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MCPS students return to classroom instruction
MCPS students return to classroom instruction

Yahoo

time23-04-2025

  • Climate
  • Yahoo

MCPS students return to classroom instruction

The McLean County Public Schools (MCPS) Board announced during a special-called school board luncheon at noon on Tuesday that students are returning to in-person instruction today — Wednesday, April 23. Students have been out of the classroom since the beginning of the month following the district's spring break. They were supposed to return to the classroom on April 7, but schools have been closed to in-person learning because of widespread flooding across McLean County. 'Because of the days that we missed previously due to snow, illness and flooding, the district was awarded five extra disaster nontraditional instruction, or NTI, days,' said district Superintendent Tommy Burrough. Those extra NTI days were granted to districts as needed thanks to the passage of Kentucky House Bill 241. The bill allowed state Education Commissioner Robbie Fletcher to authorize 'up to five disaster relief student attendance days when schools could provide instruction without having students in the classroom.' Kentucky school districts are typically only allocated 10 NTI days to use during the school year. MCPS administrators have utilized a combination of those disaster relief NTI days, along with outright school closures, since April 7, having used the final two allotted days during the beginning of the week. 'Obviously student and staff safety (are) our number one priority at the moment,' said Burrough. 'But, even though there are some routes that buses aren't able to take, we have got to get these students back into the classroom so we can finish up this school year.' MCPS' Transportation Director Ashley Troutman said that roads such as Highway 256 and Highway 1155, along with much of Rumsey, are still underwater. 'So, bus drivers are having to utilize alternate routes to get students to school,' Troutman said. 'We noticed that Fox Hollow Road has been completely destroyed from the floodwater, which affects one student from our district and that parent has agreed to provide transportation until the end of the school year. And then we have students in the area of Highway 256 who are utilizing boats from their homes to Highway 140, where the floodwaters have receded so that they can get to school. Those families are more familiar with this flooding situation and really just get it.' Burrough said that he has advised all of the school principals to take notice of which students are absent. 'I've told all of the school principals to check in with the students who can't make it into the classroom (Wednesday) to get more of an idea about who all is displaced and who can't make it to school yet,' he said. 'This allows us to know the portion of our students that have been affected and relocated because of the flooding.' Burrough explained that after adding up all of the days missed, the district's final day of classroom instruction would be Monday, June 9. 'But we have three instruction days built into the calendar as a contingency plan and I suggest utilizing those days so that we can make the last day for students Wednesday, June 4,' Burrough said. Board members across the panel agreed with the superintendent and voted to utilize those 'banked' days. Members of the school board also discussed plans for this year's graduation ceremony at McLean County High School (MCHS). 'I think we should hold graduation sooner rather than later,' said school board member Katie Gunterman. 'The students are already having to wait until June to graduate, and I don't think we should put off the ceremony until the weekend.' Board members should be making a final determination about graduation details during the Thursday evening MCPS school board meeting.

Devon woman with rare condition praises genetic testing service
Devon woman with rare condition praises genetic testing service

BBC News

time11-03-2025

  • Health
  • BBC News

Devon woman with rare condition praises genetic testing service

A woman born with an extremely rare genetic skin condition has had two healthy children using a cutting-edge genetic testing Burrough, of Axminster, Devon, has Ichthyosis with confetti, a condition reported in less than 50 people is characterised by severely dry, red, scaly, and inflamed skin that is highly susceptible to infection and skin Burrough said: "We didn't think having a child was possible without passing on my condition - not a day goes by where I don't have to pinch myself that these two bundles of joy have been brought into our lives." Elsie, five, and Annie, seven months, were born using pre-implantation genetic testing (PGT).PGT is a type of IVF treatment that involves testing embryos for the condition, allowing couples affected by serious inherited conditions to have an unaffected Exeter-based PGT service is the only NHS PGT service in the South West and is run in partnership with Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital in London, the UK's largest PGT provider. Dr Emma Kivuva, consultant clinical geneticist and genetics lead for the service at the Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, said: "A small number of cells are removed from the edge of each of the developing embryos and we test these cells using a test we have designed for the family's specific genetic condition."We would then only transfer an unaffected embryo into the womb." Ms Burrough's condition had a 50% risk of being passed down to any children, and some babies are so profoundly affected that they do not survive."I have to undergo a lot of treatment every day, which takes three to five hours and involves bath emollients, creaming and exfoliating," she said."I don't regulate my body temperature."I wouldn't be able to cope with knowing I had passed on the condition."Annie is the 50th baby born to this service in said she hoped telling her story would open the doors for other people in similar situations and people would feel able to give it a go. Dr Emma Kivuva, consultant clinical geneticist and genetics lead for the service at the trust, said: "We are extremely proud to have marked the milestone of the 50th baby born thanks to the PGT service. "By offering this service, we can help families who might otherwise face difficult decisions about having children due to their genetic risk. "Providing a service in the South West makes treatment more accessible to people living in this region."Dr Sonal Paradkar, PGT co-ordinator for the clinic said, said service could cater for several thousand rare genetic include Huntington's disease, cystic fibrosis and some rare inherited cancer conditions.

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