Florida education news: Clearwater dress code, med student match ups, data breach and more
LEAVE THE JORTS AT HOME: Clearwater High becomes the first Pinellas high school to approve a dress code that requires polo shirts and forbids concert tees, short skirts and jean shorts.
PAGING FUTURE DOCTORS: University of South Florida med students
find out where they will serve their residencies.
DATA BREACH: Some personal data of University of Tampa students is
inadvertently posted on the internet,
SEE YOU IN COURT: A lawsuit over a bill allowing “inspirational messages” in schools
is one of the conservative measures passed in the legislative session that will end up in court.
COLLEGE THOUGHTS: Community colleges
should no longer be considered the stepchildren of education,
Times columnist Bill Maxwell says.
HAZING GROUP: A panel of national experts that was expected to offer advice to Florida A&M University in the wake of the hazing death of drum major Robert Champion
may change its focus, the
Orlando Sentinel reports.
WHERE TO CUT? Palm Beach school officials
predict a roughly $31 million shortfall, the
South Florida Sun Sentinel reports.
PLUS ONE: A St. Johns County special education teacher
joins the education commissioner’s panel on FCAT testing for special needs students, the
St. Augustine Record reports.
F SCHOOL UPDATE: The Escambia School Board
gets an update on the status of an F-rated charter school, the
Pensacola News-Journal reports.
VETO THESE: A few education-related bills
are among seven that Gov. Rick Scott should veto, the
Sun Sentinel editorializes.









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