EL Education helps to found public high schools in low - income communities — district and charter — that send all graduates to college, and helps to
transform existing public schools K - 12 toward high student achievement, character and citizenship.
We help to found public high schools in low - income communities — district and charter - that send all graduates to college, and help to
transform existing public schools K - 12 toward high student achievement, character and citizenship.
Not exact matches
CityBridge Education represents the early stage of the
school development pipeline: In partnership with D.C.'s traditional
public (DCPS) and charter sectors, we incubate and launch new
schools and
transform existing ones.
Transforming education in the District of Columbia into an all - ESA district — establishing a truly universal policy to create education savings accounts for every DC student — would
transform the
existing school finance system from one that is based on student enrollment counts in boundary - defined regular
public schools to one that is student - centered and responsive to the needs of individual families.
CityBridge Education will pursue this goal through
school creation — incubating and launching new
schools and
transforming existing ones, in partnership with the traditional
public (DCPS) and charter sectors in Washington, D.C..
Finch's talk at the New
School will focus on the artist's various
public and large - scale installations like A Certain Slant of Light (2014 - 15), a site - specific installation at the Morgan Library inspired by its collection of medieval Books of Hours; Trying to Remember the Color of the Sky on That September Morning (2014), a commission for the National September 11 Memorialand Museum composed of 2,983 individual watercolors representing the artist's recollection of the sky on September 11, 2001; Painting Air (2012), an installation of more than 100 panels of suspended glass inspired by the colors of Claude Monet's garden at Giverny; and The River That Flows Both Ways (2009), a permanent installation on New York's High Line featuring an
existing series of windows which Finch
transformed with 700 individual panes of glass representing the water conditions on the Hudson River over 700 minutes in a single day.