Sentences with phrase «school option not»

An obvious question to ask is whether parents would have homeschooled their children had the cyber charter school option not existed.
Teen parents need and deserve a high - quality school option not only for themselves, but also for the future of their children.

Not exact matches

This after school and sleepover must - have snack can still be bought today — now in bulk, 24 and 48 - packs, which wasn't an option decades ago.
There's an email or fax option if your doctor is old school and can't handle an iPad.
But if you are going to school to become an «entrepreneur» because you live, breathe and dream of starting your own business, it might not be the best option in today's world.
UCLA's Anderson School of Management offered a video option last year, but scrapped it when some students didn't have access to the necessary technology.
That study, led by William Bozeman, M.D., of Wake Forest University School of Medicine, found that Tasers «appear to be very safe, especially when compared to other options police have for subduing violent or combative suspects... [though] that is not to say that injuries and deaths are impossible.»
If you fancy working in the dental health profession but can't see yourself enduring or affording all those years of dental school, starting a career as a dental hygienist might be a good option with a good income and a positive employment outlook.
Banks and other private lenders aren't usually known for their flexibility, but some do offer helpful repayment options if you go back to school or run into financial hardship.
Some tablet computers have white board capabilities so there's a not - so - old - school option for using this strategy.
«The Mayors» Council plan not only quickly improves transit service with 25 % more buses, it will give those driving to work or school the option to leave the car at home and take transit, which is better for our environment,» McGarrigle said, adding that the BC Federation of Labour, representing over 500,000 unionized workers across the province, unanimously supported a resolution Unifor Local 111 introduced to endorse a Yes in the referendum.
If you'd like to keep up with interest payments while you're in school but are afraid you can't afford much more than that, the interest repayment option is probably what you want.
Some offer more extensive forbearance options and in - school deferment so you don't have to worry about your repayments if you're planning on going back to school or want to make a career change.
In the worst case scenario, where the kid doesn't get any money for college, you always have the option of taking 4 years off from investing for retirement and plowing the money instead right out of your paycheck into school costs.
So if your child doesn't end up needing the money for college (or grad school or trade / vocational school), you have a few options.
If his stepfather even really was a Muslim (hard to know in Indonesia, because atheism wasn't an option for registration) he sure as heck didn't take it seriously enough to prevent Obama's mother from placing the kid in Catholic school.
The same people who protest international support for third - world countries saying «we need to take care of our own first» are ironically the same people who actually want to abolish food stamps, the WIC program, free school lunches, welfare and social security in the US, never mind the fact that the people who benefit from these programs are the ones who cut their lawns, clean their homes, serve their meals in restaurants, and build their houses, all while going home to a tiny apartment they share with 6 other people and finding nothing to eat in the house but a can of green beans because payday is still 2 days off and there's only enough gas in the car to get them to work the next two days, so driving around town for 2 hours trying to find an open food bank isn't an option.
Whilst I am aware that the diocese has said that the school may if it wishes do this, it hardly inspires confidence, not least given the apparent equivocation of its official «Guidance Notes» - and few schools take this option.
Better schools, better roads, health care for your neighbor whose job does not offer any health care options?
And yet the novel that followed The Junkers, Monk Dawson, was about a monk: a simple story of a boy from a school not unlike Ampleforth, who on graduation joins the community, then questions its commitment to educating the sons of the rich, and applies his own idiosyncratic «preferential option for the poor,» providing shelter for a homeless family in the school theater.
The second option, not humanly possible, is to not think, in which case it would be possible to not recruit from one school of thought to another.
fair enough, but you also have to think... they are not telling employers «you have to provide this» they are saying «you have to provide this option on there» catholic school A could offer it to 100 % of its employees... its up to the employee to choose whether or not to actually make use of it.
Membership in a philosophical school entailed not doctrinal allegiance but, as Hadot puts it, «the choice of a certain way of life and existential option which demands from the individual a total change of lifestyle, a conversion of one's entire being, and ultimately a certain desire to be and to live in a certain way.»
While some evangelical supporters of homeschooling, private school, and charter school options are celebrating a school choice advocate's appointment to this all - important role (and a graduate of the evangelical liberal arts school, Calvin College, at that), other conservative Christian public school parents and advocates are disheartened by DeVos's limited personal history with our nation's public schools (she has mentored in public schools but not attended, taught, or sent children to public schools).
