Jill Biden – 蜜桃影视 America's Education News Source Fri, 19 Apr 2024 20:18:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Jill Biden – 蜜桃影视 32 32 First Lady Visits North Carolina to Discuss the State鈥檚 Dual Enrollment Model /article/first-lady-visits-north-carolina-to-discuss-the-states-dual-enrollment-model/ Mon, 22 Apr 2024 16:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=725658 This article was originally published in

First Lady Dr. Jill Biden said North Carolina is a leader when it comes to providing opportunities for students to earn college credit and connect to careers while still in high school. 

Dr. Biden visited North Carolina April 15 to discuss innovative learning programs, like dual enrollment, that are bridging gaps between the classroom and careers.

The visit is part of President Biden鈥檚 .


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In his , the president allocated $7.2 billion to establish or expand programs that would allow students to earn postsecondary credits through career-connected dual enrollment while still in high school. 

According to a statement from the Office of the First Lady, 鈥淭he funds would be provided as matching dollars to states to initiate or expand efforts to spur greater enrollment in dual enrollment programs.”

The First Lady鈥檚 North Carolina visit included a stop at where she met with educators and students to learn about the college鈥檚 dual enrollment efforts. Following the briefing, Dr. Biden visited Pitt鈥檚 biotechnology lab and automotive bay and heard from high school students working toward postsecondary credentials.

Dr. Biden then visited alongside Gov. Roy Cooper.

Gov. Roy Cooper introducing First Lady Dr. Jill Biden. Emily Thomas/EducationNC

Before welcoming the First Lady to the podium, Gov. Cooper explained how the state鈥檚 dual enrollment program,  (CCP), is a tool to help high school students fast track their education and career goals. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why we鈥檙e all here today,鈥 Dr Biden said. 鈥淣orth Carolina has been a leader in providing those (dual enrollment) opportunities and is exemplary in transforming high school into a place that prepares students for jobs.鈥 

More than across North Carolina participated in CCP during the 2022-23 academic year. 

A showed dual enrollment was up 12% from the previous year. The most notable increase was across the Career and Technical Education (CTE) pathway 鈥 jumping 21% from the last academic year. The CTE pathway is often aligned with high-skill and high-demand jobs, providing opportunities for students to learn a variety of academic and technical skills.

First Lady Dr. Jill Biden. (Emily Thomas/EducationNC)

After her remarks, Dr. Biden and Gov. Cooper joined a panel of educators and dually enrolled high school students from three North Carolina community colleges to discuss their experiences with CCP. 

Panelists highlighted how CCP is a chance to identify career interests and begin earning college credit that will help them in a future job. The four students on the panel are taking college courses aligned with various careers, including EMT certification, business administration, electrical engineering, manufacturing, and computer science.

The students said CCP has given them opportunities to explore careers and the confidence that they could succeed in a college setting.  

鈥淚 can be successful in these types of environments,鈥 said Giovanni Robinson, a dually-enrolled student at GTCC. 

As for connecting students to careers, community colleges are doubling down on their efforts to support students by providing opportunities to become pre-apprentices.

and , both represented on the panel, are among many of the state’s community colleges that are coordinating CCP in ways that meet the needs of industry in their communities. 

is one example of cross-sector partnerships that bring together K-12 districts, community colleges, and employers. It鈥檚 an approach that leverages dual enrollment and the state鈥檚 apprenticeship program to carve out pathways for students to earn college credit, income, and skilled training. 

In her closing remarks, panel moderator Amy Loyd, assistant secretary for the Office of Career, Technical, and Adult Education at the U.S. Department of Education, thanked the audience and expressed gratitude for the chance to learn from the state. 

鈥淲e really are delighted to learn from North Carolina and lift up the great work of your great state as a model and exemplar for all of our country to learn from as we’re thinking about how we create career pathways for all young people,” Loyd said.

Panel discussion during First Lady Dr. Jill Biden’s visit to Greensboro. Emily Thomas/EducationNC

North Carolina’s Career and College Promise explained

Career and College Promise (CCP) is a dual enrollment program that allows high school students to take college courses tuition-free in North Carolina. 

CCP includes three pathways: college transfer, career and technical education (CTE), and Cooperative Innovative High Schools (CIHS), which include early colleges. The pathways are structured and provide students opportunities to earn credits that often lead to certificates and associate degrees.  

