Join Julie Pile & Nancy Daly for Saturday Salon – 64 languages:  A once-rural Kentucky school system embraces diversity to a stunning degreeJoin Julie & Nancy Daly for Saturday Salon –

The below was provided by Saturday Salon, see you tonight! They come from South America, Asia, Europe and Africa – from Albania to Zimbabwe. Meet the new face of student enrollment in Boone County, Kentucky. As migrants and refugees have settled in this fast-growing county south of Cincinnati, the school district has boosted resources to educate its “English Learners.” Our guest speaker Nancy Daly (@Nancy_Daly) published an article about the trend, “Cultural change spoken in 64 languages at Boone County Schools,” in March. Readers told her they had no idea the…

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Countdown with ParentCamp to Innovate 2023!

innovate2023 conference

We are SO EXCITED about Innovate 2023! The countdown is on – less than 3 months for this awesome event! Julie Pile, Laura Gilchrist, and Ted Huff are hosting sessions and looking forward to collaborating with everybody. Did you hear about the venue? This year’s conference is taking place at —Armory STL – pretty AMAZING, right? Julie and Laura are teaming up together to facilitate the session, “Building Relational Trust with Your Families” – as you know, a TRUE PASSION for both of them! Ted is working with Beverly Boyd…

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NKYEC Fall Convening – Building Tomorrow’s Workforce Today

Education Council Fall Convening logo

Join the Northern Kentucky Education Council for its Fall Convening and learn how our region is working towards Kentucky’s Big Goal: 60×30. Date and time Tue, October 18, 2022, 9:00 AM – 11:00 AM EDT Location Gateway Community & Technical College: Boone Campus 500 Technology Way Florence, KY 41042

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National Alliance of Black School Educators’ Parent Summit

NABSE Parent Summit

The COVID-19 pandemic has taken an especially heavy toll on Black, Hispanic, and Indigenous communities. The learning loss was especially acute in schools that predominantly serve students of color. While the worst-case scenarios from the spring may have been averted, the cumulative learning loss could be substantial, especially in mathematics—with students on average likely to lose five to nine months of learning by the end of this school year. Students of color could be six to 12 months behind, compared with four to eight months for white students.  Parents, teachers, students, administrators,…

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