As we watch teacher strikes throughout the country, that's the same question we should be
asking public school administrators.
Not exact matches
Michael Podgursky, professor of economics at the University of Missouri, looked at data from the 1999 — 2000
Schools and Staffing Survey and found that when school administrators were asked whether they used salaries to reward «excellence,» only 6 percent of traditional public school administrators answered yes, while «the rates for charter (36 percent) and private schools (22 percent) were much higher.
Schools and Staffing Survey and found that when
school administrators were
asked whether they used salaries to reward «excellence,» only 6 percent of traditional
public school administrators answered yes, while «the rates for charter (36 percent) and private
schools (22 percent) were much higher.
schools (22 percent) were much higher.»
For example, when
asked about lowering student grades for disciplinary reasons, approximately half of
public school teachers and
administrators responded that this action was prohibited; among the educators who did think such disciplinary actions were permissible, 32 percent reported that students subject to such disciplinary sanctions were entitled to formal due process protections.
I
ask not that
public school special educators and
administrators circumvent special education guidelines and laws but that they approach the process with their brains and put their hearts in their practices to allow for positive changes in special education.
The state, along with the Louisiana Association of
Public Charter
Schools and various other charter schools, had asked the judge to put the 1st Circuit ruling on hold, warning that the ruling will dramatically impact more than 16,000 charter school students and thousands of teachers, administrators and other
Schools and various other charter
schools, had asked the judge to put the 1st Circuit ruling on hold, warning that the ruling will dramatically impact more than 16,000 charter school students and thousands of teachers, administrators and other
schools, had
asked the judge to put the 1st Circuit ruling on hold, warning that the ruling will dramatically impact more than 16,000 charter
school students and thousands of teachers,
administrators and other staff.
So Van Buren
Public School administrators asked the Michigan Department of Education to take a look at the scores, too.