Not exact matches
Mayor Bill de Blasio took
heat over his tough stance on
charter schools during an appearance on MSNBC's «Morning Joe» on Monday, and countered that he's acting in defense of the many more students who go to traditional public
schools.
The
heated debate
over the growth of
charter schools in Massachusetts continues to escalate, as advocates and opponents wrangle in legal suits and wage aggressive public relation campaigns to sway parents» opinions.
The debate of
charters over traditional public
schools appears to be most
heated in Rutherford County, a rural manufacturing community in the Blue Ridge Mountains foothills with unemployment rates nearly twice the state average.
The 74:
Heated Oakland
School Board Race Captures Growing Conflict
Over Charters, Choice, Equity http://bit.ly/2eeAanJ
In Massachusetts, a years - long battle
over eliminating a cap on expanding public
charter schools will become even more heated thanks to incoming Gov. Charlie Baker, who has signaled that he will support reformers on this issue through his appointment of former New Schools Venture Fund boss - turned - federal education official Jim Peyser as the state's new superint
schools will become even more
heated thanks to incoming Gov. Charlie Baker, who has signaled that he will support reformers on this issue through his appointment of former New
Schools Venture Fund boss - turned - federal education official Jim Peyser as the state's new superint
Schools Venture Fund boss - turned - federal education official Jim Peyser as the state's new superintendent.
It seems to me that consistently front - loading a
charter school's enrollment only to see it shrink
over the course of the year, thereby back - loading enrollment at public
schools, could also allow fiscal shenanigans wherein, if less money is spent on students on average at the beginning of the year (say, no building
heating costs or payments for
school trips or assessments that occur later on in the year), then the
charter school can effect a profit on students who later in the year transfer out of the
school.
Education outcomes in America continue to lag globally; the debate
over Common Core State Standards remains
heated; and educational choice options such as education savings accounts and
charter schools continue to grow.