The state has long been a leader in dual enrollment programs — dating back over 30 years when the first iteration of the program launched.

When CCP was , it was done in such a way that students could earn a credential in less time than would normally be required. And regardless of their path 鈥 obtaining a degree, earning college transfer credits, or pursuing a credential to transition to the workforce 鈥 students would save time and money, both of which are linked to an increased . 

Research has consistently found that Career and College Promise benefits students, parents, and North Carolina as a whole.

A showed students who participated in CCP had higher high school graduation rates and higher postsecondary enrollment rates than those who did not. The study compared CCP students to a similar group of students who did not participate in CCP over seven years.

Students in college transfer or CTE pathways were 9% more likely to enroll in a North Carolina public college after high school. CIHS students were 27% more likely to enroll in a North Carolina public college after graduating.

The study also found that economically disadvantaged students and those from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups benefited most from CCP. You can read more about CCP below.

Photo highlights

Gov. Roy Cooper and First Lady Dr. Jill Biden. (Emily Thomas/EducationNC)
Panel discussion during First Lady Dr. Jill Biden’s visit to Greensboro. (Emily Thomas/EducationNC)
From left to right: GTCC student Teniola “Teni” Oladunjoye, GTCC president Dr. Anthony Clarke, and GTCC student Giovanni Robinson. (Emily Thomas/EducationNC)
Surry-Yadkin Works representatives and students. (Emily Thomas/EducationNC)

This first appeared on and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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First Lady Jill Biden Cheers Educator Wellness Efforts in Utah Visit /article/first-lady-jill-biden-cheers-educator-wellness-efforts-in-utah-visit/ Fri, 19 Jan 2024 16:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=720655 This article was originally published in

A group of Hunter High School students and educators welcomed first lady Jill Biden in a visit to the school, part of her whirlwind trip to Utah on Tuesday.

The majority of Hunter High students were dismissed in the afternoon, but some, including choir group The Madrigals and student council members, stayed to perform or to shake the first lady鈥檚 hand, sporting school T-shirts and jackets.

At the high school, Jill Biden, who is also a teacher, highlighted educator wellness in one of Utah鈥檚 most diverse areas, in front of 140 Hunter High employees in the school鈥檚 commons. Posters with teacher appreciation messages decorated the walls.


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In a quick visit to the Beehive State, Biden visited Hunter High School in West Valley City with Vivek Murthy, U.S. Surgeon General, and Abby Cox, Utah鈥檚 first lady. She was also scheduled to attend .

鈥淭oday first lady Cox and I are here to tell you that you are not alone,鈥 Biden said, 鈥渢hat we understand, that we are working to honor this profession to give you the support that you deserve.鈥

Sometimes it feels like the weight to educate people across the country 鈥渋s too heavy to carry,鈥 Biden said, especially after the pandemic as students have needed support for more issues in addition to academic performance.

She praised the president鈥檚 initiatives to address mental health and academic needs of students, including passing a bipartisan gun safety law and a student loans forgiveness program.

鈥淏ut he can鈥檛 do this alone. And here in Utah, he doesn鈥檛 have to, thanks to the work of your governor and your first lady,鈥 Jill Biden said, adding that Utah has taken 鈥渁 big step鈥 to ensure that teachers are properly compensated.

Jill Biden also highlighted the work of Utah鈥檚 first lady, Abby Cox, also an educator, to address exhaustion and burnout among teachers and school staff.

Educator wellness is one of Cox鈥檚 . As some educators in Hunter work with children in the foster care system and those with intellectual disabilities, the state is working with these communities to ensure their success.

鈥淒r. Biden and I have this passion for educators in common. She has been an advocate for teachers for as long as she鈥檚 been a teacher, and it鈥檚 been a long time,鈥 Cox said. 鈥淪o I love this opportunity that she and I have to come together in a shared purpose and a shared goal of uplifting our educators making sure that you have the tools and resources that you need to be successful.鈥

Biden touched down on a cold Salt Lake City day and hurried to her motorcade Tuesday afternoon. She arrived an hour later than scheduled, a delay she later attributed to an inch of snow in Washington D.C., a fact she could laugh at in Utah.

