Only the best and
brightest students succeed in competitive programs like Ohio State's Doctor of Veterinary Medicine program.
Not exact matches
Charters that
succeed with low - income children go full bore: all - out culture building in the classroom,
students and staffers willing to endure longer school hours,
bright teachers willing to adapt to precise training regimens and relinquish a fair amount of privacy (giving out their cell - phone number for afterschool homework questions, for example).
Our program, devoted to bringing a financial education curriculum into public high schools across the country, had one simple goal: provide funding to teachers for financial education curriculum, materials and training so they can teach their
students the skills they need to help them
succeed and achieve
brighter future.
Discover believes
brighter financial futures begin with providing
students with the skills they need to help them
succeed long after they leave the classroom.
The quality of postsecondary education in America continues to attract the best and
brightest from around the world, but we have a serious national security problem when we can not bring nearly enough of our own
students up to the standards necessary to
succeed at an internationally competitive postsecondary readiness level.
Through rigor, structure, and joy, Stellar Collegiate Charter School places every child on the path to college and equips all K to 5
students to
succeed in middle school, gain access to selective high schools, and create futures
bright with opportunity.
Along these lines, the pressure created by the last two decades of reforms hasn't been all bad; it has focused attention to helping all
students succeed, relying upon data to make decisions, and looking for
bright spots and best practices.
We approach our work firmly grounded in the notion that supporting families to be agents of change in their communities is crucial to ensuring
students succeed and have a
bright future.
Among the
bright spots nationally are New Mexico and Tennessee, says the group, which released today analyses of the federally required plans states have submitted under the Every
Student Succeeds Act.
We want you, as
students to
succeed in your academics and make your future
bright.