Catalina Foothills School District is having a job fair just for teachers.

The Catalina Foothills School District Teacher Job Fair is at 9 a.m. until noon Saturday, Feb. 15, at the Professional Learning Center at Valley View Early Learning Center, 3435 E. Sunrise Drive.

Go to http://tucne.ws/1rlp to apply.

Attendees can visit with principals and staff members from CFSD school sites.

The district asks that applicants sign up for only one interview.

Candidates are encouraged to bring rÊsumÊs with their current contact information. Contact Human Resources at 520-209-7500 or visit www.cfsd16.org for more information.

Marana to host job fair

Marana Unified School District is hosting a job fair from 9 a.m. to noon, Saturday, Feb. 1 at Mountain View High School, 3901 W. Linda Vista Blvd.

The district seeks support and certified/exempt staff for numerous openings, including: certified and substitute teachers; counselors; psychologists; social workers; aides; health service professionals; bus drivers and attendants; secretarial and clerical professionals; and childcare/preschool aides and supervisors.

Additional information is available at 520-682-4778 or at http://tucne.ws/1rlq, Marana’s employment webpage.

Scholarship applicants sought

The Marge Christensen Gould Memorial Scholarship is now open for graduating seniors at Catalina, Sunnyside, Desert View, Star Academic, Innovation Tech, TAP and Project More High Schools.

The $1,500 scholarship is renewable for 3 additional years (with qualifications). A minimum 2.5 GPA is required. There is no citizenship or residency requirement.

Marge Christensen Gould taught English and business skills to “at-risk” students at Catalina High School for 28 years. More information and applications can be found at https://www.margegouldscholarship.org/ or https://cfsaz.org/what/scholarships/ The application deadline is Monday, Feb. 24.

Masterclass photography

Budding photographers took to a variety of Tucson locations Friday for the Pima JTED Photo Masterclass.

Professional photographers came together to teach high school photography students techniques to improve their skills, including photographers from the Tucson Police Department (forensic photography) and the Arizona Daily Star (photojournalism).

Thirteen high school photography programs from around the city participated, making up approximately 120 students and teachers.


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