Teachers are teaching and many kids are learning but if we do not recognize that
schools need money and attention to the physical plant as well as the academic needs like books, we are all lost.
As Milner's principal stated, struggling
schools need money, a stable staff and community support.
For one,
the schools need the money; a report last year from the Thomas B. Fordham Institute showed that the average charter school receives 80 cents on the dollar compared to traditional public schools.
The New York State Council of School Superintendents, in a commentary on the budget proposal, wrote that
schools need money for staffing, employee benefits and energy costs, more than technology.
Our schools need that money.
In addition, Ironicus, you said that the reason
schools need money from the rental of school property is that religious groups cut school funding.
During the discussion in Weissbourd's Developing Effective School and Community Interventions for At - Risk Children course, Menino shared his opinion that the biggest challenge facing education is changing the focus from teachers or
schools needing money to what's going on at home with students and...
During the discussion in Weissbourd's Developing Effective School and Community Interventions for At - Risk Children course, Menino shared his opinion that the biggest challenge facing education is changing the focus from teachers or
schools needing money to what's going on at home with students and their families.
He said
the school needed money not just to keep up with current costs, but also to invest in academic facilities and provide more financial aid for poorer students» room and board.
Not exact matches
On the other hand, members of the middle class take jobs they don't enjoy «because they
need the
money, and they've been trained in
school and conditioned by society to live in a linear thinking world that equates earning
money with physical or mental effort.»
But the state is in a budget crisis, with
school funding a central issue as Gov. Dannel Malloy seeks to overhaul the state formula to redistribute
money to districts in
need.
Save
money during
school, because you'll
need it to start your business.
There are times when you may qualify for more
money in student loans than what you
need for
school.
If you've exhausted your federal aid options and still
need more
money to pay for
school, private student loans are another option.
If they do, they can receive the
money they
need for college or graduate
school.
«I
need to buy my kids clothes for
school, but I also
need that
money for groceries, and then the gas bill came up pretty high this month.
Other economists don't agree that you
need $ 350,000 to be considered rich, however an amount of
money that exceeds $ 200,000 per year is enough for a family to lead a more than comfortable lifestyle; this means having the chance to live in a big house, send the kids to private
schools, have enough
money to travel internationally, own at least 2 cars, and have no debt except a mortgage which will help them build equity.
Once again Prentice is using the math to suit his purpose: $ 400 million in reserves overall doesn't mean that
money is available to every
school board that
needs it.
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 you exhaust all of your federal student loan options, and still
need more
money to complete your degree, private loans can help fill the gap so you can finish
school.
And just let me point out that if religious groups hadn't cut education funding in the first place, the
schools wouldn't
need any
money at all.
The Right has no worry as to what devastation their policies will cause... their
money insulates them from crisis, from illness (
need of healthcare),,,, as one blogger who went to the convention said... their lives will not change at all, they will go to the same country clubs, their children will attend the same ivy league
schools, they have
money for all necessities, etc..
God does not
need to be in or on our courthouses, in our
schools, or on our
money.
Even individuals, when they do such planning as budgeting for their financial
needs, work in order to place meals on their tables, decide where to send children to
school or do shopping in order to get the value for their
money et cetera, they are involved in politics.
Online
schools also are cheaper in the sense that you wouldn't
need to drive to the class nor would you be spending
money on being on campus in a dorm room.
There is that bumper sticker hope that a day will come when the
schools will have all the
money they
need and the military have to hold a bake sale.
This
money has helped cultivate vital
needs for those communities like electricity, healthcare,
schools, clean water supplies and new farming equipment.
The restaurants love this, because they
need ambitious and trained talent, and that talent often
needs money for
school.
By then he had quit
school and had already been working three years at a polystyrene factory, running a press, because his family
needed the
money.
The
school would
need to eat a lot of
money, which isn't ideal.
