North Carolina: Chris Fitzsimon of NC Policy Watch calls attention to «the latest
school privatization scheme that continues to draw far too little attention from the media and even many education advocates.»
Support for
school privatization schemes continues to plummet and there is a demand, especially in communities of color, for full service, sustainable community schools!
According to organizers, the rally is being called «Win Back Wednesday» because public education must be «won back» from the profit - driven entities behind high - stakes testing and
school privatization schemes and returned to actual stakeholders: parents, students, and educators.
Click HERE to sign and share a petition telling state lawmakers to OPPOSE ESAs and other
school privatization schemes in PA..
Click HERE to sign a petition telling state lawmakers to OPPOSE ESAs and other
school privatization schemes in PA..
It is critical that PA lawmakers who are committed to improving educational opportunities for minority students in low - income districts SUPPORT increased state funding for our public school and OPPOSE
school privatization schemes that would drain resources away from the students who need them the most.
Not exact matches
They promote free market
schemes and
privatization for our
schools.
This private acknowledgment apparently was forgotten when these same union leaders stood with bullhorns at rallies and
school board meetings and in the most crass possible terms accused the district of a
privatization scheme.
When it comes to Governor Malloy, Commissioner Pryor and the corporate education reform industry, the Bronx charter
school's effort to move into Stamford is probably the most absurd, inappropriate, insulting, and anti-local control
privatization scheme that we've seen so far in Connecticut.
In «Still left behind,» the CEOs of Chicago's largest corporations claimed that all — ALL — Chicago public
schools were «failures» and had to be replaced by charters and other
privatization schemes.
We want an end to mayoral control, state takeovers and other
privatization schemes that remove our right to hold public officials accountable for the education policy they set; and curiously target cities whose public
school systems serve primarily African - American and Latino children.
They also bolster misperceptions about public
school failure, place urban
schools in the cross hairs and lend ammunition to
privatization schemes.
Tens of thousands of students live in what Jitu Brown has described as «
school deserts,» because their districts have been devastated by failed policies such as mass
school closures, the proliferation of charter
schools, and other
privatization schemes.
Dedicated to promoting the
privatization of public education, more taxpayer funds for privately owned, but publicly funded charter
schools, the Common Core, the Common Core testing
scheme and a host of anti-teacher initiatives, Students for Education Reform, Inc. (SFER) was created in late 2009, according to their narrative, by a couple of undergraduate students at Princeton University.