Examples of private school in the following topics:
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- Homeschooling is the education of children at home, rather than in other formal settings of public or private school.
- Homeschooling is the education of children at home, rather than in the formal settings of public or private school.
- Today however, homeschooling is very much an alternative to attending public or private schools.
- It allows them to provide their children with a learning environment if they are dissatisfied with offerings at public or private schools.
- Parents might be concerned about the traditional school environment, they might want to provide a particular type of religious or moral instruction, or they might simply be dissatisfied with the academic quality of traditional public or private schools.
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- Most homeschooled children are homeschooled only, but about one in five are also enrolled in public or private schools, which they may attend for 25 hours or less each week.
- Homeschooling is the education of children at home, typically by parents but sometimes by tutors, rather than in other formal settings of public or private school.
- Most homeschooled children are homeschooled only, but about one in five are also enrolled in public or private schools, which they may attend for 25 hours or less each week.
- First, in some states, homeschooling is treated like a type of private school.
- For example, in Virginia it is "home instruction," in South Dakota it is "alternative instruction," and in Iowa it is "competent private instruction. "
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- Educational attainment refers to the level of schooling a person completes — for instance, high school, some college, college, or a graduate degree.
- Because members of high social classes tend to be better educated and have higher incomes, they are able to offer greater educational advantages, such as private schooling, to their children as well.
- Upper-class parents are better able to send their children not only to exclusive private schools, but also to public state-funded schools.
- Such schools are likely to be of higher quality in affluent areas than in impoverished ones, since they are funded by property taxes within the school district.
- Wealthy areas will provide more property taxes as revenue, which leads to higher quality schools.
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- In many cases, young university professors earn the same salary as young elementary or high school teachers.
- For high school graduates, the median household income is $36,835.
- Many public institutions, such as the University of California system, rival elite private schools in reputation and quality.
- Government and private lenders also offer low-interest loans.
- According to the same census, 85% of the U.S. population had graduated from high school.
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- In high school, economic, family, and social demands may lead some students to drop out before finishing.
- U.S. public schools lag behind the schools of other developed countries in the areas of reading, math, and science.
- School funding varies by geographic location.
- In some areas, the best high schools are private high schools that may be out of reach for poorer students who cannot afford the tuition.
- Even public schools may receive different rates of funding; in particular, schools in poorer areas tend to receive less funding because school funding is often tied to property taxes.
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- In 2010, there were 3,823,142 teachers in public, charter, private, and Catholic elementary and secondary schools.
- They taught a total of 55,203,000 students, who attended one of 132,656 schools.
- Teachers facilitate student learning, often but not always in a school or academy.
- Perhaps the most significant difference between primary school and secondary school teaching in the United States is the relationship between teachers and children.
- In 2010, there were 3,823,142 teachers in public, charter, private, and Catholic elementary and secondary schools.
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- This school district was actively adopting technology and software as integrated, and integral, components of the traditional bureaucratic hierarchical brick and mortar system of schooling.
- For example, before the Emancipation Proclamation, many black people sought education through private, voluntary schools, which shows that they had a strong desire for education, generally believing that they could improve their social status through the equalizing power of schooling.
- However, they were excluded from the school system by segregation laws.
- In order to understand the bureaucratization of schools, we must understand the historical development of the school system.
- These needs formed the basis for school bureaucracies today.
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- For example, in 2007, the Washington, D.C. public school district had the third highest level of funding per student among the 100 biggest school districts.
- For example, in 2007, the Washington, D.C. public school district had the third highest level of funding per student among the 100 biggest school districts.
- Debates over school choice focus on advocates' claim that school choice can promote excellence in education through competition.
- Most proposals for school choice call for vouchers.
- Public education vouchers would permit guardians to select and pay any school, public or private, with public funds currently allocated to local public schools.
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- Both the country's private sector business class and low-income households have been greatly impacted, experiencing job loss and price hikes.
- On one island, the increased cost of privatized energy has forced people who cannot afford the electricity to return to traditional oil lamps.
- School districts in wealthy suburban areas tend to pay higher teachers' salaries, have newer buildings, and provide sophisticated equipment.
- Students in central city schools and poverty stricken rural areas often attend rundown schools that lack necessary equipment and teaching materials.
- Private tutors, SAT preparation courses, and charter schools allow children from wealthy families to gain entrance to elite colleges and find jobs more quickly after graduation.
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- Currently, there are more than 75 million children around the world of primary school age who are not in school.
- For example, according to UNICEF, an estimated 121 million children of primary-school age are being kept out of school to work in the fields or at home.
- Private groups, like Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, are also working to improve access to education through such programs as the Perpetual Education Fund.
- Students from the Hala Bint Khuwaylid secondary girl's school in the Amil district of Baghdad, pictured with new school bags containing pens, pencils, notebooks, calculators, and other school supplies: USAID is funding the purchase and distribution of 1.5 million school bags through a partnership with Creative Associates International.
- School children at Imperial Primary School in Eastridge, Mitchell's Plain (Cape Town, South Africa)