- Typically, for a college sophomore to be itted into a program to complete a degree in education, they have to first a test called the Praxis Core. The State Board of Education voted to recommend that state lawmakers end the requirement because it could be a barrier for prospective teachers, and the test isn't associated with measures of being an effective teacher.
- The school board has requested a $27.4 million increase in local school funding, up nearly 15 percent from last year, to raise pay for teachers and staff. The Durham county manager's budget proposal includes a 3.25 cent property tax rate increase and falls about $14 million short of what the school board is asking.
- In Bertie County, a newly built housing complex intended for teachers will open this summer.
- Unlike in many states, North Carolina public school teachers can not collectively bargain contracts. Nor can they legally strike. The situation has broad effects for public school employees.
- The Durham Association of Educators announced a second "day of protest" for Monday, Feb 5. A majority of educators at seven schools plan to take leave to call for the school board to maintain recent staff raises through February.
- Earlier this year, WUNC reported on a teacher who lost her teaching license because she struggled to a licensing exam. ‘Ms. Art’ is an elementary art teacher who struggles with testing anxiety. Now, a policy that ed as part of the state budget offers a solution to keep teachers like her in classrooms.
- Until recently, North Carolina teachers had to apply accrued time off or take unpaid leave when they had a child.
- A Wake County teacher has launched an online tool to help teachers calculate how much money they've lost over their careers due to inflation.
- The Wake County school board has voted to use local funds to reinstate master's degree pay for teachers and social workers who would have qualified under a repealed state law. The board also approved additional bonuses to reward bus drivers for perfect attendance.
- To have a career in teaching, every beginning teacher must first a test. More than 1,000 teachers have struggled to their exams on time, including this art teacher in Cumberland County Schools.