
Liz Schlemmer
Education ReporterLiz Schlemmer is վ's K-12 Education Reporter. She has previously served as the Fletcher Fellow for Education Policy Reporting at վ and as the education reporter at Louisville Public Media.
She holds a M.A. from the Hussman School of Journalism and Media at UNC-Chapel Hill and a B.A. in history from Indiana University. Liz is originally from rural Indiana, where she grew up with a large extended family of educators.
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Email: lschlemmer@wunc.org
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In a 5-4 vote, the school board moved to table its discussion on how to pay this month’s salaries for the district’s roughly 2,200 support staff.
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Durham Public Schools has been rocked by staff sick-outs after the district announced its plans to revoke raises for some classified staff who had received them for months. The chaos is disrupting life for families across the district, but especially for students with disabilities who often rely on classified staff far more than other students.
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The Durham Association of Educators says at least 75% of school employees at 12 Durham public schools called out of work Wednesday to protest recent cuts to raises for classified staff. Educators gathered at the Minnie Forte-Brown Staff Development Center on Hillandale Road in Durham on Wednesday morning to protest.
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A majority of school employees at 12 schools in Durham Public Schools plan to be absent Wednesday after submitting their leave requests Tuesday afternoon. The Durham Association of Educators (DAE) says at least 75% of school employees at each of these schools are walking out to protest recent cuts to raises for classified staff.
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In a tense meeting Thursday night, Durham Public Schools’ Board of Education approved a budget amendment that allows classified staff to continue receiving recent raises through the end of January. Earlier this month, the district informed staff their raises would end abruptly due to an accounting error.
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The Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Board of Education is preparing for political or legal ramifications after it voted unanimously last week to give preliminary approval to a district policy that defies the recently passed state law commonly known as the 'Parents Bill of Rights.'
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Durham Public Schools had fewer buses running and many missing employees today after some support staff didn't report to work over a pay issue.Hundreds of Durham Public Schools staff crowded into a meeting today to demand to know why they recently received notice that their pay would be reduced.
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Many Durham Public School students didn't make it to school today, due to an absence of transportation workers. Transportation staff are among a group of workers at the district who received emails over the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend announcing that their recent raises would be taken away.
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A test “which only proves you’re a good test taker” won’t prevent teachers from getting licensed anymore. վ’s education reporter Liz Schlemmer was the first to inform one of about 1500 teachers that she can keep teaching.
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The federal funding will go to school districts and charter schools across 13 North Carolina counties, with priority given to schools that serve low-income, rural or tribal communities.