Here's the answer: Because Parent Power isn't
just about school choice.
Not exact matches
I think it is important to point out that this isn't
just an issue for middle class families who care deeply
about their child's diet and are able to provide abundant healthy food
choices but
school menus have great impact on many, many poor children who, through no fault of their own and often with no agency to change the situation, end up being pawns in the lunch tray wars.
Schools selling Flaming Hot Cheetos also undermine nutrition education
about making good food
choices, and that hurts all kids, not
just low income kids.
«Local councils have been working hard to not only fulfil their duty to ensure every child has a
school place, but to make sure as many as possible get their first
choice — it isn't
just about a place for a child, but the right place.
Nor is
school choice just about breaking down a sclerotic government monopoly.
In my view, the available
choices should include private, charter, and virtual
schools, and
just about anything else with the potential to deliver a quality education to kids.
The immediate reason for this note, in addition to thanking you for Our Kids, is to respectfully take issue with your comments
about school choice at the Fordham Institute last week, which I
just watched on Fordham's website.
[3]
Just as voucher holders may benefit from a real estate broker to find housing in a high - opportunity neighborhood, low - income families in
school choice systems with limited information
about high - performing
schools could benefit from an adviser who connects them to educational opportunities.
And the situation is even worse because most regulators making decisions
about what
choice schools should be opened, expanded, or closed are not relying on rigorously identified gains in test scores — they
just look primarily at the levels of test scores and call those with low scores bad.
As a business we are very passionate
about supporting the local community and if we give an opportunity to
just one student or even guide them to make a more decisive career
choice then the work that we do with the
school has served a purpose.
Bottom line:
just about everybody would benefit from
school choice and lawmakers need to understand that.
This is not
just about saving money it is
about giving
schools the chance to make the right educational
choices and helping them ensure that they are getting the maximum life from the equipment and resources that they buy.
Kids who out of
school control large sums of money and have huge
choices on how they spend it have almost no
choices at all
about how they are educated — they are, for the most part,
just herded into classrooms and told what to do and when to do it.
Fifth, one little - noted benefit of properly implemented common standards is a better - functioning education marketplace, in which parents will be able to make
choices about schools on the basis of more accurate information
about how
schools A's performance compares with that of
school B — not
just within communities and states but also when considering a move from state to state.
Making your
school more «green» by reducing its eco footprint isn't
just good for the environment, it's an important part of educating your students
about green
choices by example.
Education isn't
just about maximizing student
choice and catering to «consumer» interests; it is
about fostering democratic citizenship, which is why all taxpayers fund public
schools.
The debate on
school choice is
about more than
just opposing vouchers and our efforts center on supporting policy that strengthens public
schools.
We could kind of use that as a parallel to what you were
just saying
about school choice.
For the last half - century,
just about every education reform — from desegregation to
school choice — has taken care to keep city and suburban
schools and students separate.
But
school choice isn't
just about families moving their kids out of failure mills and dropout factories.
As
School Choice Week 2015 gets underway, AAE just wanted to remind you about the top 8 most important facts you need to have in your school choice week ar
School Choice Week 2015 gets underway, AAE just wanted to remind you about the top 8 most important facts you need to have in your school choice week ar
Choice Week 2015 gets underway, AAE
just wanted to remind you
about the top 8 most important facts you need to have in your
school choice week ar
school choice week ar
choice week arsenal.
In Wandsworth and Southwark,
just over half got their first
choice school, while in Bexley and Newham,
about 80 % did.
«
School choice isn't
just about charter
schools, but allowing students to attend the
schools that help them thrive, regardless of zip code.»
To us, a «confident
choice» is not
just about feeling good, it's
about making the best
choices for
school and home and getting results.
But expanding
school choice into suburbia isn't
just about the middle class who populate the well - manicured subdivisions.
As per Weingarten: «Over a year ago, the Washington [DC] Teachers» Union filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to see the data from the
school district's IMPACT [teacher] evaluation system — a system that's used for big
choices, like the firing of 563 teachers in
just the past four years, curriculum decisions,
school closures and more [see prior posts
about this as related to the IMPACT program here].
Drew Catt: Then, going beyond
just schooling types, what do military families think
about educational
choice programs?
If you could describe your feelings
about school choice or the future of educational
choice in Illinois right now in one word,
just one word, what would that be?
Asked
about the decision to campaign here, Trump spokesman Jason Miller wrote in an email: «Mr. Trump believes that all children deserve the opportunity to receive a first - class education, and his
school choice reform proposals will help do
just that.
Don't forget to subscribe to our podcast for more of our coverage of
school choice and educational - related news, our podcast policy discussions, our research and
just listening to anything else we happen to talk
about.
The Advocate Guest column:
School choice data doesn't reflect classroom reality As school choice continues to gain support, we must broaden the conversation about effectiveness to include more than scores, and we must seek access to more data that can help us determine not just how students are performing in math and reading, but what effect expanding educational options has on them beyond gradu
School choice data doesn't reflect classroom reality As
school choice continues to gain support, we must broaden the conversation about effectiveness to include more than scores, and we must seek access to more data that can help us determine not just how students are performing in math and reading, but what effect expanding educational options has on them beyond gradu
school choice continues to gain support, we must broaden the conversation
about effectiveness to include more than scores, and we must seek access to more data that can help us determine not
just how students are performing in math and reading, but what effect expanding educational options has on them beyond graduation.
Ultra-conservative Grover Nordquist
just said that he's not worried
about the national election because his party added new governors: «Our strength is state by state,» Norquist said, adding that it is there that Republicans would enact the policies — ending teacher tenure, reining in public employee pensions, promoting
school choice — that would invigorate the national party from the bottom up.»
«A lot of it is building up in teachers... and it's not
just the uncertainty
about whether we're going to shift now and invest in
school -
choice programs,» Weishart said, alluding to speculation that lawmakers in West Virginia, which currently doesn't have a charter -
school law, might introduce such legislation.
What's going to happen, is once these
school reformers finish off public
schools in a couple of decades,
schools of
choice will not have to worry
about teachers» unions and due process —
just like the Walton's want it.
You're inspired, you're passionate, you've
just received your invitation for an in - depth interview and you're ready to sell your experience
about why you're going to make an exceptional Fellow, but... BUT you're not really sure why Betsy DeVos was a controversial
choice for Secretary of Education, the argument between charter
school vs traditional public
school vs
school vouchers alludes you, and you once thought Common Core was a pilates ab workout.
Just like someone walking into a gym for the first time, a
school leader and teacher have a lot of
choices to make
about how to best serve students.
Traditional districts, in particular, do as little as possible to inform families
about their options; the penchant of districts to inform families of kids in failing
schools of their options in June —
just as families were going on summer break — is one reason why the No Child Left Behind's
school choice provision has never worked as envisioned.
They don't
just offer suggestions
about how to afford your top
school choice, INvestEd offers great suggestions
about college selection and ways to keep costs down.
So my son has
just quit
school for
about half a year now, but his program or course of
choice requires him to participate in both term 1 and 2 to recieve a grade.
Each year, home buyers across North America struggle with a familiar
choice: They can pay more to live in a smaller urban property, within walking distance to
schools, shops and work; or pay less for a larger suburban home with a big backyard and ample parking, but have to hop in a car for
just about everything they need.
I'm
just one guy and I can only review so many of these driving
schools until my eyeballs fall out, so three
choices is
about the best I can do at this point.