Sentences with phrase «looking for segregation»

«Ofsted inspectors came to our schools looking for extremism, looking for segregation, looking for proof that our children have religion forced upon them as part of an Islamic plot,» he said.
«Ofsted inspectors came to our school looking for extremism, looking for segregation, looking for proof that our children have religion forced upon them as part of a religious plot,» he said.

Not exact matches

Abstract: We use the new minimum spanning tree (MST) method to look for mass segregation in the Taurus association.
From the Declaration of Independence to the U.S. Supreme Court decision ending school segregation, this new book is the place to look for the words that inspired, educated, and shaped our nation.
Kahlenberg and Potter acknowledge the CRP's methodological problems, but dig the ditch deeper by citing one article that appeared in this journal and eviscerated the CRP's study (see «A Closer Look at Charter Schools and Segregation,» check the facts, Summer 2010) and a 2010 study looking at racial enrollment patterns among charter schools managed by for - profit management organizations, which represent just 12 percent of the charter sector nationally.
However, as state legislatures and the Trump administration look to grow school choice, we must commit to ensuring that increases in choice do not lead to decreases in access to quality schools for, or greater segregation of, students with disabilities.
Looking at longitudinal studies in Milwaukee and Louisiana, she describes them in a way that will leave the impression that the results were negative for school choice: «In both cases, programs were used primarily by black students and generally did not exacerbate segregation in public schools; however, students using vouchers did not gain access to integrated private schools, and segregation in private schools actually increased.»
May 19, 2016 by Brett Kittredge As the United States marks the 62nd anniversary of the landmark Brown vs. Board of Education decision which declared state laws establishing separate public schools for black and white students to be unconstitutional, a new study looks at the effect school choice has had in reducing racial segregation in schools.
Our Top Pick in nonfiction for June is Kristen Green's Something Must Be Done About Prince Edward County, a personal and probing look at school segregation in one Southern community.
Filmed primarily in Chicago with assistance from a team of SAIC alumni, Looking Pretty for God combines a fictional photo shoot and interviews with funeral directors, revealing how their occupation is emblematic of modernity's segregation between work, the worker, and the resulting product as it is subsequently displayed for the public.
The WSJ Blog summary opines that the case does not overturn Brown v. Board of Education (which abolished the «separate but equal» justification for school segregation), but rather, amplifies it to stand for the proposition that schools can not look at race at all, no matter the reason for doing so.
«We generally look for a tax savings of at least 10 times our fee before we encourage a client to use cost segregation
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