NCSMA :: Home The north carolina Scholastic media Association (NCSMA) serves scholastic Member schools include junior high and high schools from across the state. http://www.ibiblio.org/ncsma/
Extractions: Advisers may call on the director to conduct one- or two-day workshops in their schools or to work with them on special programs they wish to conduct in their schools or areas. Membership in NCSM Advisers Association is $10 for the annual period Aug. 1 - July 31. Prospective members may also pay $50 for membership in Journalism Education Association, an affiliation that carries with it the report of the Student Press Law Center and access to the center's legal advice.
Metro School - Charlotte, NC spiraling instruction aligned with the north carolina Standard Course of Study . Around 1987, Metro Center again changed it s name to Metro school, http://www.cms.k12.nc.us/allschools/metro/
Extractions: Metro School serves approximately 200 moderately to severely disabled students ranging in age from 5 to 21 who have been determined by their Individual Education Program (IEP) team to need a public separate school placement. The school offers instruction in the areas of functional academics, speech, language and communication, physical and occupational therapy, music, art, library skills, community-based instruction, horticulture, consumer science, prevocational and vocational skill instruction and adapted physical education. Classroom and support area teachers work on grade level teams to provide consistency in instruction across teams along with spiraling instruction aligned with the North Carolina Standard Course of Study. The Edmark Reading Program is used in each classroom as the basis for reading instruction; literacy and numeracy are embedded in all instruction throughout the day in the classrooms and in support area classes. Science kits are present in each classroom for hands-on instruction in science following the NC Standard Course of Study. Reading, writing, math, self-help, communication, work skills and other content and non-academic areas of instruction form the basis of the classroom schedules, based on students' IEP goals.
Untitled Document Myers Park Traditional Elementary school. Mission and Vision Statement Charlotte, north carolina 28207 Phone 980343-5522 Fax 980-343-5518 http://www.cms.k12.nc.us/allschools/mpts/
Extractions: Duke Divinity School Directory Contact Us How to Give ... Duke University Search Duke Divinity School seeks to nurture and transform people in ministry and those they engage. Strength and faithfulness in academics, worship, field placements, lifelong learning and partnerships with the church and other institutions make this possible. The Office of Black Church Studies helps students of color make the most of their theological education. 8 a.m. - noon
NC Periodical Index north carolina Central Law Journal / NC Central University school of Law 1995 north carolina Insight / NC Center for Public Policy Research 1983- http://www.lib.ecu.edu/NCCollPCC/scope2.html
MCNC-GCNS | News Releases media Center. News Releases Archived Releases The enhancements to NCRENin Southeastern north carolina are vital for fast access to resources http://www.mcnc.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=news_item&id=346
MCNC-GCNS | News Releases media Center. News Releases Archived Releases For four historic terms, Huntled north carolina through 20 years of dramatic economic change, http://www.mcnc.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=news_item&id=344
The Biotechnology Center FAQ 4.3 Can I bring a school group to the Biotechnology Center? Mike Easley askedthe north carolina Biotechnology Center to lead the development of a http://www.ncbiotech.org/aboutus/center/faq.cfm
Extractions: Quick Links... School Home Dean's Office Departments Institutes Contacts General Information News Events Lane Medical Library Jobs Alumni Make a Gift School of Medicine Home Administrative Offices News Releases News MedNews Home News releases Search news releases Medical Center Report Features Stanford Medicine magazine ... Medical center facts For the Media About us Media contacts Media guidelines Media seminars ... Contact the staff For Faculty, Staff How we can help you Getting media attention Contact the staff Suggest a story Special Topics Clark Center Stem cells More News Sources Dean's Newsletter Lucile Packard Children's Hospital news Stanford Report Stanford University News Service 06/14/05 News Release PRINT MEDIA CONTACT: Amy Adams at (650) 723-3900 ( amyadams@stanford.edu BROADCAST MEDIA CONTACT: M.A. Malone at (650) 723-6912 ( mamalone@stanford.edu Mitchell's arrival completes the center's proposed management team, with Irving Weissman, MD, as director and Steven Leibel, MD, as medical director of Stanford's clinical cancer center. She brings to Stanford more than a decade of experience in running a comprehensive cancer center, having served as associate director of the UNC cancer center since 1994.
