Smitsonian Institution Programs Summer Archeology Programs Connected with DC Universities [Program for Deaf Students] Drinking Water Quality Research Center, Miami, FL [proposal for outreach to disabled students] Museum of Science and Industry, IL Chicago
Schools Cooperative Museum Program, IL Recreational Faculties for the Handicapped
at Rend Lake, IL SELPH Material Lawrence Hall King Report on Survey of the Special Educational Programs of Members of the Association of Science Technology Centers University of Kentucky Outdoor Education for Handicapped Project Directory of OOPS Programs Maryland Science Center, Baltimore, MD [notes on interview] ABCD Collaboration Science Program Non-Mainstreamed Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA Technical Education Research Center Camp
Happy Hollow, Mayrille, MI Squam Lakes Science Center, NH Science Enrichment Program Opened to Handicapped Students NY League of Hard of Hearing, NY Center of Science and Industry, OH Carnegie Museum, Pittsburg, PA Pacoma Environmental Education Center, PA Roanoke Valley Science Museum, VA Fairfax County
Public Schools, VA US Geological Survey Earth Science Program, WI ERIC - CRESS Info on Outdoor Ed - Science Programs National Council for Therapy and Rehabilitation through Horticulture Environments for the Able and Disabled Nature Study - A Journal of Education and Interpretation OOPS Out of
School Science Proposal and Drafts Original Newspaper Article, 1980 - 1981 OOPS Out of
School Science Proposal and Drafts II, 1980 - 1981
Despite two years in which
school reform was
at the forefront of the political debate in New Jersey, a majority of the state's residents are
happy with the education provided by their local
public schools, according to a poll released Tuesday.
The charlatans can smell the easy money; they readily understand that it is just a matter of playing out a role — you only have to say that you believe in «choice for all children» and that «bad teachers» are the problem, and that charter
schools are pathways to success, and, in good time, the
public money will come rolling in, as Stefan Pryor and his gang of reformers
at the State Department of Education are only too
happy to fund private initiatives, just so long as the required rhetoric.