Biden was greeted by first lady Abby Cox and her 17-year-old daughter, Emma Kate. Temperatures at the private hangar off Salt Lake City International Airport hovered around freezing at Biden鈥檚 arrival, attended by local media.

Following her visit to Hunter High School, the first lady was scheduled to attend fundraising events in Park City.

鈥淚t鈥檚 super special that we were chosen,鈥 Jordan Martinsen, an English teacher at Hunter High, said during the school event. 鈥(The fact) that she鈥檚 a teacher herself makes it a more genuine message because she鈥檚 kind of been there and done that.鈥

While she was receptive to the message, she鈥檚 still waiting for more action from the state to address educators鈥 wellness, she said.

鈥淚 love this school, and I love this district. So I鈥檓 not going anywhere,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey talked about a lot of really nice, lovely things. Sometimes that鈥檚 not the day-to-day reality, but I did like the message and I think it鈥檚 nice to be reminded that there鈥檚 people on your side.鈥

Parallel to West Valley City, which according to the is a minority-majority community, Hunter High鈥檚 school body is predominantly composed of students of color, which make up 66% of its population 鈥 50% of them are Hispanic 鈥 according to 2022 data.

About 48% of students were also reported to be economically disadvantaged, according to the Granite School District.

鈥淐ompensation is a part of meeting teachers鈥 needs, but it鈥檚 also about instructional support,鈥 Granite School District superintendent Rich K. Nye said on Tuesday. 鈥淲hat does it look like to have, say, a literacy paraprofessional in the room, or an interventionist in the room, or a school psychologist, or licensed clinical social worker to be able to meet the needs of the students?鈥

The district has grown its mental health resources available for teachers through insurance plans or its own wellness clinics, Nye said.

The district has also prioritized strategies to address teachers鈥 retention concerns, prioritizing the recruitment of educational support professionals, and taking into account their interests and that they represent the communities鈥 demographics.

Biden, according to her , has championed different educational initiatives to open up more opportunities to all students, such as universal preschool and more affordable higher education chances, including free community college.

In her , Biden walked through Glendale Middle School, located on Salt Lake City鈥檚 west side and also known for its, where she met with students and spoke about her commitment to raise teachers鈥 compensations and recruit more staff of color.

The first lady was set to depart Utah Tuesday night for San Francisco, where she鈥檚 scheduled for additional fundraising events for the Biden Victory Fund and other community meetings. Jill Biden will visit San Francisco and Healdsburg in California, in addition to Columbus, Ohio.

McKenzie Romero contributed to this report.

is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Utah News Dispatch maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor McKenzie Romero for questions: info@utahnewsdispatch.com. Follow Utah News Dispatch on and .

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White House Takes On Urgent K-12 Cybersecurity Threat at First-Ever Summit /article/white-house-takes-on-urgent-k-12-cybersecurity-threat-at-first-ever-summit/ Tue, 08 Aug 2023 22:45:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=712922 Shortly before First Lady Jill Biden took the podium at the White House Tuesday to champion a new federal initiative to combat K-12 school ransomware attacks, the cyber gang Medusa announced its latest victim on the dark web.

Such unrelenting attacks 鈥 this time against a Bergen County, New Jersey, district 鈥攁re what brought the first lady as well as some 200 federal cybersecurity officials, school district leaders and tech company executives together for a first-ever White House summit on strengthening school district defenses.

鈥淚t鈥檚 going to take all of us,鈥 Biden said. 


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The breaches have grinded school technology systems nationwide 鈥渢o a halt,鈥 the first lady said at the East Room gathering, forcing some districts to cancel classes as reams of sensitive student, parent and educator data were stolen and leaked online. In March, a Medusa attack on Minneapolis Public Schools exposed records about child abuse inquiries, student mental health crises and campus physical security details. 

鈥淚f we want to safeguard our children鈥檚 futures, we must protect their personal data,鈥 she said. 鈥淓very student deserves the opportunity to see a school counselor when they鈥檙e struggling and not worry that these conversations will be shared with the world.鈥

Among the new strategies announced Tuesday is the creation of a Government Coordinating Council that will provide 鈥渇ormal, ongoing collaboration鈥 between all levels of government and school districts to prepare for and respond to data breaches. Officials with the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said the agency would provide individualized assessments and cybersecurity training to 300 K-12 education entities over the next year. 

