Not exact matches
CCSA's Minimum Academic Accountability Criteria would not apply if a school is ASAM /
Alternative,
less than four years old, or has
less than 30
valid test takers.
Note that CCSA's Minimum Academic Accountability Criteria do not apply if a school is:
Alternative Schools Accountability Model (ASAM),
Alternative,
less than four years old, or has
less than 30
valid test takers.
CCSA's Minimum Academic Accountability Criteria would not apply if a school is designated as DASS (
Alternative),
less than four years old, or has
less than 30
valid test takers.
CCSA's minimum academic accountability criteria do not apply if a school is:
Alternative Schools Accountability Model (ASAM),
Alternative,
less than four years old, or has
less than 30
valid test takers.
Those
alternative sets are not known to be any
less physically
valid than whatever set produced each individual model hindcast.
(«Evidence indicating that early, extensive, and continuous nonmaternal care is associated with
less harmonious parent - child relations and elevated levels of aggression and noncompliance suggests that concerns raised about early and extensive child care 15 years ago remain
valid and that
alternative explanations of Belsky's originally controversial conclusion do not account for seemingly adverse effects of routine nonmaternal care that continue to be reported in the literature... No longer is it tenable for developmental scholars and child - care advocates to deride the notion that early and extensive nonmaternal care of the kind available in most communities poses risks for young children and perhaps the larger society as well.
Fact: «Evidence indicating that early, extensive, and continuous nonmaternal care is associated with
less harmonious parent - child relations and elevated levels of aggression and noncompliance suggests that concerns raised about early and extensive child care 15 years ago remain
valid and that
alternative explanations of Belsky's originally controversial conclusion do not account for seemingly adverse effects of routine nonmaternal care that continue to be reported in the literature... No longer is it tenable for developmental scholars and child - care advocates to deride the notion that early and extensive nonmaternal care of the kind available in most communities poses risks for young children and perhaps the larger society as well.