9.21.08 - Rep. Glazier Goes Back to School for America's Legislators Program
Fayetteville: NC
State Representative Rick Glazier (D-Cumberland) will visit nine Cumberland
County schools over the next three weeks as part of the annual America’s Legislators
Back to School Program, meeting with teachers, administrators and staff and
will speak to classes about working as a legislator and the legislative
process.
Rep.
Glazier will visit Long Hill Elementary on September 22, Cape Fear High and Mac
Williams Middle on September 24, South View High and Hope Mills Middle on
September 29, and Vanstory Elementary, Terry Sanford High, Pine Forest Middle
on October 2 and Max Abbott Middle on October 7 (a full schedule is below).
Rep.
Glazier is a leader on education issues in the North Carolina House of
Representatives, and serves as the chair of both the House Appropriations
Subcommittee on Education and the Joint Select Committee on Public School
Funding Formulas. He has taught politics, economics and
law and advanced American government courses at Westover High School. He has also
taught law at Fayetteville Technical Community College and criminal law at N.C.
State University. He is currently
a Visiting Professor in Criminal Justice at Fayetteville State University and has taught law at Campbell University since 1995.
From the North
Carolina Back to School State Coordinator:
Sponsored
by the National Conference of State Legislatures, the America’s Legislators
Back to School Program gives elected officials in all 50 states the opportunity
to meet personally with their young constituents and to answer questions, share
ideas, listen to concerns and impart a greater understanding of the legislative
processes.The program is also designed
to build personal links between schools and legislators and provide legislators
an opportunity to observe what is going on in schools. The program is designed
to teach young people – the nation’s future voters and leaders – what it’s like
to be a state legislator: the processes, the pressures, and the debate,
negotiation and compromise that are the fabric of representative
democracy.The program is emphasized as
a bipartisan event.