Many city schools fail federal program |
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Lynchburg News & Advance
Amy Coute?
Lynchburg News & Advance
Wednesday, August 4, 2004
In the coming days hundreds of Lynchburg parents will begin getting letters in the mail informing them that their childs school is not making the grade according to No Child Left Behind guidelines.
Although preliminary SOL scores revealed that area schools are doing well, the federal No Child Left Behind Act said otherwise. According to the acts measures, only seven of the citys 16 public... |
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Teacher of the Year for Region 13 from SISD |
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The Seguin Gazette-Enterprise
By Janet Grafe
Seguin Gazette
Published August 04, 2004
Weinert Elementary teacher Pam Krippner is the new Region XIII 2004 Teacher of the Year.
Texas is divided into 20 different regions, with each region having its own education service center. Krippner competed with Teachers of the Year from the 59 school districts in 16 counties covered by Region XIII.
Weve known all along that she is an incredible teacher, said John Yonk... |
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Kentucky Schools Receive Report Cards |
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WCPO-TV ABC 9 Cincinnati
Reported by: Tom McKee
Web produced by: Jennifer Moore
Photographed by: 9News
8/3/2004 5:10:52 PM
Kentucky schools received report cards Tuesday to show if they have met standards in the "No Child Left Behind" laws.
If goals were not met for a second straight year, parents could transfer their children to another school.
In order to turn things around in the district, intensive instruction is being used towards reading and math.
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Quarter of schools might not show 'adequate progress' |
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WKRC-TV CBS 12 Cincinnati
LAST UPDATE: 8/4/2004 8:29:53 AM
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) - About a quarter of Kentucky public schools may fail to fulfill the federal government's demand for "adequate yearly progress," the state Department of Education reported.
For schools that get federal funding, failure for two years in a row means consequences - at a minimum, allowing students to transfer to other schools at the district's expense and drawing up an improvement plan.
The department... |
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'Needs improvement' list grows |
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Las Vegas Sun
By Emily Richmond
LAS VEGAS SUN
Mirroring results in Clark County, the number of Nevada schools labeled as "needing improvement" under the federal No Child Left Behind Act skyrocketed this year to 122 campuses, up from 26 in 2003.
There was a silver lining in the results released Monday by the Nevada Department of Education -- the number of schools on the state's "watch list" for a single year's low test scores dropped to 103 from 19... |
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Scores improve at some schools, drop at others |
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Goldsboro News-Argus
Northeast Elementary School squeaked past three-year standout Northwest Elementary as the highest performing public school in Wayne County, according to the state's accountability program.
Charles B. Aycock High School joined Eastern Wayne High as a "school of distinction."
But unlike last year, when all 28 eligible schools met or exceeded the state's growth expectations for the first time, 15 of the schools failed to make "adequate yearly progress" under a federa... |
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