First Lady Jill Biden and Education Secretary Miguel Cardona look on as Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas speaks during a back-to-school K-12 cybersecurity summit at the White House on Aug. 8. (Getty Images)

Tuesday鈥檚 cybersecurity event didn鈥檛 come with the announcement of any new federal regulations but was instead positioned as the first step in a new-found federal urgency around cybersecurity in schools. The Federal Communications Commission in late July proposed a $200 million pilot program to enhance cybersecurity in schools and libraries that still needs to be approved.

鈥淲hen schools face cyber attacks, the impacts can be huge,鈥 Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said. 鈥淟et鈥檚 be clear, we need to be taking these cyber attacks on schools as seriously as we do the physical attacks on critical infrastructure.鈥

In released by the Education Department and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, the agencies recommended that school districts implement multi-factor authentication, enforce minimum password strength standards and ensure software is kept up to date. They should also consider moving on-premises information technology services to cloud-based systems. 

鈥淒o not underestimate the ruthlessness of those who wish to do us harm,鈥 Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said. 鈥淭hey have proven their willingness to steal and leak such private student information as psychiatric hospitalizations, home struggles and suicide attempts. Do not wait until the crisis comes to start preparing.鈥 

School cybersecurity expert Doug Levin, who attended the summit, said it was a positive development to see the federal government, and the Education Department in particular, focus on the effects of ransomware on schools. The Education Department has been 鈥渕ostly absent from these conversations鈥 in the past, said the national director of The K12 Security Information eXchange.

Meanwhile, several companies, including education technology vendors, unveiled new commitments to help facilitate digital security in schools. Amazon Web Services announced a new $20 million grant program to bolster K-12 school cybersecurity while Cloudflare committed to providing free cybersecurity tools to small districts with 2,500 or fewer students. 

Schools are now the single leading target for hackers, outpacing health care, technology, financial services and manufacturing industries, according to a global survey of IT professionals released last month by the British cybersecurity company Sophos.

In the U.S. school district cyber attacks reached a record high of 37 in the month of June alone, , but Tuesday鈥檚 event centered largely on a crisis that unfolded in Los Angeles nearly a year ago. 

Last September, a notorious ransomware group carried out an attack on the Los Angeles Unified School District, the nation鈥檚 second largest, that resulted in some 500 gigabytes of district data being published to the Russian-speaking group鈥檚 dark-web leak site. 

A major theme of the White House summit was the politically connected superintendent鈥檚 swift outreach to federal agencies, including the U.S. Department of Education and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. That collaboration, Superintendent Alberto Carvalho and federal education officials said, set into motion a response plan that mitigated the attack, limited the number of files breached and avoided class cancellations. 

Jen Easterly, director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, called it 鈥渢he Harvard Business School case study on how to get this right.鈥 

Other school districts should respond similarly, said FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate. When school leaders suspect they鈥檝e been the target of an attack, he said, it鈥檚 incumbent that they 鈥減lease call us immediately.鈥 In L.A.鈥檚 case, the FBI was able to have a team of agents on the ground in less than 24 hours, he said, enabling them to freeze vulnerable accounts and secure sensitive information that had been sought out by the threat actors. 

That coordinated response didn鈥檛 prevent some 2,000 current and former students鈥 highly sensitive psychological evaluations from being leaked on the dark web, an investigation by 蜜桃影视 revealed. Carvalho initially denied that such records were exposed in the attack, but the district acknowledged they were after the story was published. The district also initially said the attack began and ended on Sept. 3 鈥 the Saturday of Labor Day weekend 鈥 but a follow-up investigation determined that an intrusion began as early as July 31, the .

While Carvalho didn鈥檛 comment Tuesday on the leak of sensitive psychological information, he said the number of stolen files 鈥渃ould have been much worse,鈥 adding that the hackers 鈥渆ncrypted and exfiltrated very little thanks to our actions.鈥 Among the actions they didn鈥檛 take, the schools chief said, was paying the undisclosed ransom demand because 鈥渨e don鈥檛 negotiate with terrorists.鈥

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White House Rolls Out Cybersecurity Initiative as Schools Face Devastating Hacks /article/white-house-rolls-out-cybersecurity-initiative-as-schools-face-devastating-hacks/ Mon, 07 Aug 2023 09:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=712723 Updated, Aug. 7: A tornado watch forced the postponement of the White House K-12 cybersecurity summit from 4 p.m . Monday to 10:30 a.m. EST Tuesday. Check back on 蜜桃影视 for Mark Keierleber’s full report from D.C.