William G. Enloe High School school code for registration from Student Services, a teacher, or the MediaCenter. Parents may access our north carolina school report card at Link http://enloehs.wcpss.net/
Archived:North Carolina north carolina CENTRAL UNIVERSITY President Judith L. Chambers group settings,or helping students locate books in the library/media center. http://www.ed.gov/inits/americareads/ARC_FWS/northcar.html
Extractions: Districts: Guilford County Program targets both children and non-reading or poorly reaing adult single mothers. Children begin with children of mothers in Challenge Opportunity Program, children after school at St. Matthews Church and in Bennett College Saturday programs. Children through junior high school. CENTRAL PIEDMONT COMMUNITY COLLEGE
N-C Middle School Media Center NewtonConover Middle school. media Center email me at sherry_mims@nccs.k12.nc.us.Sherry Mims - media Specialist, Newton-Conover Middle school. http://www.nccs.k12.nc.us/ncms/ncmsmediacenter.htm
Media Center | NC Museum Of Natural Sciences Museum selects 12 middleschool girls for Neuse River Project The NorthCarolina Museum of Natural Sciences, in downtown Raleigh, documents and http://www.naturalsciences.org/wnew/2005-02-16_neuseriver.html
Extractions: February 16, 2005 RALEIGH Twelve sixth-grade girls from Wake County have been selected to participate in the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences' Neuse River Project held February 22 through April 24. The project, one of the Museum's annual Girls in Science offerings, aims to foster middle school girls' interest in science by giving them the chance to perform research in the field and interact with women in science-related professions. The young women in the Neuse River Project will meet once a week after school to work at the Museum and in the field to learn about and participate in scientific research on water quality and wildlife in the Neuse River Basin. The girls will also maintain a journal and are encouraged to create and participate in projects that increase public awareness of water quality issues. The intensive program includes one overnight experience at the Museum's outdoor educational facility at Prairie Ridge and two field trips to local streams. At the end of the project, participants make presentations about their experience during an "open house" at Prairie Ridge. The 12 middle-schoolers were selected from a competitive application process that included a personal essay detailing their interest in natural sciences, and a recommendation from one of their science teachers. James Gassmann, science teacher from Heritage Middle School in Wake Forest and a sponsor for the past five years, said the key is self motivation. "Interest is a bigger factor than academic standing," he said. "Some girls get really excited about this opportunity."
NC National Board For Professional Teaching Standards They provide information and support to north carolina s public schools. north carolina Association of Educators Dorsey Harris; Center for Teaching and http://www.ncpublicschools.org/nbpts/
Extractions: All teachers teaching in Charter Schools are encouraged to check with your school administration as to any salary differentials offered for National Board Certification. The state continues to provide funding to Charter School Teachers to cover the assessment costs, per meeting eligibility criteria. However, each charter school has discretion as to any salary adjustments. NOTE :: Adobe Acrobat Reader (free download) is required to view PDF (portable document format) documents. For instructions or more information, please visit our PDF download page General Statute 115C-296.2 - National Board for Professional Teaching Standards Certification
Extractions: The Program in European Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Duke University was founded in the wake of the 1989 revolutions in Europe. With funding from Title VI, the Program became the Center for European Studies in 1994, a cross-campus initiative. In 1998 the joint center became one of ten US centers funded by the European Commission to promote the study of the European Union in the United States. The Center's mission is to advance understanding in the US of the social, political, and economic events shaping contemporary Europe by promoting scholarship, instruction, and language learning on o ur campuses and in the nation at large. The Center for European Studies funds the development of new courses on contemporary Europe, organizes and sponsors workshops and conferences, funds a program in Foreign Languages Across the Curriculum, and sponsors the teaching and learning of less commonly taught languages through campus based courses and FLAS awards. CES funds faculty research travel through competitive awards and supports several research working groups within which scholars from a variety of disciplines can meet and generate cross-disciplinary research. Graduate students are integrated into these groups as are area college faculty. In the past six years, our working groups have produced four published volumes, three more are currently under review. CES is the U.S. base for the Transatlantic Masters Program (TAM) an intensive 15-month MA program in comparative US-EU politics, policies, and society. TAM sponsors faculty and graduate student exchanges and implements an innovative program of graduate training that crosses two continents, with instruction in the languages of the host universities. TAM is run in consortium with the University of Washington-Seattle and six European Universities. Students may receive the MA from any of the participating universities in Europe or from UNC-CH.
