Sentences with phrase «more students per year»

Not exact matches

A 2014 report from the New American Foundation estimated that 40 % of loan debt was held by the 14 % of students seeking graduate degrees and the College Board found that graduate students borrow an average of nearly three times more per year than undergraduates.
The government only allows a student a certain amount per year, so that they don't end up owing more than $ 50k after four years... less if you're a dependent of your parents.
The term «applicable educational institution» refers to an educational institution which a) had at least 500 students during the preceding taxable year; b) the aggregate fair market value of the assets of which at the end of the preceding taxable year (other than those assets which are used directly in carrying out the institution's exempt purpose) is at least $ 500,000 per student of the institution; and c) more than 50 percent of the students are located in the United States.
According to Statistics Canada, full - time undergraduate students paid $ 6,191 in tuition fees in 2015/2016, up more than three per cent from a year earlier, and continuing to grow each year.
On the question of whether public funding for elite private schools that charge more than $ 10,000 per year per student in tuition should be eliminated, 75 per cent of respondents agreed and more than half, 53 per cent, agreed strongly.
For the purposes of this story, «elite private school» was defined as a private school charging more than $ 10,000 per year per student in tuition.
While private student loans contributed between $ 5 and $ 7 billion in new loans annually just seven years ago, it now contributes $ 10 billion per year as well as a portfolio numbering more than $ 100 billion in outstanding loans.
Private School Review found the average private school tuition for an elementary student is 7,379 per year and the private high school average is $ 13,334... MORE per year.
Students miss more than 51 million school hours per year * because of dental problems or related conditions.
Share Our Strength's No Kid Hungry campaign reported in 2013 that on average, students who eat school breakfast attend 1.5 more days of school per year and score 17.5 percent higher on standardized math tests; when combined, these factors translate into a student being twenty percent more likely to graduate high school.
New York for the fifth year in a row spent more money per student than any other state, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
Statewide, more than 75 parochial schools have closed in just the last five years, and average tuition can reach as high as $ 8,500 per student annually.
Budgeted operating costs for the 2011 - 12 school year were $ 1,302 more per student at NCC than at Suffolk County Community College, according to the report.
The program, which will offer free SUNY tuition to students whose families earn up to $ 125,000 per year, is expected to increase applications to the system's schools, and it could lead to the need for expanded offerings as well as more instructors to meet the demand.
Erie Community College students will pay an additional $ 138 per year in tuition, plus more in student fees, under a 2016 - 17 budget plan unanimously approved by the college's trustees.
It would also increase funding for charter schools by $ 225 per student next year — even more than the governor's budget would.
The Democrats pointed to a benefit similar to one in Massachusetts offering a deduction for undergraduate loan interest with no income or total deduction limit as potentially helping more than 1 million New York students save an estimated $ 90 million per year.
Enrollment numbers have decreased in both smaller districts in recent years and yet they continue to spend more on administrative costs per student than others.
The mayor repeatedly declined to say how much the city currently spends per year on tuition for students who are approved for reimbursement for private school education, but according to the city's Independent Budget Office, the city is estimated to have paid out more than $ 200 million in reimbursements this year.
The plan, known as the Excelsior Scholarship program, includes incentives to ensure that more students graduate on time, including requiring that each year, students complete the full - time requirement of 30 credits per year.
Over the last 15 years, spending on education in New York has more than doubled, from $ 28 billion to $ 58 billion, and we spend more per pupil than any other state in the nation, yet our students remain in the bottom half when it comes to results.
The Health Ministry has instructed principals of nursing training institutions to reduce the number of students they admit for the 2017/18 academic year by 40 per cent or more.
The number of U.S. medical students choosing careers in family practice plummeted by more than 50 percent in just the last eight years, but ironically, the more specialists there are in a state per capita, the lower the quality rank of medical care in that state and the higher the cost.
These applicants may also prove more profitable for a university, because international students — who can end up paying up to # 35,000 per year in tuition fees — tend to be heavily influenced by league tables when choosing a UK institution.
Starting in 2012, money is likely to become an even more important concern for students as universities in England are allowed to charge undergraduates up to # 9000 per year ($ 14,200 or $ 10,300) in tuition fees as a way of dealing with government funding cuts.
The Welsh Assembly has agreed to subsidize Welsh students so that they will pay no more than # 3465 per year, wherever in the United Kingdom they choose to study.
