Not exact matches
We
need more incentives for well - qualified teachers to make a long - term commitment to teach
disadvantaged children.
We all
need encouragement to exercise a new vision of the public good, and to join with others in sacrificial efforts to achieve that good in concrete ways, ranging from providing housing for the homeless to parks for everyone and enriched educational environments for
disadvantaged children.
Which leads to a new and pressing question: Exactly what is it in the daily life of a
disadvantaged child that most acutely hampers the development of the skills he
needs to succeed?
Educare, which serves more than 3,000
children at its 21 centers, is intended primarily as a demonstration that even highly
disadvantaged children can enter kindergarten ready to learn — but that in order to achieve that goal, they will
need early interventions that are intensive (not to mention expensive).
In the same way that the zero - tolerance approach to discipline sends precisely the opposite psychological message to
disadvantaged kids than what we now know they
need in order to feel motivated and engaged with school, so do many basic elements of traditional American pedagogy work in direct opposition to what the psychological research tells us will help those
children succeed.
As I mentioned above, one of the premises I'm working from here is that childhood is a continuum, and if we want to help improve outcomes for
disadvantaged children, we
need to look for opportunities to intervene in positive ways at many different points along that continuum.
These are essentially questions of public policy, and if real solutions are going to be found to the problems of
disadvantaged children, these questions will
need to be addressed, in a creative and committed way, by public officials at all levels — by school superintendents, school - board members, mayors, governors, and cabinet secretaries — as well as by individual citizens, community groups, and philanthropists across the country.
We would also like to mention one important thing that can be the only
disadvantage of this pillow; if your
child has sensitive skin then you may
need to purchase a pillow case for this pillow because many parents have reported that the surface of this pillow is «scratchy».
Disadvantaged children are in greater
need than other
children from ongoing positive relationships with their fathers (Dunn et al 2004).
Most obviously, the
needs of very young fathers are substantially different from those of older young fathers (Kiselika, 2008, p. 132); and they tend to be most socially
disadvantaged to start with, are less likely to be living with their
children's mothers, and are more likely to be involved in criminality and substance misuse and to suffer anxiety, depression and emotional volatility (Kiselika, 1995).
I think that makes a lot of sense, especially for
children who are growing up in
disadvantaged situations — they
need more time in school.
As a result, in a neighborhood with an intense concentration of deep
disadvantage, like Roseland, it is next to impossible for large numbers of
children to get the kind of help they
need to make it out of there and to make it to a really successful adulthood.
Sharing a nanny also has
disadvantages if your
child or the other
child or
children in the arrangement are particularly demanding or have special
needs.
The two say the change «lowers standards and will allow inexperienced and unqualified individuals to teach those
children that are most in
need - students of color, those who are economically
disadvantaged, and students with disabilities.»
«Despite all the money that has been spent by Labour, schools taking
disadvantaged children aren't getting the money they
need to break this link by cutting class sizes and providing them with extra support,» he said.
«Given the limited accessibility of traditional mental health services for
children — particularly for
children from minority and economically
disadvantaged backgrounds — school - based mental health services are a tremendous vehicle for overcoming barriers to mental health care and meaningfully expanding the reach of supports and services for so many
children in
need.
We
need to consider preparing
disadvantaged children as early as the preschool level and continuing throughout the high school years in order to complement the college and graduate school programs that focus on increasing minorities in the sciences.
Equity: Governments, donors and civil society must develop programmes and target funding to meet the
needs of the most
disadvantaged so no
child is left behind.
Some
children are at risk because of developmental delays or special learning
needs; some begin school at a
disadvantage because of their limited mastery of English or their socioeconomically impoverished living circumstances; and some, including some Indigenous
children, experience multiple forms of
disadvantage.
Some advocate expanding existing programs that target
disadvantaged children on the grounds that limited public resources should be directed toward the families and
children most in
need.
If we are serious about helping all
disadvantaged children, but especially the most able, to learn well and unlock their full potential, we
need to know how they are doing at 14, as well as at seven, 11 and 16.»
«Labor is hosting this national schools» forum to identify and discuss the changes
needed to ensure excellence, tackle educational
disadvantage and make certain all Australian
children leave school with the skills they
need to participate in their community and in our changing economy,» she said on Wednesday.
It is beyond dispute that, because
disadvantaged children come to their classrooms with an array of educational and personal challenges, they
need additional resources to compete successfully with their more - affluent peers.
Schools that receive federal Title I funds to improve learning among
disadvantaged children and fail to make AYP for two years in a row are considered in
need of improvement and face a range of consequences.
«There's a
need to improve the effectiveness of interventions to reduce the prevalence of mental disorders in
children experiencing socio - economic
disadvantage and to improve the effectiveness of programs to help students.
