When its matter of your children education, parents tends to follow what the children wants. Parents think to give what the best up to the children want. But what if your children don’t know what the best for them or they have several option, yet not knowing which one the best for them. That’s the reason why we need to do early detection, knowing it early is way more effective rather than confuse at the end.
Problems in parents in big cities is they usually don’t have much more time with children, then formal education makes a good option for them, such as Photography Colleges and Graphic Design Colleges.
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Auto mechanics perform alignments by lining up the direction of the wheels so the vehicle is pointed in a straight line. Curriculum alignment follows the same principle, with the “wheels” being curriculum, instruction, standards and assessment. Research indicates this kind of alignment can point a school or district toward improved student achievement.
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The federal law governing special education is called the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, or IDEA. It is codified in Title 20, United States Code, starting at section 1400. It was initially passed in 1975. A number of major reauthorizations have taken place. The two most recent were in 1997 and in December 2004. The December 2004 changes took effect, for the most part, on July 1, 2005. The changes made in the 2004 Act are numerous and varied, but perhaps not revolutionary. Continue Reading »
Connecticut’s commissioner of education is appointed by the state board of education for a four-year term. The commissioner directs the department of education. Many local school districts have combined into supervisory unions, in which several towns share a superintendent. School attendance is free and compulsory between the ages of 7 and 16.
Dame schools—primary schools conducted by women in their own homes—existed in 1651 at New Haven. A state board of education was established in 1838 through the efforts of Henry Barnard, who later (in 1867) became the nation’s first commissioner of education. Continue Reading »