LCC September/October Continuing Education offerings
All in Education
Lenoir Community College graduate and court reporter Tori Pittman of Wake Forest recently won a fourth gold medal at Intersteno, the International Federation for Information and Communication Processing.
Greene County Schools posted the same performance grades as last year, but showed an increase in overall proficiency in end-of-year results revealed Monday evening.
Jones County has experienced plenty of success in education, but there have been some concerns from parents — especially when it comes to the new school.
Lenoir County Public Schools has revised its traditional school calendar to recoup instructional hours lost to Hurricane Dorian last week.
Playground and water park slides add up to summer fun, but for students, the summer reading slide is no joke. The tendency for school aged kids to read less—or not to read at all—during summer vacation creates a step backward in reading skills. And the problem is growing.
From football players to summer campers, they came by the thousands for the free breakfast and lunches served up from mid-June to mid-August in LCPS’s Summer Feeding Program.
Sixth and seventh grade science students will have fun studying some principles of physics this school year thanks to a grant to Lenoir County Public Schools from the Duke Energy Foundation.
Social studies teacher Shivar Person traveled to Ireland and Iceland this summer to expand his understanding of Celtic culture and northern European geography.
A former LCC trustee is being honored for his two decades of service to the school.
School bus drivers in Greene County have a higher initiative when they navigate roads during the early-morning hours during the 2019-20 academic year.
Around 8,500 students in the Lenoir County Public Schools system enjoyed their first day of the 2019-20 school year.
Waving dark blue and white pom poms, teachers and folks from the community greeted students from different entry points Monday morning at Greene County Intermediate School.
From the line of white and blue buses pulling into the school parking lot to the just-purchased book bags filled with fresh notebooks and pencils, Opening Day at Arendell Parrott Academy was a blend of the old and the new.
The employees of the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services in Raleigh collected a truckload of school supplies for Lenoir County Public Schools and the department’s leader, Dr. Mandy Cohen, delivered them to Kinston herself on Tuesday.
The LCPS Exceptional Children Department honored three staffers at the department’s annual opening day gathering.
Lenoir Community College is offering several short-term classes in August and September.
LCPS has brought in speakers to help prepare county educators for the 2019-20 school year.
At this week’s opening day ceremony at Historic Grainger Stadium, the state’s teacher of the year took time to motivate Lenoir County Public Schools teachers and employees.