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High school seniors not meeting the testing benchmarks to graduate next year could have extra options on the table 鈥 that is, if Ohio lawmakers can pass a鈥
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The state has a lot of work to do to meet its self-imposed goal of 65 percent of working-age adults holding college degrees or industry certificates by鈥
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Right now, Heartland High School doesn鈥檛 look like much 鈥 just a few rooms on the second floor of Broad Street Presbyterian Church on Columbus鈥 East鈥
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With most Ohio students back in school, officials and lawmakers are hoping to prevent a possible crisis like the one that had them scrambling to find鈥
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More than 140,000 Ohio students are preparing to enter their senior year of high school, but for thousands of them, the year won鈥檛 end with a walk across a stage in a cap and gown. That is unless lawmakers move the graduation goal post once again. It鈥檚 a lingering question that鈥檚 creating uncertainty for rising seniors in the state鈥檚 high schools. Ja鈥橫ya and Kenmore-Garfield鈥檚 Class of 2019 Sixteen-year-old Ja鈥橫ya Goley is about a month away from starting her senior year at Kenmore-Garfield High School in Akron.
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Taft IT High School is launching what Cincinnati Public Schools believes is the first-in-the-country cybersecurity certificate program.
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A nonprofit group based out of Columbus took on the mission of providing prom dresses to teenage girls in the area who would otherwise be unable to afford鈥
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Today at 10amAs the football season picks up, we explore the effects of injuries players take on in the gridiron. New science on diagnosing a brain鈥
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More than three-quarters of Ohio high school seniors are on track to graduate in May, with another 19 percent 鈥渉ighly likely鈥 to meet requirements to鈥
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Every one in three babies born in the United States is delivered by Cesarean section. According to a Consumer Reports investigation, a mother's risk for鈥