Sentences with phrase «homeless children attending»

Not exact matches

Though flung far across this tilted and spun world, studying the serving ways of Jesus — Charles brims when he gets to this part in the story — he carried in his heart the faces of the orphaned, widowed and homeless of the Rwandan genocide, and he and his wife, Florence, scrounged and squirrelled every penny to begin sponsoring vulnerable children to attend school in Rwanda.
(The company said it also paid for costumes for more than 100 children from homeless shelters who attended the party.)
Where the public school or school district a homeless child was attending on a tuition - free basis or was entitled to attend when circumstances arose which caused the child to become homeless is located outside the State, the homeless child shall be deemed a resident of the school district in which the child is temporarily located and shall be entitled to attend the schools of such district without payment of tuition.
Determinations regarding whether a child is entitled to attend a district's schools as a homeless child or youth must be made in accordance with subdivision (x) of this section.
Where a homeless child designates the school district of current location as the district the child will attend, such district shall provide transportation to such child on the same basis provided to resident students.
Where a parent or person in parental relation or a child who is neither placed in a temporary housing facility by the local department of social services nor housed in a residential program for runaway homeless youth established pursuant to article 19 - H of the Executive Law, designates the school district of current location, the school district shall forward to the department a completed designation form and a statement of the basis for its determination that the child is a homeless child entitled to attend the schools of the district.
School district of origin means the school district within the State of New York in which the homeless child was attending a public school on a tuition - free basis or was entitled to attend when circumstances arose which caused such child to become homeless, which is different from the school district of current location.
Whenever the school district of current location is designated, the child shall be entitled to attend the school that is zoned for his or her temporary location or any school that nonhomeless students who live in the same attendance zone in which the homeless child or youth is temporarily residing are entitled to attend.
Where the school district in which a homeless child is temporarily housed is the same district the child attended on a tuition - free basis or was entitled to attend when circumstances arose which caused the child to become homeless, the child shall be entitled to attend the schools of such district without the payment of tuition for the duration of homelessness.
The McKinney - Vento Program addresses the problems that homeless children and youth face in enrolling, attending, and succeeding in school.
The McKinney - Vento Education for Homeless Children and Youth Program is designed to address the problems that homeless children and youth have faced in enrolling, attending, and succeeding inHomeless Children and Youth Program is designed to address the problems that homeless children and youth have faced in enrolling, attending, and succeeding inChildren and Youth Program is designed to address the problems that homeless children and youth have faced in enrolling, attending, and succeeding inhomeless children and youth have faced in enrolling, attending, and succeeding inchildren and youth have faced in enrolling, attending, and succeeding in school.
Activities for, and services to, homeless children and youths that enable them to enroll in, attend, and succeed in school or preschool programs
We believe that every one is entitled to receive a basic education, although many orphaned, homeless and destitute children right here in Kibera Slums can not attend school due to their level of poverty.
Homeless children are also automatically eligible to attend preschool programs funded under Title I.» USED Guidance, March 2017, N - 2.
The McKinney - Vento Act's Education for Homeless Children and Youth (EHCY) program and Title I Part A provide students experiencing homelessness with protections and services to ensure they can enroll in and attend school, complete their high school education, and continue on to higher education — their best hope of avoiding poverty and homelessness as adults.
When these barriers are not addressed, homeless children and youth often are unable to attend, or even enroll in, early childhood programs or school, which prevents them from obtaining the early care and education that is their best hope of escaping poverty as adults.
To support the attendance of homeless children, Head Start programs must allow homeless children to attend for up to 90 days or as long as allowed under state licensing requirements, without immunization and other records, to give the family reasonable time to present these documents.
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