A day after Warren said she would be voting in favor of Question 2, Healey, Driscoll and Campbell touted benefits of MCAS.
When Massachusetts voters head to the polls on Nov. 5, all eyes will be on a hotly contested referendum: whether to eliminate a statewide exam as a high school graduation requirement.
It doesn’t mean the MCAS goes away. We have to have a test.” The Massachusetts Association of School Superintendents’ ...
In its place, the ballot measure would establish a new mandate: Students would need to complete coursework certified by their ...
Gov. Maura Healey publicly opposes Ballot Question 2, and we are asking: Why? Her stance aligns with the Massachusetts ...
Despite vows to raise $7 million to fight a ballot measure they worry will hurt the state’s economy, business groups are ...
Ballot question 2 for the November 5th election would change the current Massachusetts law that requires high school students ...
If Question 2 passes, students would no longer need to meet specific competency levels on the MCAS to graduate, although the ...
While Healey and other state leaders have maintained their position against the ballot question to eliminate MCAS as a high ...
The Brockton School Committee passed a resolution supporting the ballot question to remove MCAS as a graduation requirement.
Battle lines continue to form around a ballot question to change a key component of the education reform law that some say ...
Massachusetts voters will decide on five ballot questions this election. Question 2 presents an issue that could impact ...