The University of Louisville has dedicated a pavilion to the Class of 2020, who was forced to have a virtual graduation because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Greater Clark County Schools will transition to virtual learning from Sept. 7-10, the school corporation announced Monday.
The Kentucky Department of Education said students in fifth through 12th grades can request performance-based schedules if local school boards’ policies allow performance-based coursework, which can be taught traditionally or virtually.
Space will be limited.
The key feature of the district's classroom reopening plan -- hybrid scheduling -- has posed new problems for parents like Sara Hagan, whose 7-year-old son is in first grade at Stopher Elementary.
After more than a year of offering online classes during the pandemic, GCCS is expanding its existing virtual academy.
The district dropped hybrid learning and went back to in-person learning five days a week. Students can still decide to learn virtually, but can’t do both.
For the spring 2021 semester, the university is offering students "hybrid" courses that combine "traditional in-person instructional activities with some online learning activities."
To prepare school buildings and transportation routes for the transition, all Hardin County Schools students will have a virtual learning day on March 17.
After nearly a year away from the driver’s seat, Jefferson County Public Schools bus driver R.W. Fawbush is ready to get back behind the wheel once classrooms in Kentucky’s largest school district start reopening next week.