State and city elected officials, parents and education advocates stand united outside Department of Education headquarters on Feb. 28 in favor of proposed state legislation that would
require elected parent councils to approve school co-locations before they could go into effect.
UFT President Michael Mulgrew joined state and city elected officials, parents and education advocates on Feb. 28 to announce his support for proposed state legislation that would
require elected parent councils to approve school co-locations before they could go into effect.
Not exact matches
As
required by the state, we have a school management team made up of administrators and
elected parents and staff members.
Cameron cited the White Paper, which said: «We will no longer
require academy trusts to reserve places for
elected parents on governing boards.»
The structure of Community Council
requires that six
parent members are
elected each year to represent each of the six grade levels K - 5 (two
parents may share one position).
It says: «We will no longer
require academy trusts to reserve places for
elected parents on governing boards.
The path to excellence
requires students who are motivated and ready to learn, involved
parents, trained and committed educators, informed voters, an engaged business and philanthropic community, and capable and supportive
elected officials.
First published in the CT Mirror, SBAC: Failing most Connecticut children in more ways than one fellow public educator advocate and columnist has a great article that provides important information to
parents across Connecticut and should be
required reading for Connecticut's
elected officials.
As noted by Judge Cole, the IDEA was amended, effective June 4, 1997, to provide that the Act no longer
requires a local educational agency to pay for educational services for a disabled child at a private school «if that agency made a free appropriate public education available to the child and the
parents elected to place the child in such private school or facility.»