Education equality means ensuring that everyone, regardless of their background or circumstances, has an equal opportunity to receive a quality education. It is about providing fair and inclusive educational opportunities to all individuals, so that they can develop their full potential and achieve success in life.
Full definition
The leadership of the California Teachers Association has been saying a lot of things about the Vergara v. California
education equality lawsuit and the nine kids bringing the case.
View a collection of quotes from the testimony of experts, superintendents, human resources officials, students, teachers and principals in the Vergara v.
California education equality trial.
Students Matter fights for
education equality in the court of law and in the court of public opinion, where students» rights and voices matter most.
Review anticipated arguments from State Defendants and Intervenors in the Vergara v. California
education equality trial.
In February 2016, Assemblymember Shirley Weber, a longtime champion
of education equality in the California Legislature, introduced AB 2826, a bill aimed at refocusing teacher evaluations on student progress and ensuring that districts meaningfully evaluate educators based on multiple measures of academic growth and performance.
Following last week's filing of Martinez v. Malloy by a group of students and parents in Connecticut, the groundbreaking new
federal education equality lawsuit has earned continued local and national media coverage.
Despite loud demands for
greater education equality, access to first - rate college preparatory programs for large numbers of minority students remains an unrealized goal.
Plaintiffs» closing arguments PowerPoint, presented in court on the last day of the Vergara v. California, sums up what's at issue and what's at stake in the
historic education equality case.
Such ideas are not only ridiculous but also impossible in countries like Finland, South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Taiwan...well - known for
high education equality.
The bill's introduction largely ended what had been, until then, a bipartisan process, with Rep. George Miller (D - Calif) calling it a «complete betrayal
of education equality» and «a knife in the back to the bipartisan process.»
This week, The Wall Street Journal published an op - ed by Theodore J. Boutrous, Jr. and Joshua S. Lipshutz, two lead members of the legal team behind Vergara v. California and the new
federal education equality lawsuit, Martinez v. Malloy, in which the attorneys make the case for a constitutional right to education and federal legal protections for disadvantaged students.
A group of Connecticut students and their parents, with Students Matter's support, have filed a new
education equality lawsuit, Martinez v. Malloy, in federal court.
Also Friday, a group of CPS students is expected to embark on an «
education equality» march from the Thompson Center in the Loop to Benito Juarez Community Academy in Pilsen.
The traditional public system was in dire need of improvement then, and it is today, especially with regard to
education equality: urban, minority students continue to be blamed (along with their parents & communities) for lower academic achievement instead of given the same educational opportunities, funding and expectations as their peers.
Unique is deeply committed to
education equality and social justice.