The key points from each strand are highlighted as follows: Early Identification and support • Early identification of
need: health and development review at 2/2.5 years • Support in early years from health professionals: greater capacity from health visiting services • Accessible and high quality early years provision: DfE and DfH joint policy statement on the early years; tickell review of EYFS; free entitlement of 15 hours for
disadvantaged two year olds • A new approach to statutory assessment: education, health and care plan to replace statement • A more efficient statutory assessment process: DoH to improve the provision and timeliness of health advice; to reduce time limit for current statutory assessment process to 20 weeks Giving parent's control • Supporting families through the system: a continuation of early support resources • Clearer information for parents: local authorities to set out a local offer of support; slim down requirements on schools to publish SEN information • Giving parents more control over support and funding for their
child: individual budget by 2014 for all those with EHC plan • A clear choice of school: parents will have rights to express a preference for a state - funded school • Short breaks for carers and
children: a continuation in investment in short breaks • Mediation to resolve disagreements: use of mediation before a parent can register an appeal with the Tribunal
Amidst the debates on how best to strengthen our educational system, there is clear consensus on what motivates the
need for change: many of our country's
children and adolescents are being left behind, falling out of the educational system and further into cycles of systematic
disadvantage.
This has been done effectively at local public schools such as PS 396 in the Bronx, where a significant percentage of
children have special
needs and all of the students could be characterized as economically
disadvantaged.
It is adequate to conclude, from international perspective, that the most
disadvantaged schools, especially those serving large proportions of aboriginal
children and other
children with special
needs, should be much better resourced if equity is to be enhanced in Australia.
Research conducted in New York City's traditional schools indicates that balanced literacy doesn't build the knowledge and vocabulary that
children — especially those from
disadvantaged backgrounds —
need to move beyond basic literacy, but Success adds tons of content to it.
The danger is that preschool will become a new middle - class entitlement, displacing the more intensive (and extensive) efforts
needed to shrink the achievement gap among severely
disadvantaged children.
Education policy
needs to take account of the differing experiences that
children have in their communities and at home, and not assume that schools alone can overcome the multiple and significant challenges posed by poverty and social
disadvantage.
Ofsted's report recommends ways that schools, early years settings and childminders can improve the situation, such as ensuring key information is shared promptly at points of transition, so that the
needs of the most
disadvantaged children are identified quickly.
Having worked for an organisation that dealt with integration of non-nationals and
disadvantaged [5]
children in Dutch society and the educational system for primary school
children specifically, there was heartbreaking evidence and examples that those who
needed to assess the environmental conditions young
children were catapulted into, could not — and will never — understand the extent of trauma these
children and their parents had been exposed to; subsequently, unable to realistically assess the cause of underachievement and trauma, nor adequate measures could be taken to equip fugitives with sufficient resources to overcome this
disadvantaged position.
In 2013 - 14, according to the United Way, «almost 60 percent of the student population came from economically
disadvantaged homes, and nearly 70 percent were considered high
needs students — an inequity that made it exceptionally difficult for many
children to thrive.»
Founded nearly 40 years ago, the charity focuses on
children in primary schools in some of the most
disadvantaged areas in England and Wales, as well as
children with Special Educational
Needs and Disability.
The Forum declared that Education for All must take account of the
needs of the poor and the
disadvantaged, including working
children, remote rural dwellers and nomads, ethnic and linguistic minorities,
children, young people and adults affected by HIV and AIDS, hunger and poor health, and those with disabilities or special
needs.
and too many
disadvantaged children don't have access to the highly effective teachers they
need to realize their potential.»
But the most important thing is to increase the access for
disadvantaged children to have a school for them that will serve their
needs,» says Matthew Ladner, a senior fellow at the Charles Koch Institute, a libertarian research center in Arlington, Va., who supports DeVos's nomination.
We still
need it to promote equity by funding schools that serve
disadvantaged children and protecting the civil rights of all
children, including LGBTQ students, still vitally important 60 years after the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision.
The implication is that, from the very beginning,
disadvantaged and advantaged
children have different educational
needs and stand to benefit from different kinds of instruction.
97 % think it
disadvantages children with special educational
needs, 84 % feel
children with English as an additional language will be adversely affected and 74 % of teachers voiced concerns about the effect on summer - born
children.
Secretary of Education William J. Bennett last week unveiled his proposal for distributing Chapter 1 aid through vouchers, saying it would benefit
disadvantaged students by «enabling parents to choose the educational program that best meets the
needs of their
children.»
But these conditions are almost nonexistent in many public or charitable enterprises - especially those devoted to tending the
needs of
children or the
disadvantaged.
Either this discordant plan is a front for public school expansionism, bent on adding another grade or two to its current thirteen, and adding the staff (and dues - paying union members) that would accompany such growth, or it's a cynical calculation: only by appealing to the middle - class desire for taxpayers to underwrite the routine
child - care
needs of working parents will any movement occur on the pre-K front, and the heck with the truly
disadvantaged youngsters who
need more than that strategy will yield.
The policy, devised as a way to help
disadvantaged children, provides schools with a base rate of funding for each student, currently $ 2,896, and adds dollars based on
need, such as the number of
children receiving special education services, free and reduced - price lunches and lessons in English as a second language.
He also wants to reverse a policy that allows school districts to give teachers raises with money designated to help English learners, economically
disadvantaged students and foster
children, saying the money
needs to get to the
children who
need it most.
While there, she recognized a desperate
need in the system to better support and educate
children from
disadvantaged or underprivileged backgrounds at an earlier age.
Our Supreme Court has directed that districts with disproportionate numbers of
children with special
needs,
children who are economically
disadvantaged, and
children with limited English language skills be taken into account.
Consequently, some of our economically
disadvantaged children who
need additional help are not receiving it.