First Lady Jill Biden, senior administration officials, school district heads and technology company executives will convene at the White House Monday to kick off a new cybersecurity defense initiative as schools increasingly fall victim to crippling ransomware attacks. 

The Education Department will launch a coordinating council to provide formal collaboration between government officials and district leaders to help schools strengthen their cybersecurity capabilities in the face of attacks that have closed campuses and exposed highly sensitive student and educator information online. The effort was announced by senior Biden administration officials on a press call Sunday evening. 

The council is being billed as the department鈥檚 鈥渒ey first step鈥 in a renewed focus on cybersecurity after multiple districts 鈥 including in Los Angeles and Minneapolis 鈥 were targeted by cyber gangs. 


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At the White House event, federal officials will hear from school district leaders who navigated attacks, including Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Alberto Carvalho, who led America鈥檚 second-largest school system through a hack last September. That breach, an investigation by 蜜桃影视 revealed, exposed thousands of current and former students鈥 highly sensitive psychological evaluations on the dark web.

In addition to the first lady, others expected to attend the 4 p.m. White House summit include Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and Federal Communications Commission Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. 

Anne Neuberger, the deputy national security advisor for cyber and emerging technologies, said the administration seeks to help school districts protect sensitive information about students, parents and educators. In March, a ransomware attack against Minneapolis Public Schools led to a data breach that exposed more than 189,000 files, including records related to sexual misconduct investigations, child abuse reports and district physical security information that鈥檚 typically kept private. 

Neuberger called the Minneapolis breach 鈥渁 particularly vicious example,鈥 citing the disclosure of closely held school security information, which was first revealed in an investigation by 蜜桃影视. 

Teams of federal cybersecurity experts will visit schools and help them create incident response plans, said Neuberger, adding that districts 鈥 particularly small ones 鈥 often lack the money and resources to adequately prepare for attacks. 

Schools are now the single leading target for hackers, outpacing health care, technology, financial services and manufacturing industries, according to a global survey of IT professionals released last month by the British cybersecurity company Sophos.

Cindy Marten, the deputy secretary of education, said that government officials and school leaders must make school cybersecurity a priority at the same level as physical infrastructure. She said she experienced firsthand how districts and the federal government can work together to mitigate the harm from attacks. Carvalho reached out to the Education Department after the Los Angeles district was hacked, Marten said, making clear the importance of partnerships.

It can take as long as nine months for districts to recover from cyberattacks, , and can cost them as much as $1 million to respond. 

Several technology companies have also committed to offer schools 鈥渇ree and low-cost resources.鈥 Amazon Web Services pledged to provide $20 million for a K-12 cyber grant program, free security training and incident response help. Meanwhile, will offer free cybersecurity tools to small districts with 2,500 or fewer students. 

Other federal commitments announced Monday include a guide from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the National Guard Bureau to help schools report cybersecurity incidents and tap into federal cyber defense expertise. 

Last month, the Federal Communications Commission proposed a $200 million grant program to help districts bolster cybersecurity. 

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Nation's Top Teacher is a Special Educator from Nevada /article/immigrant-bilingual-special-educator-named-national-teacher-of-year-says-shes-devoted-to-finding-all-our-students-strengths/ Sat, 08 May 2021 13:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=571781 Get essential education news and commentary delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up here for 蜜桃影视鈥檚 daily newsletter.

Children with special needs are among those whose learning has suffered the most because of the pandemic. But that鈥檚 not what Juliana Urtubey sees when she looks at her students at Booker Elementary in Las Vegas.

鈥淥ur brains work in slightly different ways. Our job is to find all of our students鈥 strengths,鈥 she said about special education teachers. That perspective, she said, has given her an advantage over the past year. 鈥淚 was mining for students鈥 strengths.鈥

On Thursday, the Council of Chief State School Officers named Urtubey the 2021 National Teacher of the Year. Surprised with flowers from First lady Jill Biden, Urtubey is the third special educator to receive the honor. Advocates said having a special education teacher as spokeswoman for the field over the next year could help as they push for an increase in federal funding for children with disabilities. But Urtubey said her focus will be much broader. Her message is that all students deserve a 鈥渏oyous and just鈥 education in schools where they feel a 鈥渄eep sense of belonging.鈥

That starts, she said, by incorporating children鈥檚 culture into classroom lessons and their experiences at school.

