Not exact matches
If mothers today can sell their
grade - school
daughters into prostitution, why couldn't this sort of thing have happened five thousand years ago in Canaan as well?
My 7 year - old
daughter asked me this morning
if we could celebrate Hanukkah, as she was learning about it in her first
grade class.
First, he was that obsessed tech guy in Malcolm Gladwell's story, the one who reverse - engineered girls basketball and deduced that his seventh -
grade daughter's team could win
if they applied full court pressure all game long (it worked).
Dear Abby: Years ago, when our
daughter, Stacy, was in the 8th
grade, a contest was held at her school to see
if they could win one of the flags that had flown over the U.S. Capitol.
For example, unlike nursing, where I could have taken my
daughter with me
if I was away from home and fed her wherever I was, lugging my hospital -
grade pump to a restaurant or a friend's house or most any other place realistically wasn't going to work.
If they had 7th
grade my
daughter would be going here next year.
She hopes district officials change their minds, but, in the meantime, she's decided to call school districts across the state to see
if any of them will allow her
daughter into a regular first -
grade classroom this fall.
Now, Barr has a
daughter in 2nd
grade at Ivanhoe Elementary, one of the better public schools in the city, and it seems as
if he and LAUSD have met halfway.
No doubt it came as news to most Californians that such a firewall even exists, and for many, it makes as much sense as it would
if my
daughter's teacher were required to assign her
grades without looking at her papers, tests and homework.
It's been eye - opening to me, as a parent of a two
daughters and a former high school history / geography teacher, how much things change between the elementary
grades and the middle and high school
grades — there were so many opportunities to come in and help out
if my schedule allowed (which it often didn't) and to interact with the teachers when my girls were in
grade school, but this was completely cutoff by the time they entered 7th
grade.
«
If you get the math curriculum wrong,» a parent ranted to a 5th
grade teacher at my
daughter's school, «you will ruin my child's life!»
Asked
if he thinks his novel is pessimistic or hopeful, Dee points to the character of Mark First's
daughter, Haley, who we meet when she is in second
grade.
Wow, I had no idea that we could get a cheaper rate on our car insurance
if my
daughter maintains good
grades.