A memorandum of understanding also allowed us to launch expanded learning time at all of our neighborhood schools; students attend school for 100 minutes more per day, equaling over 40 additional days per year.
What's more, in the 1995 - 96 school year, the tiny, 260 - student Sausalito district that includes the school spent $ 12,100 per student, compared with $ 4,977 per pupil statewide.
Most people who read the headlines last February were stunned to learn that New York City schools were being shortchanged by $ 5.6 billion per year, or more than $ 5,000 per student.
«PIRLS 2016 shows that 81 per cent of Australian Year 4 students are achieving at or above the Intermediate benchmark — the proficient standard for Australia — compared to 76 per cent in 2011, with more students achieving at the High or Advanced benchmark,» Dr Thomson said.
Whilst the future of the charges seems more uncertain than at any time since their rise to # 9,000 per year in 2011, the uncertainty seems to be turning students toward tuition alternatives, such as online learning models.
«In its 2012 report Improving Student Attendance, the Queensland Audit Office found students with attendance rates of 85 per cent or less [due to unexplained reasons] are: four times more likely to be suspended or excluded; 1.5 times more likely to not finish Year 10; and 3.5 times more likely to not obtain an Overall Position (OP) 1 - 15.
Changes to the tertiary sector have seen the number of students commencing higher education grow by 46 per cent in less than 10 years since 2007, and more avenues being used to gain entry.
The median answer remained $ 2,000, and more than one - third of the sample still thought that their districts spend no more than $ 1,000 per student each year.
However, the study shows the decision to delay is becoming more common, with the number of «delayed entry» students increasing each year so that the proportion among all public school students almost doubled from 1.5 per cent in 2010 to 2.9 per cent in 2014.
The average Massachusetts student misses eight school days per year, according to Goodman, but student absences vary by poverty status, with poor students being absent ten days per year on average, three days more than nonpoor students.
Students randomly offered a seat at a small school accumulate 1.4 more credits per year, attend school for 4 more days each year, and are 9 % more likely to receive a high school diploma.
But the 82 - year - old retired school administrator — whose 1977 move to charge the families of undocumented children here $ 1,000 per student to attend public schools sparked a federal lawsuit — has more than made his peace with the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling against him and the school system in Plyler v. Doe.
This year, more than half of all team registrations and submissions were from government schools and, in terms of the gender split, around 42 per cent of students on teams that submitted a report were girls.
Wealthy school districts in Connecticut typically spent $ 1,227 more per student than poorer ones during the 1981 - 82 school year, according to a recent state report.
But the U.S. Census Bureau, in a survey of education finances released in July 2009, says Washington spent $ 14,324 per public - school student in the 2006 — 07 school year, or about $ 6,300 more than the national average.
In my city, New York, elite private schools such as Dalton, Horace Mann, Spence, Brearley, Riverdale Country School, and at least two dozen more levy tuitions in the range of $ 20,000 a year — exceeding what even the wealthiest New York suburban school districts spend per student.
For the past hundred years, with rare and short exceptions and after controlling for inflation, public schools have had both more money and more employees per student in each succeeding year.
In this four - year longitudinal class - size study, more than 7,000 students in 79 schools were randomly assigned to one of three classroom situations: small class (13 to 17 students per teacher), regular class (22 to 25 students per teacher), or regular class with a full - time teacher's aide.
And with forty school visits, ten workshops for K - 12 teachers, two week - long field trips, an annual openhouse event at CSU, and even a television show on a station operated by the city «sPoudre School District, Jones and the Little Shop of Physics bring hands - on scienceto more than 15,000 students per year.
As our survey did two years ago, we asked respondents a variety of factual questions: whether charter schools can hold religious services, charge tuition, receive more or less per - pupil funding than traditional public schools, and are legally obligated to admit students randomly when oversubscribed.
Nevertheless, a measure of state and federal court cases calculated per enrolled student would demonstrate similar upward trends, more than doubling from the years 1976 — 1992 to the 2003 — 2007 period.
A study of elementary and middle - school funding in the 2007 08 school year found that the 18 smallest elementary and middle schools received 28 percent more dollars per student than the six largest: $ 10,900 compared to $ 7,800.
Goldrick - Rab uses their stories to argue that financial aid falls far short of what students need and recommends that lawmakers spend at least $ 70 to $ 100 billion more per year to fully cover tuition at public colleges.
The poll showed that 73 per cent felt young people were under more pressure now than two years ago, while 82 per cent felt that students were more pressured now than 10 years ago.
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