Noel Gallagher covers K-12 and higher education issues statewide. Her stories are a mix of breaking news and trend stories. In recent years, they’ve ranged from why college costs so much, the launch of the state’s first charter schools, how a school welcomed a transgender student and why Maine schools have a hard time finding teachers. She’s enough of a news nerd to enjoy sitting through legislative education committee meetings and hours-long school board meetings so you don’t have to. The Maine Press Association has honored Noel’s work, but she says she writes for the readers, in the firm belief that an informed citizenry is key to a healthy democracy. Noel is a California native who has worked at wire services, online websites and newspapers across the country. She was in Washington D.C. during the early Clinton years, covering AIDS activism in 1990s San Francisco, documenting the business of wine in Sonoma County and riding out the boom and bust cycle of the early Internet era in early 2000s Silicon Valley. She arrived in Maine at the beginning of the recession and wrote quite a bit about the downturn here. In her free time, Noel writes the occasional cookbook review, spends an inordinate amount of time at the Portland Public Library and hangs out with her three fabulous kids and wonderful husband. She is not a former member of the band Oasis.
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PublishedSeptember 24, 2013
Website to help transfers to Maine’s universities
Critics say transferring credits has been difficult because it’s unclear what classes would qualify.
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PublishedSeptember 22, 2013
Negative trends provoke ‘painful’ cuts in UMaine System
Education officials believe eliminating degree programs may be the key to adapting. For others, the implications are ‘shocking.’
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PublishedSeptember 19, 2013
USM will host Confucius Institute
The institute is a language and cultural nonprofit set up by the Chinese government’s Ministry of Education.
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PublishedSeptember 16, 2013
Maine high school equivalency exam to be replaced
The chosen test covers the same content, costs less and can be taken on paper or online.
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PublishedSeptember 14, 2013
Grant will fund University of New England scholarships
A dozen Maine high school graduates will get scholarships to study science, technology, engineering and math at the Biddeford college.
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PublishedSeptember 13, 2013
USM says physics major is underused, will be cut
The decision to cut the physics major shocked students and prompted professors to vow a fight.
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PublishedSeptember 11, 2013
In Maine, state university enrollment falls
Early data show a decline of 3 percent, blamed partly on a drop in high school grads, and officials say it could have been worse.
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PublishedSeptember 10, 2013
Maine college classrooms adapt to Syria spotlight
Teachers are changing their courses and students are tuning in for the news as schools stay topical.
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PublishedSeptember 4, 2013
Portland voters OK supplemental school budget
The school department plans to use $1.3 million to pay for teacher retirement costs that were shifted from the state to the district.
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PublishedSeptember 4, 2013
LePage emphasizes Maine educational autonomy
The governor says there will be no federal overreach into Common Core State Standards.
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