For more on this topic, please see «The 2012 Republican Candidates So Far: What they've said and done on education in the past, and what they might do
about our public schools if elected,» by Allison Sherry, which will appear in the Fall 2011 issue of Education Next and is now available online.
What they've said and done on education in the past, and what they might do
about our public schools if elected
Not exact matches
If you have kids or are planning on starting a family, you've likely thought
about how you can position yourself in an area with excellent
public schools.
If Amazon is concerned
about retaining employees as they move into their 30s, settle down and have families, Montgomery's bucolic neighborhoods and strong
public schools might be the answer.
Stevens offered not a word of concern
about whether religious students might feel themselves to be less than full members of the political community
if, by order of the nation's highest court, their messages and only their messages are categorically excluded from the
school's
public arena.
The secular humanist
public schools are always on
about persecution, hoping to entice kids into believing that
if they leave their faith they will be part of the «majority» and therefore safer.
The government doesn't need to recognize marriage (I don't give a hang
if they don't recognize my relationship with my wife); the government doesn't need to run
public schools (and get into the fight
about whether evolution truly explains the origin of species and the origin of life).
If you can't name him right away, check Google... for reliability use Google to find out a report made
public by the Johns Hopkins Universiity Blloomberg School of Public Health about the estimated figures on civilian casualties during the Iraq invasion... Just so you be aware that we too in America have our «Hitler», so publicly paraded in San Francisco, Rome and other places in the world during the height of the Iraqi invasion and make your own conclus
public by the Johns Hopkins Universiity Blloomberg
School of
Public Health about the estimated figures on civilian casualties during the Iraq invasion... Just so you be aware that we too in America have our «Hitler», so publicly paraded in San Francisco, Rome and other places in the world during the height of the Iraqi invasion and make your own conclus
Public Health
about the estimated figures on civilian casualties during the Iraq invasion... Just so you be aware that we too in America have our «Hitler», so publicly paraded in San Francisco, Rome and other places in the world during the height of the Iraqi invasion and make your own conclusion...
If he worked for a
public school or just
about anywhere else, he would still be gainfully employed.
If Thor believers were rampant in the country and were trying to impose their myths into government,
public policy,
schools and science, and were continually promising dire eventualities for not believing in him, I'll just bet you would hit up a message board or two
about it!
In my view, the education market will work well only
if the
public has a wealth of accurate, comparable information
about every
school (or other education provider).
1: Suing
public schools if they let the valedictorian talk
about how his religion helped him / her.
So
if the
public schools don't by default give the days off, parents should talk to the
school (principals, teachers)
about not having exams on days they plan to have their kids miss
school.
If muslim holidays are observed in
public schools, what
about Buddhists, Jewish, Hindu and others?
If Santa Clausism became the dominant «religion» of the country, tried to influence the government, inst / itute laws and
public policies and demand that it be taught in
public education - start every
school day with a reading from «Twas the Night Before Christmas» and have «Ho Ho Ho» on your money - I'm just betting that you would have something to say
about it on an internet forum and elsewhere!
JK
If you're talking
about public schools,
schools supported by everyone's tax dollars, please explain to me why my tax dollar would go to promote the belief in a god that I don't believe is real?
Tried to talk with them
about it, but they're too busy asking me for things, and they never get around to listening... wouldn't like what I'd say
if they did shut up for moment... think I'll send a mass email... (no, did that the other day to another group of my followers, the ones who continue to blame Satan and the Atheists for getting prayer and «God» out of the
public schools... they just deleted the email as SPAM: 0 -LRB-...
If you know anything
about New Orleans
public schools, you probably know this: Hurricane Katrina wiped them out and almost all the
schools became privately run charters.
The Committee directs the Secretary to issue minimum national standards to address the ongoing issue of shaming
school children for unpaid
school lunch fees, including standards that protect children from
public embarrassment; that require all communications
about unpaid
school lunch fees be directed at the parent or guardian, not the child; and that
schools take additional steps to determine
if families falling behind in their
school lunch fees are in fact eligible for free or reduced - price
school meals.
I was team mom for little league, cheer mom, pta mom, chaperoned
school field trips, volunteered as a classroom helper and parent at their
schools (when in
public school) attended toddler tumbling and mom classes, was a homeschooling parent for one of my kids with leaning disabilities, I didn't have to scramble to figure out what to do
about work or where to take my kids for child care
if they were sick, I led and was involved with the church groups with my kids, I spent summers with them doing all kinds of things like traveling, visiting grandparents out of town, amusement park trips, swimming, picnics, and hiking, instead of them being stuck with a sitter every summer.
If you come from a low - income home — that's 2/3 of the District of Columbia
Public School students — where breakfast is Doritos and some colored water and high fructose corn syrup called «juice» purchased at the convenience store on the way to school, with dinner not being much better, where do you learn about food and nutr
School students — where breakfast is Doritos and some colored water and high fructose corn syrup called «juice» purchased at the convenience store on the way to
school, with dinner not being much better, where do you learn about food and nutr
school, with dinner not being much better, where do you learn
about food and nutrition?
If you're a reader of this blog you probably already know all
about Mrs. Q, the (formerly) anonymous
public school teacher who set
about the unenviable task of eating the same
school food her students were eating for an entire year.
Mayor Byron Brown says he is open to mayoral control
if that's what it takes to improve Buffalo's
schools, but feels a conversation is needed with parents and others in the city — and statewide —
about how to reform
public education.
