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Argyle ISD produced a 10-year strategic growth plan in 2023. Now it’s putting three bond propositions totaling $511.5 million before local voters to fund the key parts of that plan.
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Dallas Independent School Board Place 5 Trustee Maxie Johnson, whose district includes Wilmer-Hutchins High School, hosted a community discussion Tuesday night on the shooting that left one student injured.
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For students like Rayvon Bray, the Multicultural Center at the University of North Texas was like a second home — a place to meet friends, play games and share experiences as part of the Black gay community.
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Crowley ISD Superintendent Michael McFarland started a chant as he kicked off a 2023 bond discussion.
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Facing a $40 million budget shortfall, decreasing enrollment and low student performance, Fort Worth ISD declared last week its intention to close a second school beginning in the 2024-25 school year.
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If the next Texas Legislature doesn't increase funding, Denton ISD may broach school closures.
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County and state records show Mansfield ISD Place 2 candidate Angel L. Hidalgo wasn’t registered to vote in Tarrant County when he filed to run. Some residents are urging the school board to remove him from the ballot.
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The governor singled out pro-Palestine groups and said they should be subject to discipline.
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Crowley ISD trustee Mia Hall faces accusations of misusing public funds and school district resources for political campaigning.
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Richardson Superintendent Tabitha Branum says the closures are the only option to avoid a $28.5 million deficit. But prior to the vote, more than two dozen frustrated parents and students urged trustees to reject the plan.
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Kristin Harman knew her position as an instructional coach at Arlington ISD’s Bailey Junior High School might get cut.
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Sanger ISD announced Tuesday that the district will shift to a four-day instructional week for the 2024-25 school year. The school board recently approved the change unanimously, according to a news release, after “extensive research, community engagement, and discussion.”
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Northwest ISD parents and the school board president defended the middle school teacher whose home and campus were sent hoax bomb threats last week after a post on Libs of TikTok. Meanwhile in Lewisville ISD, speakers once again spoke in support of a teacher targeted for wearing a dress at school.
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Hoax bomb threats against a teacher at home and the Northwest Independent School District campus she works at led to investigations this week by local and federal authorities. The school district was closed for spring break, so officials suspect the perpetrator was not local.