Please visit to learn more about how the NEA Mental Health App works and to sign up. The newest Ohio Education Association Legislative Watch release is available: ☑️ House Bill 67 Advances to the Governor ☑️ HB 200: Report Card Overhaul Receives First Hearing Sponsor Testimony For the complete Legislative Watch ➡️... See More In celebration of # readacrossamerica, retired educators from OEA - Retired recorded themselves reading some of their favorite children's books. 📚 The Rough-Face Girl by Rafe Martin What happens in the classroom depends in large part on what happens in the Statehouse. OEA's VP Jeff Wensing joins the Education Matters podcast for a Legislative Update to keep a close eye on all of the bills making their way through the Ohio legislature that could shape the education landscape in the state. TransistorFM ➡️ Apple podcasts ➡️... See More Congratulations Martha! 🎉 💯 🏆 👏 In celebration of # readacrossamerica, retired educators from OEA - Retired recorded themselves reading some of their favorite children's books.
The heart of the city is always the hot spot for private investigators, so when you're in a state with three world-class metros like Cleveland, Columbus, and Cincinnati, you know there's bound to be a lot of cases to take and a lot of opportunities to make your mark in private investigations. Ohio State University's search for justice for the sexual abuse victims of a team doctor is just one example of what a career in private investigations can look like in the Buckeye State. After hiring PIs to investigate claims of abuse dating back to the 1980s, OSU agreed to pay $41 million into a fund for the victims of a now-deceased team doctor. Thanks to the tireless work of PIs on the case, not only was this settlement reached in early 2020, but the 162 victims were given some sense that justice was done. According to the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, the number of jobs in private investigations is projected to grow in the coming years, rising from 1, 220 in 2016 to a projected 1, 310 by 2026 – that's a 7.
Children may be excused from compulsory attendance in order to be home educated if their parents comply with the state's homeschool regulations. Follow these steps to homeschool under this option: 1. Submit annual notification to the school district in order for your child to be excused from compulsory attendance. In order to receive an excuse, parents or guardians must submit annual notification to the resident school district superintendent either (a) no later than the first week of the start of the public school building the child would attend in the school district of residence, (b) within one week of the date on which the child begins to reside in the district, or (c) within one week from the child's withdrawal from a school.