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Walker

04/13/20 9:36 AM

#4584238 RE: Campeese #4584235

GAXY - E-Learning - https://www.baltimoresun.com/coronavirus/bs-md-pol-coronavirus-task-force-20200408-hkudrtszoreyjmu3tgznx3pjt4-story.html

All schools will be announcing the same - I don't see a better stock at current levels with this much potential. Endless contracts to continue to roll in.

Maryland public schools must be prepared to continue teaching classes online into the fall and winter if the spread of the coronavirus continues or makes a resurgence, the state’s top education official said Wednesday.

Speaking to a bipartisan work group of Maryland lawmakers, State Superintendent of Schools Karen B. Salmon said she is ramping up online and distance-learning capabilities in case schools must remain closed into the 2020-2021 academic year. Some epidemiologists have said the state could see a second wave of the virus in the fall.

“I’m not sure we are going to be doing school in the same way going forward,” Salmon told lawmakers. “We’re not sure that is not something that we’re going to revisit in the fall or the winter."

"I’m really focusing much of our resources on the expansion and accountability wrapped around online learning and distance learning. That’s going to be a our focus right now, because it has to be.”

Walker

04/13/20 9:36 AM

#4584239 RE: Campeese #4584235

GAXY - E-Learning - https://www.baltimoresun.com/coronavirus/bs-md-pol-coronavirus-task-force-20200408-hkudrtszoreyjmu3tgznx3pjt4-story.html

All schools will be announcing the same - I don't see a better stock at current levels with this much potential. Endless contracts to continue to roll in.

Maryland public schools must be prepared to continue teaching classes online into the fall and winter if the spread of the coronavirus continues or makes a resurgence, the state’s top education official said Wednesday.

Speaking to a bipartisan work group of Maryland lawmakers, State Superintendent of Schools Karen B. Salmon said she is ramping up online and distance-learning capabilities in case schools must remain closed into the 2020-2021 academic year. Some epidemiologists have said the state could see a second wave of the virus in the fall.

“I’m not sure we are going to be doing school in the same way going forward,” Salmon told lawmakers. “We’re not sure that is not something that we’re going to revisit in the fall or the winter."

"I’m really focusing much of our resources on the expansion and accountability wrapped around online learning and distance learning. That’s going to be a our focus right now, because it has to be.”