Not exact matches
JK If you're talking about
public schools,
schools supported by everyone's tax dollars, please explain
to me why my tax dollar would
go to promote the belief in a god that I don't
believe is real?
I
believe that it is up
to the parent
to determine if their child should
go to a religious
school or a
public school.
I mean that a lot of Christians (primarily Christians) feel that they don't need
to study something and the fundamental types will probably refuse
to go to a
public school because of this too, because they strongly
believe in miracles, and in God that provides all answer's.
«If you are
going to be a Democrat and you
believe in bread - and - butter Democratic issues like funding
public schools, you should do that and not keep — you've got
to fund the
schools better and not keep siphoning off money for vouchers and charters,» Nixon said.
«You shouldn't be testing everybody, but if there are reasons
to believe that a test for H. pylori may come back positive, and it does come back positive, you should
go on
to treat,» says Dr. Traci Murakami, previous gastroenterology fellow at the UA and graduate of the clinical and translational research graduate certificate at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman
School of
Public Health, now an assistant clinical professor of medicine at the University of Hawaii, Manoa, and lead author of the study.
The poor, so this logic
goes, need government assistance if they are
to get a good education, which helps explain why, in the United States, many
school choice enthusiasts
believe that the only way the poor can get the education they deserve is through vouchers or charter
schools, proxies for those better private or independent
schools, paid for with
public funds.
As both a former schoolteacher and a parent of two children who
went through
public schools, I am convinced that we need more effective ways
to hold educators accountable, and I
believe that testing has
to be a part of an effective accountability program.
High - achieving students, especially those growing up in poverty, have not been well served by our traditional
public school system, and I
believe they deserve a place
to go to school where they can learn
to their full potential.
Some will
go into traditional
public schools; some will run away from teaching, or what they
believe from Rocketship
to be teaching, forever.
«I really firmly
believe and our case is such that the constitution itself speaks
to the actual use of the
public dollars
going to public schools,» Ritz says.
I personally do not
believe any
public money should be
going to religious based
schools, but the priority should be reigning in all the currently failing voucher
schools.
He
believes that this cultural shift
goes a long way
to fixing the problem, symbolized by the equity policy he helped get passed in Fairfax County
Public Schools to ensure equity for every service enacted, including health care.
There are many parents who
believe that too often, children who have been raised
to use all their intelligence will
go off
to schools where they are severely restricted in what they learn and how they learn it, thus making a traditional
public school a less than ideal option.
Maass
believes voucher programs weaken
public schools and
school districts in ways that
go beyond just losing state aid, although that is devastating during a time of unprecedented cuts
to public education.
The survey by BerkeleyIGS / EdSource shows that 69 percent of voters «
believe is it very important for the state's
public schools to put greater emphasis on preparing high
school students who may not end up
going to college
to be successful in the workforce» while just 28 percent say
schools near them «are doing an excellent or good job in this area.»
«I personally
believe that
public dollars should
go to public schools,» she said in a statement.
We
believe that all children should be able
to go to great
public schools but sadly that's not the case at the moment, so we help
to bridge the gap.
While legislation may be brought forward at the federal level
to create new student voucher programs, given that California's vibrant and growing charter
school sector affords parents their fundamental right
to choose where their students
go to school, we
believe that vouchers would be at odds with the needs of California's
public school system, and we will work actively
to resist them from being forced upon our state.
We also generally
believe in voucher programs that would help children in poorer communities have the same opportunities
to go to the same
schools as their wealthier counterparts, almost always with a lower price - tag than simply sending them
to failing
public schools.
I do not
believe public dollars should
go to private
schools.