It was
white parents choosing segregation that helped get us to this state.
Not exact matches
Health conscious
parents are likely to choose this «whole grain» treat over white flour animal crackers, since they have no way to know that the whole grain variety contains high levels of the carcinogen «Parents trust companies like Disney and Walgreens to make safe products for their children, but our testing shows that when it comes to these animal crackers, parents just can't trust in Disney,» said Michael Green, Chief Executive Officer
parents are likely to
choose this «whole grain» treat over
white flour animal crackers, since they have no way to know that the whole grain variety contains high levels of the carcinogen «
Parents trust companies like Disney and Walgreens to make safe products for their children, but our testing shows that when it comes to these animal crackers, parents just can't trust in Disney,» said Michael Green, Chief Executive Officer
Parents trust companies like Disney and Walgreens to make safe products for their children, but our testing shows that when it comes to these animal crackers,
parents just can't trust in Disney,» said Michael Green, Chief Executive Officer
parents just can't trust in Disney,» said Michael Green, Chief Executive Officer of CEH.
Some
parents might think that it is a hassle to
choose from the countless designs available, but
white bodysuits will do just fine.
Parents and caregivers can
choose from a heartbeat,
white noise, ocean waves, a lullaby, and even classical music, depending on their preferences.
And while it used to be that
white rice cereal was considered a standard first supplement to breastmilk or formula, there are actually many healthier, whole food options for
parents to
choose from.
So,
parents choose to take a beautiful word like «Heaven» and reverse it so that it became a thick,
white lotion used on dried - out elbows.
Many
parents choose to wait until after 10 months of age to introduce baby to
white potatoes so that baby gain more nutrients from other nutrient dense foods.
But if the loudest and most active (read:
white upper - middle - class suburban)
parents think standardized tests are just an annual annoyance, if these
parents and other activist voters
choose to disbelieve the results in the fact - free era of modern political discourse, then accountability will be diluted down to the posting of test results and the annual finger wagging of the local news media.
* Non-
white and non-Asian
parents were more likely than
white and Asian
parents both to
choose «better education» as their top reason for
choosing a private school (40.5 percent versus 23.7 percent) and to place high school graduation rates and postsecondary information in their top two pieces of important decision - making information (54.1 percent compared to 27 percent).
As Checker himself acknowledges, a sizable proportion of
parents — rich, poor,
white, black, and Hispanic — would like to
choose diverse schools for their children.
Many of these individuals are
white, middle - class kids who grew up in
white - flight - created suburbia, but are
choosing to return to the neighborhoods that their
parents and grandparents left decades before.
Other
white and affluent
parents choose private schools, either because their children are not accepted to their first choice of public schools, or because they are bothered by the racial separation within and between New York public schools.
Furthermore, we know that there is a large, and potentially growing, group of
white parents in the system who would
choose otherwise if New York City policymakers would only listen and create more viable, racially diverse schools and racially diverse programs within those schools.
In a statement in response to the AP story, Shavar Jeffries, national president of Democrats for Education Reform, said sarcastically, «Apparently, the school segregation problem boils down to Black and Brown
parents choosing schools that aren't
White enough, as if the doors of all -
White schools would magically open if only they had the good sense to seek to enroll their children in them.»
Philadelphia Inquirer: Its «feel - good» story about a
white family's decision to
choose a local elementary school over a higher - performing alternative gave little voice to the community
parents and educators at the neighborhood school.
Adam Kelley, an eighth - grader at Roland Park who lives on a predominantly
white street in the neighborhood, said he was glad his
parents chose not to send him to a private school where most students look like him.
Many schools are already nearly completely black and Hispanic, as
white parents have
chosen charter schools and private schools to educate their children.»
In a much - heralded democratic concept like
parents choosing the schools they want their child to attend, you wouldn't think folks — especially liberal
white folks — would protest it so vehemently.
If students and
parents are to have real choices, shuffling urban students between struggling schools in their city is not a satisfactory answer — they must be able to «
choose» the predominately
white and wealthy schools serving suburban property owners as well.