North Carolina Lawmakers OK
Choice for Waiting Kids
The October issue
of School
Reform News reports the North Carolina legislature approved a budget allocating more money for a
new school voucher program and allowed more students to transfer to private
schools on scholarships. I prayed that the other parents that didn’t get
picked, that extra money would be available for them to get picked, because as
passionate as I am, they are too, said one
parent.
Also in this
issue:
It’s been almost a
year since Indiana and Pennsylvania officially withdrew from national Common
Core standards, but the testing organization Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC)
still lists the two states as members.
-
Some high schools in Florida are experimenting with massive open online classes to reduce costs and expand options.
- Lawmakers, state board of education members, parents, and the governor of Florida are all suing each other over Common Core.
- As online education becomes more popular, homeschooling families attempt to distinguish themselves.
- Philadelphia schools say class sizes will balloon to 40 kids without a bailout, but their numbers don’t add up.
- The College Board won’t say who wrote its new, biased U.S. history curriculum for advanced high school students.
The full text of
the issue is available online in Adobe Acrobat’s PDF format: October 2014 School Reform News. All issues of
School Reform News are archived here: School Reform News archive. If you were sent
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