鈥淭o me, as a Latina, our public institutions can鈥檛 separate our students from their families,鈥 said Urtubey, who moved with her parents to the U.S. from Colombia and was trained as a bilingual teacher in Arizona when the state passed a law requiring English-only instruction. 鈥淚 think about the tremendous loss of language and culture in this country.鈥

At Crestwood Elementary, where she worked before Booker, she helped that became an outdoor classroom for the school and another way to make immigrant families feel welcome.

Ciara Byrne, founder and CEO of Green Our Planet 鈥 which works with schools to teach science, technology, engineering and math through school gardening 鈥 remembers how plain and uninviting Crestwood looked in 2014 when she first talked with Urtubey about being part of the program.

鈥淪he was just full of beans and talking about how she was going to transform it,鈥 Byrne said. 鈥淲ithin three years, there were murals all over the place.鈥

Many were painted by mothers of the 鈥済nomies,鈥 a student garden club that meets on Friday mornings. In fact, when Byrne wants to show the nonprofit鈥檚 work off to potential sponsors, she takes them to Crestwood, which not only has several planter beds, but also butterfly, bee and pollinator gardens.

Urtubey, far right, with some Crestwood Elementary 鈥済nomies.鈥 (Green Our Planet)

Jose Silva was assistant principal at Crestwood at the time. He took notice of Urtubey鈥檚 鈥渃aring approach鈥 and her expertise in working with special needs students. Now he鈥檚 principal at Booker, where he said her dedication to the school extends to her colleagues.

With the title of learning strategist, Urtubey coaches other classroom teachers on providing instruction for students with special needs and has served as a mentor to new teachers. But even veteran educators said they benefit from working with her.

Rosie Perez, another special educator at Booker, called Urtubey when she was working on a certification from the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. They had never met before, but Perez said she 鈥渋nstantly noticed her amiable and warm-hearted personality.鈥

鈥淚 am in the 19th year of my teaching career and am still eager to learn,鈥 Perez said, adding that she 鈥渃ould not think of anyone better to begin this step in my career, to learn and grow along with, but Juliana.鈥

鈥楾hrough a lot of loss鈥

Urtubey鈥檚 positive outlook doesn鈥檛 mean the past year hasn鈥檛 been traumatic 鈥 for families and teachers. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been through a lot of loss,鈥 she told CBS This Morning host Gayle King, after she learned she was the winner.

In an interview with 蜜桃影视, she noted the past year has probably been the most difficult in her teaching career 鈥 a sentiment shared by those in the special education field nationally. An American Institutes for Research released last fall showed that 58 percent of districts have found it challenging to comply with the requirements of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act during the pandemic. And almost three-quarters said it was 鈥渕ore or substantially more difficult鈥 to accommodate students鈥 individual learning needs.

Urtubey, Nevada鈥檚 first recipient of the national award, said her emphasis on students鈥 social and emotional connections made the loss of in-person learning less disruptive. 鈥淥ur classroom community just translated over鈥 to a remote format, she said. She worked with school nutrition staff to make sure meal distribution worked for families鈥 schedules and tracked down students who moved during remote learning.

Her 鈥渞esilience is indicative of how hard special education teachers have worked this year,鈥 said Dennis Cavitt, president of Council for Exceptional Children, a membership and advocacy organization. But he added that her recognition also comes as advocates are pushing for funding to address shortages of special education teachers and a lack of diversity in the workforce. President Joe Biden has asked for a $2.6 billion increase for special education.

鈥淗aving Juliana in the spotlight this year will help carry that message forward and energize the entire education community around those goals,鈥 Cavitt said.

Urtubey said she doesn鈥檛 know if she鈥檒l return to Booker after her year on a national stage. But she鈥檚 working with Silva and Green Our Planet to create another community garden 鈥 what she described as a 鈥10,000-square-foot outdoor oasis鈥 鈥 and leave a lasting mark on the school.

鈥淚鈥檓 definitely going to stay connected to my Booker family,鈥 she said.

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