There are wooded options up island as well (we used to run loops around Peaked Hill for cross country practice in high school) but they're harder to find and not as convenient as down island.
The meal options I came up with had to be: # 1 things that would be fairly easy to prepare (I wasn't about to take an extra hour on Sunday to make something elaborate), # 2 had to be foods I could easily manipulate the nutritional profile for (ensuring a balance of protein, carbs, and fat), # 3 the food had to store well in the fridge or freezer, # 4 they had to reheat well in either the toaster or microwave OR be eaten cold right from the fridge, and # 5 ideally, they needed to be things she could easily eat in the car on the way to school (remember, it takes us at least 20 minutes with no traffic to get to school so eating in the car gives us even MORE time to sleep lol).
This recipe is also typically a safe option, even if your child attends a school where nuts are not allowed.
I never really ever follow recipes for smoothies or juices and I don't have much time when I am working from home so this is a healthy option for me for breakfast after I've done the school run or for lunch.
While caterers in many schools worry about wasting their budget on meat - free options that children simply do not eat, creative cuisine of this calibre can tempt pupils all week long, not just on a Meat Free Monday.
Rather than having just one or two vegetarian options, they will have a wider choice of vegetarian foods not always available in school meals.
Note, if a child is eligible for a free school meal the duty is not to discriminate and we believe this means that a vegan option should be provided.
I was not your average kid and always ate the traditional meal option at school instead of the pizza or burgers (and the white milk instead of chocolate.
A recent report published by Harvard Medical School suggests, «When it comes to getting protein in your diet, meat isn't the only option.
«Students don't want to support an industry that slaughters nearly 2 million animals every hour, devastates the environment, and contributes to human disease, and schools are responding by rapidly increasing their cruelty - free options, from vegan ravioli to nondairy chocolate mousse.»
Because he's a year removed from his high school class, Diallo is eligible for the draft but he hasn't signed with an agent yet and is keeping his options open.
Scheme (e.g. triple - option or return to Air Raid) and an out - of - the - box approach to recruiting are some ideas I've come up with, but I'm not sure there's a SABR type way to evaluate high school football talent to exploit inefficiencies in that kind of player market.
Like the others outside the top 125, Duval also has the option to improve his status by playing at Q school this year, but that doesn't sound likely.
it wasn't Ennis» only option, he was being recruited by other schools oddly enough
If I were in his shoes, I might consider a graphic like that even if I knew half the schools weren't real options anymore.
Pellegrino didn't initially consider the ACC school as an option, but when Riley left Dartmouth to take the job at his alma mater in January following the retirement of long - time head coach Bobby Clark, the Irish quickly rose to the top of Pellegrino's list.
I've been overwhelmed with all of the options (I do better with limited choices) and, while I haven't actually visited any of the schools in person yet (I have talked with some moms about where they are sending their kids), I haven't felt peaceful about the whole process.
I hope there will be more options available when the time comes in the way of tax breaks or vouchers for those who decide not to send their kids to public schools.
Because then you'll know you explored all options and I get the feeling that if you do homeschool and then you change your mind you'll kick yourself for not doing the school visits.
In our case, home schooling isn't an option but we moved to a school district that we loved 2 weeks before Kindergarten started.
I love your post, you have described exactly how I feel at the moment.My older 4 children went to our local school, but now my son has just turned 5 and will attend kinder next year I am really considering homeschooling.I just have this niggling feeling in the back of my mind that our local school is just not right for him.I understand completely where you are coming from.I'm going to check out your other post and my options too.Good luck with your decision.
They're less into dolls and role play type games, although they do still enjoy a good game of school on occasion, I try to avoid screen time where possible so tablets are not an option and they're still at an age where clothes are a necessity rather something to be bought for pleasure.
We looked into private school options when we learned that public school was not working well for our family.
If your child's school doesn't have the option for them to compost their leftover food (perhaps you can inquire about it and get a system started), ask them to bring home their leftovers rather than throw them into the trash so you can either save them if they are salvageable or compost them yourself.
Since I'm a stay at home mom and within walking distance of our school, I often have the option to pop in at party time and deliver a cupcake, So Delicious fudgesicle, Hansen's Natural Rootbeer and safe ice cream, gluten free pizza, etc... If I can't be there then we have the the safe treats tub for the kids to pull goodies out of.
For example, the Broward County Public Schools in Florida have been offering soy milk to any lactose - intolerant child whose parent requests it, but officials say the option is not widely advertised because of the costs involved.
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