Education

School bus drivers deliver daily meals, schoolwork to ConVal students

With students learning at home, you wouldn’t think there was a big call for bus driving at the moment, but Kevin Brace and Ken Simonetta do a daily three-hour route, dropping off school breakfasts and lunches to Peterborough school kids.

UNH, all state colleges ‘intend’ to open to students in fall

By Staff
Seacoastonline.com

Leah Zarrilli right, photographs her friends and fellow senior classmates, dressed with their graduation caps, at the University of New Hampshire in Durham, Friday, May 8, 2020. Commencement ceremonies, which were scheduled for May 16, were postpone…

Leah Zarrilli right, photographs her friends and fellow senior classmates, dressed with their graduation caps, at the University of New Hampshire in Durham, Friday, May 8, 2020. Commencement ceremonies, which were scheduled for May 16, were postponed due to the COVID-19 virus outbreak. From left are Kelly Anderson, Devin Paquette, Megan Nolan and Zarrilli. The school has stated students have made it clear they want an in-person ceremony and UNH has not yet announced a date for commencement to be rescheduled. [AP Photo/Charles Krupa]

CONCORD -- The University of New Hampshire and all the colleges of the University System of New Hampshire and the Community College System of New Hampshire announced Friday they “intend to welcome students back to campuses for the fall term” amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The schools announced they are “working closely with state leaders and health professionals to develop guidelines and criteria that institutions will follow to support a safe return.”

USNH enrolls 32,000 students combined at UNH, Keene State College, Plymouth State University and Granite State College. The state’s community college system includes Great Bay Community College in Portsmouth and Rochester.

Lisa Thorne of USNH said said the announcement reflects the intentions of the schools, but they also acknowledge the pandemic creates continued uncertainty.

Read the full article.

These articles are being shared by partners in The Granite State News Collaborative. For more information visit collaborativenh.org. 


My first two weeks as a kindergarten teacher

The closure of my daughter’s school district through at the time was going to be March 27, (it changed the next day to April 3 and then again to May 4) with the implementation of remote learning to begin on March 23. It was clear now, I was set to be a one on one kindergarten teacher.