Sentences with phrase «lack ready access»

It is true that teachers lack the ready access to organizational authority that school and system leaders can use to bust free.
Such an expansion would particularly benefit residents of medically underserved urban and rural communities who otherwise lack ready access to primary care services, especially adults with serious and chronic health conditions that can be cared for in primary care settings, women of childbearing age, children and the low - income elderly.
Consumers lack ready access to information that can help them to make efficient upgrades.
Whatever confidence they may have had when they entered teaching was undermined daily as they realized that they did not really know what they were supposed to teach, that they had no instructional guides, that they lacked ready access to resources that might enhance their own subject knowledge, and that their private knapsack of instructional strategies was virtually empty.

Not exact matches

Underlying these mundane and bureaucratic reasons may be the fact that, beyond imposing accountability, Vallas lacked a sophisticated or flexible education vision, or ready access to one.
As I said earlier, the lack of a national, strategic approach to teacher training means that there are challenging areas of the country without ready access to the best newly qualified teachers.
You've shown why Android isn't ready to be considered an iPad alternative, based on the lack of apps, but there are Windows tablets out there in the world with access to more «apps» than the iPad could ever hope for.
Right now on Steam, the game lacks the «Early Access» banner, and this is coverage of the game's version 1.0.12 - I honestly think that the developers have made a huge mistakes in labeling this game as ready for sale.
Little Japan lacks natural resources, but has ready access to the sea.
Despite evidence of the positive impact of high - quality early childhood education for all children, it remains out of reach for most low - and moderate - income families.15 The average price of center - based care in the United States accounts for nearly 30 percent of the median family income, and only 10 percent of child care programs are considered high quality.16 Publicly funded programs — such as Head Start, Early Head Start, child care, and state pre-K programs — are primarily targeted at low - income families, but limited funding for these programs severely hinders access.17 This lack of access to high - quality early childhood education perpetuates the achievement gap, evidenced by the fact that only 48 percent of low - income children are ready for kindergarten, compared with 75 percent of moderate - or high - income children.18
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