The new state superintendent of public instruction is holding a series of "listening and learning sessions" across the state in March and April to hear concerns about the state's public schools.
Mo Green, who assumed office Jan. 1 after being elected in November, will host the sessions in eight different regions from March 17 to April 9.
Fiscal assistance requests for Hurricane Helene recovery in North Carolina got an extra voice in the Beltway as the nation’s ...
Superintendent Maurice “Mo” Green shared the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction’s (NCDPI) legislative priorities and budgetary asks for North Carolina’s public schools at the February Sta ...
Two lawmakers will lead North Carolina’s DOGE-style initiative to cut wasteful spending, including the lead sponsor of a bill ...
North Carolina is still not quite on pace to meet its 2030 goal for 2 million adults aged 25- to 44-years-old to have ...
Grant funding for a collaboration between Union County Public Schools, Gaston County Schools and UNC Charlotte was also ...
Federal action from the U.S. Department of Education will likely result in a reduction or elimination of the educator pipeline for Eastern North Carolina. According to Rodney D. Pierce, who represents ...
House Bill 171 would ban dedicated DEI staff positions and training programs related to race, sex, ethnicity, nationality, and sexual orientation.
In 2019, the state set a goal for 2 million North Carolinians to have a college degree or industry credential by 2030. The state has been closing the gap, but isn’t there yet.
Teachers may lose their jobs and not get bonuses due to the grants being abruptly cut by the Department of Education.