Public school leaders deserve counsel and consultants that will work for their District and share the school's goal of serving kids first.
Public school leaders deserve nothing less.
Not exact matches
Houston's business and civic
leaders also
deserve credit for recognizing the need for a sustained and highly
public school - reform strategy.
That's why I joined a group of
school leaders, educators and civic
leaders to sign onto a ballot initiative aimed at providing fair access to
public charter
schools to the thousands of Massachusetts's families who want and
deserve them.
With funding for
public schools in Robeson County at rock bottom among North Carolina counties, local
leaders are in agreement that our children
deserve better.
We want to be
leaders in transparency and accountability in the state — shining a light on our areas of growth so we can continuously improve and offer South Carolina kids what they
deserve — only the most excellent
public school choice options.
Although schemes abound these days to divide and degrade
public education, they were nowhere to be found when teams of educators, union
leaders, administrators, and community
leaders gathered in New York City on Jan. 26 - 29 to explore ways they could effectively work together to transform
schools into the safe, welcoming environments that every student
deserves.
As a local education
leader, elected in 2014 to serve on the Yolo County
School Board, I know firsthand that our
public schools need big changes to give all students access to the education they
deserve.
All stakeholders — educators, parents, philanthropists, banks, and
leaders in all sectors interested in seeing and supporting improvements in Indiana's
public education system —
deserve to understand decisions that lead to opening and / or closing a
school.