Sentences with phrase «enough about school funding»

While SB 213 makes a quantum leap in providing greater equity, adequacy and accountability for school funding, it will require our citizens to know enough about school funding (not the most glamorous topic) to make an informed decision at the ballot box.

Not exact matches

When I attended the 2017 School Nutrition Association (SNA) Annual National Conference (ANC), I learned an AMAZING amount about what school lunch officials are up against, including (some schools) having no kitchen, limited funds, parent pressure, nutritional innovation and mixing it up enough to gain continued intSchool Nutrition Association (SNA) Annual National Conference (ANC), I learned an AMAZING amount about what school lunch officials are up against, including (some schools) having no kitchen, limited funds, parent pressure, nutritional innovation and mixing it up enough to gain continued intschool lunch officials are up against, including (some schools) having no kitchen, limited funds, parent pressure, nutritional innovation and mixing it up enough to gain continued interest.
As a taxpayer I am sick of paying for the unchecked growth of charters.I even got a flyer today offering a $ 100 incentive for those referring students to enroll in a local charter school.The charter school industry seems well funded enough to pay for all these ads — how about donating the funds for these ads to reduce local taxes — listen to local taxpayers!.
«I've been worried enough about lack of funding and sequestration that I've considered alternative career options,» says Bolduc, who works in the lab of Philip Cole, director of pharmacology and molecular science at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
And now some of those superfans from the National Cancer Centre Singapore (NCCS) and Duke - NUS Medical School (along with some financial donors who just love durians enough to privately fund a study about them) have completely mapped the durian genome to find out, among other things, why the putrid stench, durians?
I've long griped that the Obama administration has talked too often about more school spending and not enough about smarter school spending, and I was particularly disenchanted to hear the President go back to talking this week about pumping more borrowed federal funds into school facilities and salaries.
While both these charter studies roughly track the effects found in the school funding study, I don't think we know enough about adult outcomes for urban charters.
And when we talk about improving public education, and the very real and increasing threat that is coming from the corporate «education reform» types, who want to layoff teachers, ban or reduce collective bargaining rights, take - over public schools and transfer the care and control of our public schools to various third parties... let's not forget that many districts do not fund enough IA positions and every district fails to fairly compensate IAs for the incredible work they do.
When asked about charter schools, Vermont's Deputy Secretary of Education said she did not support charter schools saying «No I don't think we need them... The state's longtime tradition of allowing public funding to flow to private, non-religious schools when a community does not have a public school... provides enough flexibility.»
According to the National Association of Head Teachers, about three - quarters of schools already lack the funds to provide good enough mental health care for pupils.
• There is a really clear consensus about the relationship between the number of teachers and the number of pupils — strong enough to build into a reliable model for school funding.
And after volunteering on school district committees, she says that there isn't enough transparency about whether new state funding is going to the neediest schools as it's supposed to.»
Homann also worries about schools whose students aren't poor enough to qualify for Title I funds.
There is also a warning that the Education Funding Agency, part of the Department for Education, is not intervening rapidly enough when there are financial concerns about schools.
Put in only $ 100 a month from birth and a high school graduate will have about $ 40,000 — enough money to fund two years of going to a public college.
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