Miss-Delectable
New Member
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2004
- Messages
- 17,160
- Reaction score
- 7
KTVB.COM | Boise Idaho News, Weather, Sports & Traffic | Education
Officials with the Idaho School for the Deaf and Blind say they'll expand school services throughout the state, even if it means consequences for the school's main campus in Gooding.
Following a report last fall that said the school needed to change if it is to survive, the school has begun sending teachers from its main school to seven outposts around the state.
Some say it's a preview of when the main campus shuts down altogether.
And many say the town of Gooding needs the school as an economic base.
Interim superintendent Harvey Lyter says the school needs to serve its clients, Idaho's deaf and blind students, as best as possible, and that might mean closing down the main campus.
Officials with the Idaho School for the Deaf and Blind say they'll expand school services throughout the state, even if it means consequences for the school's main campus in Gooding.
Following a report last fall that said the school needed to change if it is to survive, the school has begun sending teachers from its main school to seven outposts around the state.
Some say it's a preview of when the main campus shuts down altogether.
And many say the town of Gooding needs the school as an economic base.
Interim superintendent Harvey Lyter says the school needs to serve its clients, Idaho's deaf and blind students, as best as possible, and that might mean closing down the main campus.