in Hurricane Helene by Mebane Rash The N.C. Association of School Administrators (NCASA) surprised superintendents from the 11 districts who sustained the most damage in Hurricane Helene last week with the Raymond Sarbaugh Leadership Award, named after NCASA’s first executive director.
-
1 month ago |
us9.campaign-archive.com | Mebane Rash |Katie Dukes |Caroline Parker |Heather Finch
Following expansion of school choice, fewer families apply for vouchers this year by Mebane Rash An update on vouchers including county level data by income tier, new applications, and a change in leadership at NCSEAA In 2023, the N.C. General Assembly passed a state budget including what Republicans called the “largest expansion of school choice” in 10… Continue reading → Dr. Monique Perry-Graves announced as new CEO of Road to Hire by Katie Dukes Dr. Monique Perry-Graves will become the new...
-
1 month ago |
insightnews.com | Katie Dukes |Liz Bell
The inaccuracy of the term “daycare” is at the heart of a book by Dan Wuori, an early childhood expert who you may know from his viral social media posts or his previous work as senior director of early learning at the Hunt Institute. In “The Daycare Myth,” Wuori argues that what we think of as “daycare” doesn’t exist. “That’s a strange thing to say because there are businesses all over North Carolina who have that right outside on their signs,” Wuori said.
-
1 month ago |
washingtoninformer.com | Katie Dukes |Liz Bell
Photo by Lina Kivaka on Pexels.com The inaccuracy of the term “day care” is at the heart of a book by Dan Wuori, an early childhood expert who you may know from his viral social media posts or his previous work as senior director of early learning at the Hunt Institute. In “The Day Care Myth,” Wuori argues that what we think of as “day care” doesn’t exist.
-
2 months ago |
edsurge.com | Katie Dukes |Liz Bell
Policymakers across the political spectrum ran for office on child care issues in 2024. From the presidential campaigns to local races, Democrats and Republicans both acknowledged that our early care and learning systems are not functioning for families, educators or their communities.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →