Sentences with phrase «public school enrolments»

Public school enrolments are expected to grow by 21 per cent or around 164,000 additional students by 2031, with most of this growth expected in Sydney.
That said, families with children seem more determined to return than others; while the post-wildfire population dropped about 17 per cent, public school enrolment fell only by about five per cent this year.

Not exact matches

On pupils» enrolment, in March 2017, the Federal Government — although with no statistics to back it up — said the feeding programme had led to increase in the enrolment of pupils in public primary schools across the country.
The August 2017 census showed there were 46,566 students enrolled in Canberra public schools, an increase of 1,649 enrolments (3.7 per cent) since August 2016.
By the time his seven years of leadership had come to a close, the school was awarded the title Top Public WA Senior High School, thanks to improved attendance, graduation, enrolment and NAPLAN reschool was awarded the title Top Public WA Senior High School, thanks to improved attendance, graduation, enrolment and NAPLAN reSchool, thanks to improved attendance, graduation, enrolment and NAPLAN results.
One of these was a post-secondary enrollment option permitting eleventh and twelfth graders to take college courses (1985); another was open enrolment, which enabled children to attend any public school of their choice in Minnesota (1987 — 8).
You write «As a result of the hideous decision to reduce medical school enrolment, we now have far too few doctors per capita and far too many lawyers per capita, and both situations are demonstrably very harmful to the public and our society.»
As a result of the hideous decision to reduce medical school enrolment, we now have far too few doctors per capita and far too many lawyers per capita, and both situations are demonstrably very harmful to the public and our society.
; (4) taxpayers would not have to pay for a justice system that provides lawyers a good place to earn a living but doesn't provide affordable legal services for those taxpayers; (5) the problem wouldn't be causing more damage in one day than all of the incompetent and unethical lawyers have caused in the whole of Canada's history (6) the legal profession would be expanding instead of contracting; because, (7) if legal services were affordable, lawyers would have more work than they could handle because people have never needed lawyers more; (8) law schools would be expanding their enrolments instead of being urged to contract them; (9) the problem would not be causing serious & increasing damage to the population, the courts, the legal profession, and to legal aid organizations because their funding varies inversely with the cost of legal services for taxpayers who finance legal aid's free legal services; (10) there would be a published LSUC text that declares the problem to be its problem and duty to solve it, and accurately defines the problem; (11) Canada would not have a seriously «legally crippled» population and constitution - the Canadian Charter of Rights an Freedoms is a «paper tiger» without the help of a lawyer; (12) Canada's justice system might again be «the envy of the world»; (13) the public statements of benchers would not show that they don't understand the cause of the problem and haven't tried to understand it; (14) LSUC's webpage, «Your Legal Bill - To High?»
Wednesdays 21 February, 21 March, 16 May, 13 June 2018 1.30 pm - 3.15 pm Note: This course is not for public enrolment, however if you are interested in running a workshop at your school or organisation, please arrange a consultation with Relationships Australia NSW.
«Many public schools in areas like the inner west, lower north shore and eastern suburbs have long waiting lists for after - school care services, which are under increasing strain due to significant growth in enrolments
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