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Federal funding will help pay for the statewide initiative to keep kids in class this summer and help make up for pandemic-related learning loss.
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This year is part of a “transition” as Missouri education officials update the state’s accountability program for schools.
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After a reporter identified a security flaw that exposed teachers’ social security numbers, Missouri said it would offer credit monitoring.
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After personal information for thousands of educators in Missouri was shown to be vulnerable due to a website flaw, a Washington University professor sees this as an opportunity for the state to reevaluate its cybersecurity practices.
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Missouri’s Board of Education approved a new emergency amendment to give prospective substitute teachers the option to take a 20-hour online certification course to address a statewide substitute teacher shortage.
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Missouri governor demanded the investigation of a journalist who alerted the state to a website security flaw, pegging the cost to the state at $50 million. Democrats say that number is unrealistic, and it’s not clear what the money would be used for.
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The St. Louis Post-Dispatch discovered a flaw that exposed Social Security numbers for more than 100,000 Missouri teachers and alerted the state before publishing its findings, but the state is calling the act an unauthorized hack.
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Advocates said the groundwork for the office’s launch has been years in the making and will be a chance to transform the early childhood landscape.
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Missouri’s ambitious school testing plan landed with a thud. What it can teach us now about keeping the delta variant out of classrooms.
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Former educators said they have never encountered the teaching of critical race theory in their classes.