MCCSC plans to reopen school buildings over next two weeks
All K-12 students in Monroe County Community School Corporation can return to school buildings Sept. 8.
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All K-12 students in Monroe County Community School Corporation can return to school buildings Sept. 8.
Monroe County parents are still trying to understand how their children are going back to school in the fall after the Monroe County Community School Corporation presented its Re-Entry and Recovery Plan on June 23.
At the Monroe County Community School Corporation Board of School Trustees meeting Tuesday, a summer talk series on race was introduced, and the board approved a $12 million renovation and improvement project.
A draft of the re-entry and recovery plan for the Monroe County Community School Corporation was presented at a Board of School Trustees meeting Tuesday. The plan offers detailed guidelines on self-screening at home, instruction and health measures at school and mental and emotional support for students and staff.
As universities plan to reopen amid the pandemic, students are not the only ones with worries. IU professors also have reasons for concern, including their students, colleagues and course plans.
An email was sent to staff, faculty and students last week updating the IU community about tuition increases that will continue this year as decided last year, fall class statuses and the commitment everyone must sign before returning to campus in the fall.
The Monroe County Community School Corporation announced Friday they are finalizing plans for the 2020-21 school year and will provide both in-person and online instruction options, according to a MCCSC Facebook post.
The Monroe County Community School Corporation released a letter last week acknowledging institutional racism embedded in public schools and outlining a plan to address inequalities in the local school system.
Indiana K-12 schools moved all classes online at the end of March in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and state orders to social distance. Some schools gave teachers an extra week of spring break to prepare for the rest of the semester being through a screen and no longer in person.
The Monroe County Community School Corporation Board of Trustees approved a nearly $1.5 million construction contract at its meeting Tuesday night to go toward four new classrooms at Summit Elementary School.
Hilltop Garden and Nature Center invited volunteers to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday at the center on East 10th Street by creating plant growing kits for local schools.
Seven IU students, through a university program, will volunteer to teach children during a three-week camp this summer to Rwanda. Applications for the trip will be accepted through February.
Almost half of 350 pre-medical students want free tuition for medical school, according to a new survey by Kaplan Test Prep.
Bloomington Faculty Council met Tuesday to discuss ways to change the current general education program at IU.
Black scholars, both graduates and undergraduate, will be honored at 6 p.m. Dec. 20 at the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center Grand Hall during the Black Congratulatory Event. This celebration is held twice a year in May and in December. In May, the event will take place in the IU Auditorium.
IU’s Office of the Bicentennial is taking IU’s history on the road with its interactive exhibit “All for You,” otherwise known as the “Big Red Bus.”
Chefs from all 14 Big Ten universities gathered this past week at IU to meet with companies, cook together and talk about the future of the industry. The Big Ten Conference Chefs’ Summit keynote speaker set an ambitious goal: She wants 50% of menu offerings in the next five years to be planted-based.
In honor of National Hispanic Heritage Month, the City of Bloomington Commission on Hispanic and Latino Affairs hosted an awards ceremony Monday night. It recognized the achievements of business owners, Monroe County Community School Corporation educators and students and other community advocates.
ILEARN is the newest statewide test to measure the achievement and growth of Indiana’s students, but it has received mixed results from people in the education field. It began in the 2018-2019 school year.
Delays for visa application approval have been affecting people across the nation, but they have put a special strain on international students trying to work and study in the United States.