College Of Charleston, Charleston, South Carolina College of Charleston Founded in 1770 Charleston, South carolina media Studies,Miles Early Childhood Development Center, Minority Student Services http://www.cofc.edu/
Extractions: A-to-Z site index Academic Advising Academic Affairs Academic Computing Academic Computing Liaisons Admissions Adult Student Services African American National Heritage Museum African American Student Programs African Studies African American Studies Alumni Relations American Studies Annual Security Report Anthropology Arabic Army ROTC Art History Arts Management Assessment and Planning Astronomy Athletics Attorney Assistance Program Auxiliary Services Avery Research Center Baseball (Men's) Basketball (Men's) Basketball (Women's) Bell South White Pages Bell South Yellow Pages Better Things To Do Biochemistry Biology Blacklock House Board of Trustees Bookstore Business Administration Business Affairs Campus Dining Campus Recreation Services Campus Security C.A.R.E. Career Services Carolina Lowcountry and Atlantic World Center for Creative Retirement Center for Disability Services Center for Effective Teaching and Learning Center for Entrepreneurship Center for Historic Preservation Center for Student Learning Chemistry/Biochemistry Chinese Classics Program Classics, German, Italian, Japanese
Burke County Public Schools Oak Hill Elementary s program is called SMMACK (stands for Summer media Milk AndCookie 200 South Center Street Hildebran, NC 28637 Phone 3976118 http://www.burke.k12.nc.us/
Extractions: Find Activist Tools ISSUES Jump to an Issue Afghanistan African American African Poverty Agriculture Anarchism Animal Rights/Liberati Anti-Zionism Arts Asian/Asian American Bhopal Campaign Biotechnology Books Not Bombs Building a Youth and S Campus Democracy Campus Recruiting Campus Worker Rights Civil Liberties Class Colombia Corporatization Cuba Death Penalty Democratic Party 2004 Digital Freedom Disability Drug Policy Reform Education Reform Electoral / Campaign F Environment Environmental Justice Fair Trade Farmworker Justice Free Speech Free Tibet Free Trade Area of the Gender Global Warming Globalization Green Party 2004 Gun Control Gun Rights Health/Physical Issues Health/Psychological I HIV/AIDS Activism and Homelessness Housing Human Rights Hunger Immigration Independent Media Labor Latino/a LGBTQ Living Wage Menstrual Activism Militarism and Environ Military Draft Military Recruitment Multi-Issue Mumia Abu-Jamal Nader 2004 Native American Nuclear Palestine Patriot Act Peace Police Brutality Prison-Industrial Comp Racism Religion and Social Ju Religious Liberty Renewable Energy Reproductive Freedom School of Americas Sexism Sexual Assault Sexual Violence Socialism Socially Responsible I Stop the War Against I Student Rights Sudan Sustainable Developmen Sweatshops The Media Third Party Tuition and Fees University Investments University Research US 2004 Election US Foreign Policy Vegetarian/Vegan Youth Rights