Sentences with phrase «face public accountability»

We increasingly face public accountability, universal scrutiny, and heightened expectations — not to mention new evaluation systems, moving targets, and the climate of underwhelming respect we teach in.

Not exact matches

Cuomo continues to push for accountability and choice in public education — even if, in the face of union opposition, he doesn't get all that he wants.
Home secretary John Reid said: «The new respect areas will take public accountability one step further, with regular statutory «face the people» sessions where they will be scrutinised by their local community for the work they have done and have yet to do.
«Ramarley's family and the public still don't know whether Haste is facing charges for the full extent of his misconduct or whether the 12 plus other officers who engaged in misconduct will face accountability,» Colon added, saying it was time for «more than just rhetoric.»
Many senior school business management professionals find themselves on call long after 5.00 pm, are now working across groups of schools, are responsible for a wider range of school functions and larger, more dispersed teams, and alongside greater autonomy and responsibility, face greater scrutiny and public accountability.
Massachusetts charter schools appear to face more stringent accountability requirements than do traditional public schools.
The opportunity for choice to further strengthen schools only comes when all schools receiving public dollars — including charter and magnet schools — face the same reporting and accountability requirements as traditional schools.
These schools do not face the same public accountability standards as public schools, including those in Titles VI and IX of the Civil Rights Act, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the Every Student Succeeds Act.
These schools do not face the same public accountability standards that all public schools must meet, including those in Title IX, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and ESEA.
«While many of these (mandates) may seem innocuous on their face - within them are activities regarding direct public accountability, public safety and monitoring.»
In light of these circumstances, and the challenges faced by public schools in ensuring these students are mastering grade - level TEKS, and the evidence as noted in the Katrina study that many of these students may well perform below state standards in their tested areas as compared to their non-affected peers, it is logical that students who are identified by these specific PEIMS codes should be excluded in the 2017 - 2018 accountability subset for public schools.
A January report from the Tennessee Comptroller's Offices of Research and Education Accountability (OREA) spotlights the unique challenges Tennessee's public charter schools face as a result of inequitable policies for locally allocated capital funds, the main source of facility funding for traditional Tennessee public schools.
Higher Education Accountability is designed for policymakers, higher education professionals, students and faculty, or members of the public who are interested in learning more about how colleges are responding to all of the pressures that they face.
These schools do not face the same public accountability standards as public schools, including those in Title IX, IDEA, and ESEA.
These schools receive public funding and must apply local standards but generally have greater freedom from certain laws and regulations, and face less accountability than do public schools.
Unlike these two charter schools, other public schools faced crude forms of high - stakes test accountability under federal, state, and local rules.
All we needed was some slick PR and smiley corporate faces and a media ready to spit back the buzzwords they'd been fed — failing public schools, no excuses, accountability, choice, access for every child, closing the achievement gap — repeating them so often that they passed for truth.
Either way, it's a refreshing sign, and should be a nice kick in the wallet to the bottled water marketing cartel.It also could be a boon to public water systems, which face a $ 22 billion annual shortfall while consumers load up on bottled water at grocery stores and cities waste millions on the bottles, says Corporate Accountability International.
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