«I love to walk into (Athletic Director Mike Papadopoulos») office and tell «Pop» that we're going to make him spend some
money,» Vacaville co-coach Adam Wight said of the program's consistent
need for transportation and numerous hotel rooms to house the
school's state qualifiers in Bakersfield.
As
school districts roll out these changes, they should expect lower contributions from parent organizations and put scaffolding in place for both: Teacher who rely on that outside
money, and those parents who want to fundraise but
need to come up with new funding methods.
Investing more
money in federal
school meal reimbursement, so
schools can afford to buy healthier food and pay for the increased labor
needed to prepare it;
Past winners have raised
money for childhood cancer awareness, created «clothing closets» for students who
need everything from formal wear to graduation gowns, and a chef who jumped into
school nutrition with both feet, creating
school breakfast programs, a
school garden, and meet - the - chef events to raise the profile of his district's child nutrition program.
While we
need federal funding and guidelines, in the final analysis it's the parents, principals, and teachers [who matter]-- it's a local program, not just another federal program that
needs money, but a program that invests in the future of local
schools and communities.
Reading the comment carefully, you understand that the father (and child) feel less shame about taking advantage of
school meals at breakfast, where the service is universal (available to all regardless of economic
need) versus at lunch, where there is often a more visible distinction between paying and nonpaying students, or between students on the federally reimbursable lunch line versus those who can purchase for - cash (and often more desirable) «a la carte» food, or (in the case of high
schoolers) between students who can go off campus to buy lunch at convenience stores and restaurants versus those with no
money in their pockets.
These sound like great resources, but
school districts also say they
need more
money.
Earn
Money = Saving
Money: Do you have a pile of clothes from the last
school year that you no longer
need?
Stretching your
money on things you
need for
school — School supply lists can really add up as kids get older and kids don't like going to school with pencil boxes and backpacks that have been worn hard and put u
school —
School supply lists can really add up as kids get older and kids don't like going to school with pencil boxes and backpacks that have been worn hard and put u
School supply lists can really add up as kids get older and kids don't like going to
school with pencil boxes and backpacks that have been worn hard and put u
school with pencil boxes and backpacks that have been worn hard and put up wet.
I have very mixed feelings about encouraging any community which can afford it to go ahead and raise all the
money they
need to fix
school food in their own back yard, and I say this even as, here in SF, we prepare to have a study done on building the central kitchen of our dreams; to build that kitchen, we will have to tax ourselves via a bond.
To attract and retain top cooking talent like Bonnie,
schools need to be able to offer nutrition department salaries that are competitive with the top restaurants, and that too takes more
money.
Security and theft are big issues, and the dining room is just a big, scary place... If I could hope for one change it would be for smaller
schools... it is just one solution for a system that
needs a lot of solutions and a lot of change... longer lunch periods, teachers willing to eat with the students, nutrition education, getting rid of the soda and snack vending machines that fund the sports programs, and more
money and support for
school food service programs...
I get it that this would likely mean extending the
school day by 10 or 15 minutes, and that costs
money because then the staff
need to be paid for a longer day, but this is the dream wish list, right?
If you find that you do
need to purchase a few items, pay attention to the back - to -
school sales and use coupons to help you save
money.
I agree 100 % that if we (as a nation) honestly want
schools to teach students what and how to eat (as opposed to just selling / providing food), we do
need to invest
money in the marketing and education you mention as well as the food itself.
That's why we have to fight for more
money for
school meals, that and because it can cost more to buy the foods
needed to cook from scratch.
Box Tops for Education can earn your
school extra
money to spend on whatever wants or
needs they have.
This
school is good for anyone who
needs / wants to save
money or time.
«Tioga Downs» expansion will foster hundreds of new jobs and spur much -
needed economic development in the Southern Tier, plus generate millions of dollars for public
schools and local governments — with all private
money and zero taxpayer dollars,» Commission Executive Director Robert Williams said in a statement.
The pledge of # 50 million on a summer
school for «the children who
need it most» before they start secondary
school sounds like one of those throwaway promises where politicians pledge
money in return for a chance to control the day's headline.