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Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.

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3 results for Lukasik, Lisa
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Record #:
4382
Author(s):
Abstract:
In 1995-96, the number of home-schooled children in North Carolina exceeded 13,000. Eventually a point is reached where parents of these children cannot instruct in advanced courses, such as chemistry and physics, and request local school systems to allow their children to attend part-time. Schools are not required to do this, either by state or federal law. North Carolina law does not prohibit this, allowing schools systems to decide requests on an individual basis.
Source:
School Law Bulletin (NoCar K 23 C33), Vol. 28 Issue 3, Summer 1997, p16-22, il
Record #:
5714
Author(s):
Abstract:
During the 1994-95 school year, over 11,000 children were home schooled in the state. This method cannot offer all classes. Requests to public schools for special classes like chemistry challenge the schools in fitting these students in.
Record #:
4753
Abstract:
The North Carolina General Assembly amended General Statute 143-128 in September 1998. This amendment changes the way a school district can award certain construction contracts. Lukasik and Malone discuss how this amendment will affect school systems.
Source:
Voice (NoCar LB 2831.624 N8 V6x), Vol. 10 Issue 1, Spring/Summer 2000, p32-33, il