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School districts would have to submit their plans for virtual academies to the state board of education for approval, and could enroll no more than 15 percent of their total student population in a virtual program.
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The outcome suggests a likely veto by Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper if the bill reaches his desk could doom the Republican measure. The bill’s authors said the legislation was needed to give parents more ability to oversee their children’s’ education and health.
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State education officials are working on a plan to overhaul how teachers are paid and licensed and they're seeking feedback. Here's what to know.
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Dr. Sheila Cannon seeks to train SANE nurses at Fayetteville State University to serve in Cumberland County and nearby rural areas. She hopes for additional funding to sustain program.
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Parts of a former African American prep school in North Carolina have made the 2022 list of the 11 Most Endangered Historic Places in the U.S.
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By wide margins, parents across the political spectrum are satisfied with how their children's schools teach about race, gender and history. That's according to a new national poll by NPR and Ipsos.
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The audit also states the academy's leaders used DPI money for a preschool and failed to file correct tax forms to the IRS.
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Part of the ruling is a setback for school districts and parents of students who are plaintiffs in decades-long litigation over school funding.
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Special Superior Court Judge Michael Robinson was tasked last month with scrutinizing the November order of another judge who had directed that $1.75 billion be moved from state coffers to carry out two years of a remedial plan to address education inequities.
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The U.S. Department of Education unveils a plan to help millions of borrowers who have been hurt and held back by its troubled income-driven repayment plans.