It isn't
because rural children suffer from spending too many days in school.
Not exact matches
It is certainly of concern that
children in these more
rural schools may be denied access to the latest, most innovative digital education learning content
because of a mismatch in broadband and connectivity, as the findings of our research implied.
While many of the nation's
children have access to super-fast cable and fiber internet
because they live in urban areas, large
rural areas of the country have broadband internet only
because of satellite internet technology.
12, started Anseye Pou Ayiti
because she says her native country lacks a datadriven, culturally relevant system for recruiting and training highcaliber teachers where they are most needed — in
rural and underserved areas where about 70 percent of Haitians live but fewer than 30 percent of
children from low - income households will complete even...
The model was developed for
rural schools
because Colbert and her cofounders recognized that
children in these communities have unique circumstances surrounding their schooling, such as the need to leave school during harvest season to work the family farm or single - classroom schools that serve many grade levels at once.
Our growth over the past decade has been propelled by educators and parents who are themselves opening their own charters in both urban and
rural areas
because they believe charters will provide their
children with better educational outcomes.
The reality of the situation, however, is that spending differences are not just dollar amounts — spending $ 100 on a
child in
rural Alabama will probably go a lot further than $ 100 in Manhattan
because purchasing power changes depending on where you're at in the United States.
This is important
because it reassures parents that their
children will live in a supervised setting and get the support they need to adapt to an urban environment that is not always friendly to newcomers from
rural areas.
However,
because the participating schools were mainly situated in urban areas, we were concerned with an overrepresentation of
children living in the city at the expense of youth from more
rural areas.
Families with young
children usually prefer suburban and
rural environments
because life can be less structured, Kopec says.