Sentences with phrase «public school attendance requirements»

Early in the session, Kenley and fellow Senate Education Committee member Carlin Yoder, R - Middlebury, publicly debated the so - called «public school attendance requirement,» as the Evansville Courier & Press «Eric Bradner recalls.
-- Loosen the public school attendance requirement.
The public school attendance requirement has been irksome to many parents who have long sent their children to private schools.
Proposed legislation would remove the public school attendance requirement.
Because House Bill 1003 is more about dropping the public school attendance requirement, it is not accurate to say that as many as 14,500 additional students would qualify for vouchers.
Under the current rules, young students entering school have to attend at least first grade in a public school to meet the public school attendance requirement — kindergarten doesn't count.
But House Bill 1003 also drops the «public school attendance requirement» — the guideline that a student must attend public schools for at least a year to receive a voucher — for students living in attendance zones of schools that received an F grade from the state.

Not exact matches

In addition, all students applying for the WPCP must meet one of the following attendance requirements for 2016 - 17: (1) have attended a public school in Wisconsin in the prior school year; (2) not have been enrolled in school in the prior school year; (3) applying to attend kindergarten, first, or ninth grades for the coming school year; or (4) participated in the WPCP or Racine Parental Choice Program (RCPC) in the 2015 - 16 school year.
If House Bill 1637 is enacted, public funds would be used to send students to private schools — which are only approved by the Department of Education for attendance and not curriculum, without the same accountability standards as the public schools — violating the requirements of state law and the state Constitution.
The National School Breakfast and Lunch Programs (Fund 312) are voluntary programs available to all public schools, private schools, and residential child - care institutions that agree to operate a non-profit program offering lunches meeting federal requirements to all children in attendance.
Include (1) methods of assessing student growth; (2) consideration of control factors tracked by public school information system that may affect teacher performance, such as student characteristics, attendance, and mobility; and (3) minimum requirements for evaluation instruments and procedures.
Many high schools, especially public high schools, the only requirement for passing is attendance.
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