Sentences with phrase «wealthy parents get»

Not exact matches

• In an article on the anxieties of wealthy New York parents trying to get their small children into elite preschools, a New York Times reporter writes of standing outside one of the sought - after public schools, which happens to be one of four public schools recently the subject of a sex - abuse scandal.
The same can be said about someone like Andrew Luck who, because of wealthy parents, was able to stick around Stanford for another year and get his degree instead of jumping into the NFL.
A bounce of fate later and Metro Man gets a happy upbringing with wealthy parents, while his blue - faced rival is brought up in a nearby correctional facility.
His Greek business manager (played with cosmopolitan sleaziness by Michael Gambon) fails to get funding from a Saudi princeling; his wealthy, semi-estranged wife Eleanor (a jaded but regal Anjelica Huston) is disinclined to invest any more of her parents» fortune.
Opening Friday, Get Out stars Daniel Kaluuya as a young black photographer who heads upstate with his white girlfriend (Allison Williams) to meet her wealthy parents but encounters increasingly strange behavior.
Children with learning disabilities may draw disproportionately on their teacher's time; racial or gender tension in the classroom may interfere with learning; wealthier parents may purchase learning resources that get spread over a classroom.
He conceded that the brightest students don't always «have the educational opportunities they deserve» but cautioned that schools have proven to be very good at selecting students through» social background» rather than academic potential, because wealthy parents «will always find a way» to get their children through the one - off test.
In other words, the wealthy hand - to - mouth are parents overextending themselves to get their kids into the best schools possible in our de facto private system.
Because parents will stop at nothing to get lawmakers to understand the right to a great school isn't just for the privileged wealthy.
In a nation as wealthy as America, no parent should have to lie about their address to get their child into a high - quality school.
But this latest admissions proposal may prove controversial if wealthier parents struggle to get school places for their children.
This becomes an issue in a given state or district when the wishes of wealthy taxpayers (those who owe enough state taxes to make STO donations and get the resulting tax credit) are not aligned with the wishes of parents.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z