Elementary's library. Leader from page XI Preparatory Academy before taking his current position. NCAE is the largest education organi zation in the state. The convention is a 2 chance for its members, which can include ? any employee of a public school, to plan out NCAE's educational advocacy activi ties. Ellis said it is a challenging time for education in North Carolina. School sys tems all over the state are having difficulty filling their positions and the teacher short age is expected to get even more severe in the coming year. Schools of education aren't producing enough new teachers to meet the demands of public schools, said Ellis v "That's a clear sign that something's not right with public education if you don't have people interested in the profession," he said. He said educators are frustrated that they have relatively low salaries and resources while state funds go to vouchers for private schools. Ellis said the local situation with Cook 1 NCAE members help with landscaping around the outdoor water garden at Kimber ley Park Elementary School, which is home to a variety of marine life and lets students study ecosystems in the school yard. Elementary school reopening with new staff after being labeled as low performing has happened to schools all over the state. He said he didn't feel replacing the staff was the right approach and what schools like that really need is greater parental involvement. "I think that too often we point to teachers and staff as the reason that schools aren't performing at the level of expectation, instead of what a lot of the real issues are, and that's poverty," he said. During the convention, educators heard from N.C. Attorney General and gubernatorial candidate Roy Cooper, N.C. Public Education Superintendent June Atkinson and National Education Association President Lily Eskelsen Garcia. During the primary, NCAE endorsed Cooper, who Ellis said would be a " true champion of education" as governor. They also endorsed Atkinson, who Ellis said has been open and responsive to NCAE, meet ing with members of the group before each of the N.C. State Board of Education's monthly meetings. "We have a seat at the table with June and we're very appreciative of it," he said. Candidate Carolyn Highsmith was among the atten dees at the BOE canvas meeting. I ' i ii ? i i ? Photo* by Todd Luck Forsyth County Board Elections Members Fleming El-Amin, Ken Raymond and Stuart Russell check over ballots on Tuesday. Candidate John Larson listens during the BOE can vas meeting. Vote from page AT board involved voters who've moved and were transferred to the correct precinct. Tsujii said voters who transfer should've been given regular ballots but signed provisional bal lots count, too. However, . the 20 provisional ballots * presented to the board on Tuesday lacked signatures, a matter the BOE contin ued until today. There was a voter who lacked the proper ID and cast a provisional ballot cast with a reasonable impediment form that was unsigned, which violates statute, due to poll worker error. The BOE rejected the ballot 2-1, with Democrat Fleming El-Amin dissent ing. There were also 101 absentee ballots that arrived by mail at the BOE the day after Election Day without a postmark that were rejected, also in accordance to statute in a 2-1 decision with El-Amin dissenting. There were also four instances of vot ers voting twice, which the board ruled to allow one ; vote to count for each voter and referred the matter to the state board to see if legal action should be taken. UJS. House June 7 primary The upcoming June 7 primary came about because of court rulings. One ruling said that the 1st and 12th congressional dis tricts were racially gerry mandered by adding black voters into a district with a large black population in order to dilute their voting power statewide and ordered the districts to be redrawn. The newly redrawn congressional dis tricts mean that there's a new filing period for candi dates, which ends Friday at noon, and a new primary. The redrawn 12 th District no longer includes the Triad, and now all of Forsyth County is in the Fifth District. Tsujii said that all vot ers will be receiving new voter registration cards, regardless of if their district changed. "My plan is to send cards to everybody, not just the ones that were affected, otherwise there's going to be a lot of confusion," he said. As of press time. Democrat Jim Roberts and Republican Pattie Curran had filled for the Fifth District. Incumbent Republican Rep. Virginia Foxx has been campaign ing for re-election and is expected to file. Rep. Alma Adams is r running for re-election in the 12th district, which is now entirely in Mecklenburg County. So far Democrats Rodney Moore and Tricia Cotham, who are both state lawmak ers, have filled to chal lenge her in the primary. Democrats Gardenia Henley and Juan Antonio Marin Jr., who were run ning before the districts were redrawn, have indi cated they will continue running in the 12th but had not filed again as of press time. So far Leon Threatt is the only Republican to file for the seat. N.C. Supreme Court June 7 primary A court also struck down a new up or down vote for N.C. Supreme Court seats that was sup posed to go into effect this year, so once again there's an open election for the seat currently occupied by Justice Robert Edmunds. As of press time, Mike R. Morgan and Sabra Jean Faires have filled to chal lenge Edmunds in the non partisan primary. Filing for that seat also ends Friday. Voter registration is currently open for the June 7 primary and will run until 25 days prior to the elec tion. Any voters needing to register or change their reg istration can do so during that time. There will be an early voting period for the June primary. The amount of early voting hours will be entirely at the discretion of local BOEs. There were no judicial races on the local ballot in the March primary, because there weren't enough challengers in other judicial races to warrant a primary. All four incum bent judges on the N.C. Court of Appeals will face one challenger in the General Election. In the N.C. 21st Judicial District Court, all incumbent judges are running unchal lenged except William Graham Jr., who is retiring. Attorneys Carrie Vickery and Aaron Berlin are both vying for Graham's seat. Though judicial races are non-partisan, the party of each candidate will now be labeled on the ballot. wssu from page A1 compared to 1,968 accept ed during the 2015 fall semester. Allen mentioned the increase in acceptance may be because the university has decided to pursue more students who have main tained a high grade point average (GPA) instead of putting emphasis on stan dardized tests such as the SAT and ACT. She said GPA shows students have learned study habits that are beneficial at "We have really looked A closely at the data and we v are trying to go after stu- fi dents who are showing n great potential through is their work in high school," v said Allen. " The thing we n know about GPA is that it is ei the best predictor of suc cess in college." According to university records, the average GPA of students accepted for the fall 2016 term is 3.43 com pared to 3.41 during the same time last year. Last year, WSSU had a freshman enrollment of 887, the most in the schools' 124-vear historv. .lien said this fall the uni- i ersity is set to enroll 900 < irst-year students. Allen oted anything beyond 900 i i more than they can pro- i ide for, considering the < umber of students already < nrolled at the university. i WSSU currently has an The Chronicle flJSPS 067-91 f undergraduate enrollment of about 5,150. "Going into the fall, we are in really good shape," said Allen. "Our freshman enrollment will come in at or about our target, and that is always a plus." The Chronicle will li was established hv Finest I have more information on RaVonda Dalton-Rann in \ an upcoming issue of the paper. E P T NOTHING LE ? cJsfe jKj IggBWM Ii|l ?gtpftyUfc ? Hmhm I H. Pitt and Ndubisi Egemonye in 1974 and is published :very Thursday by Winston-Salem Chronicle Publishing Co. Inc., 617 N. Liberty Street, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27101. Periodicals postage paid at Winston-Salem, N.C. Annual subscription price is $30.72. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: The Chronicle, P.O. Box 1636 Winston-Salem. NC 27102-1636