By Matthew Di Carlo A
recent education poll conducted by Time magazine has gotten a lot of attention.
Not exact matches
According to a
recent Gallup
poll, only 29 percent of Americans say they have a «great deal» or «quite a lot of confidence» in the U.S.
education system.
In
recent years,
polls and studies have put Canada and our cities at or near the top of places to get an
education, establish a business, raise a family and live a long, healthy life.
A
recent poll / test showed that the average atheist and average agnostic know more about the Bible and have more
education than the average Christian.
A
recent Siena
poll showed voters support Cuomo and his budget conceptually, but oppose
education cuts and support the millionaire's tax.
Education now ranks as the number - one priority among American voters, with 67 percent of those surveyed saying it is a major concern, according to a
recent Gallup
poll.
Nearly two - thirds of elementary and middle school principals believe national subject - matter standards will not improve American
education, according to a
recent poll.
Or so we are told by Phi Delta Kappa, a bulwark of the
education establishment whose
recent poll has been widely reported in the media.
Public Agenda's
recent poll of
education professors offers an answer to a question that has troubled citizens and policymakers for more than a decade.
The results of three
recent polls on
education policy should provide interesting fodder for the winners of state and national elections.
Several
recent polls have asked adult members of families their thoughts about
education.
Key takeaways from four
recent polls that asked parents and guardians for their thoughts on
education.
Michael Feuer, dean of The George Washington University Graduate School of
Education and Human Development, suggested the dip in confidence among PDK / Gallup
poll respondents might reflect the influence of
recent public debates over whether college is worth the money.
The most
recent annual Gallup
poll on attitudes toward schooling reported that just 20 % of respondents said «improving the nation's lowest - performing schools» was the most important of the nation's
education challenges.
Results of the
poll commissioned by the Center for
Education Reform differ sharply from those of two
recent surveys released by Phi Delta Kappa and the National
Education Association.
Education Bridgeport looked at the
recent poll showing the majority of CT voters want to see immediate action to fix the school funding system.
What can
recent poll numbers on support for the Common Core tell state
education officials debating which standards Indiana schools will use next?
According to
recent polling, 78 percent of Mississippians support giving parents the right to use the tax dollars associated with their child's
education to send their child to the public or private school which best serves their needs.
The results of the
recent New York Times
poll reflecting dissatisfaction with Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg's leadership of our public schools reminded me of a call to action Bill Gates offered
education reformers last September.
A
recent Education Next
poll reveals that teachers are more likely to oppose forced dues than to support them, by a 47 — 44 percent margin.
A
recent survey of voters from nine swing states indicates that
education will be a top concern for
poll - goers in the fall election.
Most parents with children in public schools do not support
recent changes in
education policy, from closing low - performing schools to shifting public dollars to charter schools to private school vouchers, according to a new
poll to be released Monday by the American Federation of Teachers.
Students at top - tier colleges are less likely than their peers at other colleges to go into
education; high - achieving college graduates are less likely to go into teaching; and those who do become teachers are less likely to stay in the profession long term.45 In
recent polling, high - achieving Millennials revealed much of the thinking that goes into this drop - off: They reported that they do not believe teaching is a good career option for high - achieving students, and they feel that the status of the teaching profession is in decline.46
In a
recent 2013 Phi Delta Kappan / Gallup national
poll on public
education, the largest majority of parents ever recorded gave their community schools a grade of A or B.
A
recent Education Next
poll, which included a question about that issue, is instructive.
Three out of four Americans oppose reducing federal
education funding to lessen the debt and deficit, according to a
recent poll from the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press.
When voters were asked in a
recent national
poll which candidate would be better for public
education, there was little agreement.
A
recent poll by
Education Reform Now, a non-partisan partner of DFER - DC, showed that 76 % of voters and an overwhelming 86 % of parents believe that public charter schools should be part of the solution to the city's supply of vacant school buildings.
A
recent public opinion
poll conducted in Bridgeport included questions about Malloy, Mayor Bill Finch, Paul Vallas, members of the Working Family Party who serve as the outspoken minority on the Bridgeport Board of
Education and Carmen Lopez, the former Connecticut superior court judge who brought the lawsuit that determined that Paul Vallas lacked the credentials necessary to serve as a superintendent of schools in Connecticut.
According to a
recent Education Next
poll, fifty percent of all teachers think that forced dues payment is wrong, while 38 percent support it.
The most
recent Gallup
poll on
education shows that the opposition to vouchers has expanded.
And it was really no surprise to me that in a
recent poll Insight conducted with SmartBrief
Education, 70 % of teachers said that they did not receive enough meaningful feedback from observations.
In a
recent survey by
Education Next, half of those
polled expressed support for universal school vouchers, and 60 percent favored giving tax credits for individual and corporate donations to scholarship organizations that help low - and middle - income families pay private - school tuition.
The council says it has sought in
recent years to «reduce or remove the use of schools as
polling stations so that pupils do not have their
education disrupted».
Many Canadian parents are not planning ahead when it comes to their child's
education, a
recent RBC
poll revealed.
In «Intelligent design», Althouse compares a
recent split vote by the Kansas Board of
Education to embrace creationism with a vote by most Pennsylvanians to use the
polls to fire the board who tried to do the same thing.
According to a
recent poll from the First Five Years Fund, 82 percent of Republicans, 85 percent of Independents, and 97 percent of Democrats support «making quality early
education for children from birth through age five, including child care, more affordable for working families.»