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North Carolina's superintendent of public instruction is alleging that more than 70,000 third-grade students have been wrongly promoted since 2014 even鈥
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North Carolina's Read to Achieve program, enacted by the General Assembly in 2012, is continuing to get lackluster results. The program is a statewide鈥
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Third grader Dylan Ward says that when he goes to college, he鈥檚 going to be a 鈥減rofessional football player, that鈥檚 it.鈥漈he shaggy-haired nine-year-old鈥
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Lawmakers in a House committee on education spending released their budget proposal Thursday, and it includes several policy changes. One of those is an鈥
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Senate Leader Phil Berger is criticizing the Department of Public Instruction for a budget it proposed in January. Documents show the department wanted to鈥
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Forty percent of the state鈥檚 third-graders tested below grade level in reading last school year. Those are levels of achievement many parents and鈥
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Across the state, 79.2 percent of third-grade students showed they were proficient last year, according to a report presented to the State Board of鈥
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Calling the current testing mandate excessive, school districts are asking the State Board of Education if they can implement their own tests to fulfill鈥