Editor’s note: The video above is from January 30 after Manor announced that it will not be monitored by the Texas Education Agency.
Manor, Texas (KXAN) – Students attending the Independent School area in Manor have already seen one of the biggest changes for the academic year – new systems to discover weapons that must pass to enter the campus.
This step comes after a fatal stab in the past fall, where a student was accused of stabbing another student on the campus. According to the 18 -year -old, the kitchen knife was used in the attack.
Safety improvements to universities
The supervisor, Dr. Robert Surmani, said: “We had a safety review, and two of them are actually, and there are 43 recommendations to improve safety we started last year.” “Some take a little longer, others take more money, but we have continued throughout the summer and continue to implement these safety improvements.”
One of the largest and most obvious changes is to add an arms detection system, according to Surmani.
This new system caused a few days of delay for students trying to enter school when it started on August 12. The province said at that time to obtain students in the classroom.
“[The system] “It is somewhat annoying, he is a person who is used by the American Professional League as well. It allows children to pass and can monitor employees to make sure that there is nothing in the unpopular school,” Surmani explained.
However, Sormani added that there is nothing guaranteed.
“The best thing we can do is to continue to ask our children to be great children, and if they see something, they would say something,” he said.
Based on the future
Surmani said that the boycott continues to expand the Fine Arts program, which was what it was It was recently called Texas Educational Theater Association, Distinguished Distinguishing County for 2025. ISD is one of only 36 provinces in the state that gets honor.
“We had five [high school] Surmani said: “The players in the professional league championships have been formulated in the past three years alone, so watching our academics, and of course academics.”
He added: “We hope to continue to expand and have opportunities for more students. We are very excited to find out what our children can do and the type of inheritance that they can grow.”
This is the first full school year because the region is no longer under the supervision by Texas for Education (Tea). The area was previously under the surveillance of tea for six years.