«
If it is
about choice for parents and the
public, evidence shows that what parents and the
public want are good local
schools run by local councils, democratically accountable to local communities.
«People are not paying attention
if they think it's just
about the money,» said Ansari, who is, as she regularly mentions, a
public school parent, mother of eight, and grandmother of three.
A 1 - cup serving of leaves provides
about 7 percent of your fiber intake
if you follow a 1,500 - calorie diet, according to the Harvard
School of
Public Health, or 5 percent
if you're on a 2,000 - calorie diet.
Im not sure
if its related in any way but they were talking
about putting a ban on these dresses in
public places /
schools / busses..
If you think you've heard something
about ballroom dancing being used in the New York City
public school system before, then you are likely remembering a documentary released in 2005.
I'm a
public school teacher, and I'd enjoy my job far more
if it weren't for those holy terrors who don't know a thing
about manners!
When families inquire
about the
school, Hecker's assistant asks families to what
public school their children would be assigned and then walks them through the voucher application
if they're assigned to a failing one.
My purpose here is to provide a simple overview of the pivotal roles that teacher unions actually play in
public education - and to suggest why,
if Americans want to improve their
schools, something needs to be done
about the unions and their extraordinary power.
Because my interest here is in how portability would affect the distribution of federal funds across
public schools even
if students do not switch to private
schools, I do not need any assumptions
about the terms private
schools would face.
If the mayor were truly concerned
about «corporate» funding of
public schools, we have to ask, «Does that include all corporate money?»
(
If it ain't broke, etc.) Yet all the news
about flat NAEP results and bleak PISA and TIMSS scores, to say nothing of the hand wringing over international competitiveness and waning social mobility, don't seem to have penetrated very far into the
public's continued faith in their local
schools.
If you look at the Fund's «990» tax form, you'll find even more reason to question the veracity of the mayor's concern
about the malign influence of private money in
public schools.
In the case of private
school choice, you're right that there's a mixed track record, though I would say mostly positive
if you look at the full body of evidence
about what happens when you allow a student to move from a
public school to a private
school using a voucher.
But despite all the anecdotes
about teachers being lured away from
public schools to lucrative private - sector work, the available evidence shows that,
if anything, teachers earn less when they leave teaching for another job.
Rotherham writes «this is political and not
about substance and to the extent this turns into a big
public fight
about money it's one more reason that
if you're a
school administrator the Washington groundhogs are saying a few more years of NCLB.»
If you follow news about the District of Columbia Public Schools closely, you could be forgiven if you thought teacher turnover had increased since the schools were handed over to mayoral control in 200
If you follow news
about the District of Columbia
Public Schools closely, you could be forgiven if you thought teacher turnover had increased since the schools were handed over to mayoral control i
Schools closely, you could be forgiven
if you thought teacher turnover had increased since the schools were handed over to mayoral control in 200
if you thought teacher turnover had increased since the
schools were handed over to mayoral control i
schools were handed over to mayoral control in 2007.
If there was any doubt that Tisch and Steiner weren't serious
about bringing change to New York's hidebound
public school system, that ended when they tapped John King to be NYSED's number two.
In sum, clear majorities of uninformed respondents want their districts to spend more, but when respondents are told current expenditure levels, they take those amounts into account — an indication that
public thinking on expenditures would change
if residents were better informed
about actual fiscal practices in their
schools.
A young Michigan man who runs a Web site that supplies information
about public schools sent hundreds of e-mails this fall to superintendents in four states, demanding that they reveal their sexual orientation and threatening to list them as gay
if they did not respond.
The portrait of
public satisfaction changes dramatically, however,
if one inquires
about Americans» local
public schools.
If Republicans and Democrats disagree strongly on the options for
school reform, changes are unlikely — despite clear signs that the
public is concerned
about the quality of
public education.
The authors hypothesize that
if state and local governments empower parents to choose the
schools of their choice, a «spontaneous education order» — a state in which parents seek information
about schools and in which
schools make available the necessary information without
public officials» intentional intervention — will arise.
Washington —
About 5 percent of the students currently attending
public schools would be likely to transfer to private
schools if a tuition tax credit of $ 250 were available, according to a Congressionally mandated study of private
schools.
If the new information surprises respondents by indicating the district is doing less well than previously thought, the
public, upon learning the truth of the matter, is likely to 1) lower its evaluation of local
schools; 2) become more supportive of educational alternatives for families; 3) alter thinking
about current policies affecting teacher compensation and retention; and 4) reassess its thinking
about school and student accountability policies.
The Persuadable
Public The 2009 Education Next - PEPG Survey asks
if information changes minds
about school reform By William G. Howell, Paul E. Peterson and Martin R. West
If you follow news about the District of Columbia Public Schools (DCPS) closely, you could be forgiven if you thought teacher turnover had increased since the schools were handed over to mayoral control in 200
If you follow news
about the District of Columbia
Public Schools (DCPS) closely, you could be forgiven if you thought teacher turnover had increased since the schools were handed over to mayoral control i
Schools (DCPS) closely, you could be forgiven
if you thought teacher turnover had increased since the schools were handed over to mayoral control in 200
if you thought teacher turnover had increased since the
schools were handed over to mayoral control i
schools were handed over to mayoral control in 2007.
If we use the traditional definition of a C grade as «satisfactory,» then the
public, on average, thinks
about one - fifth of teachers in the local
schools are unsatisfactory (13 % D and 9 % F)(see Figure 3).