A Nye County resident said he felt the school district had recovered from the pandemic slower than the rest of the state under the superintendent’s leadership.
Education
Gov. Joe Lombardo held a signing ceremony for Assembly Bill 73. The changes go into effect immediately amid high school graduation season.
Shanea Anna Chee, a student at Brown Junior High School in Henderson, was selected as a finalist for her doodle highlighting her Diné heritage.
Danielle Ford, who was elected to the Clark County School Board in 2018 and lost the general election in November, hopes to launch a podcast by the beginning of June.
The Clark County School District filed a complaint May 17 against the Clark County Education Association.
Nevada and federal officials have teamed up on a program to provide food to students 18 and younger now through August.
Amid a teacher shortage, the nation’s fifth-largest district relies on educators from the Philippines to help cover hard-to-fill positions in elementary school, special education, and math and science.
The Nevada Senate passed Assembly Bill 282, which would require school districts to provide long-term substitute teachers with a subsidy to buy health insurance.
Republicans on the Senate Finance Committee voted against the K-12 education budget, saying more money should have been spent on literacy programs and teacher training.
The state’s charter school authority board voted Friday to appoint GEMS Assistant Principal Michael Taack as the school’s trustee during the closing process.
The school says the quote, from American Nazi Party founder George Lincoln Rockwell, runs counter to its “core values.”
The Clark County School Board heard a presentation Thursday on results of the study about minority-owned and women-owned businesses.
As the school year in Clark County ends, school police are taking stock of another year in which guns made their way onto too many school campuses.
The Clark County Education Association’s representative council unanimously passed a resolution Tuesday night seeking for Superintendent Jesus Jara to leave his job.
Two 15-year-old boys were arrested by school district police on suspicion of making threats against their high school on social media.