The Athens Banner-Herald
Understandably, much of the reporting done across the state in connection with an announcement that Georgia will receive $122 million in taxpayer funds for its persistently lowest-achieving public schools through the federal School Improvement Grants program focused on local concerns.
Image: buckeyeinstitute.org
Numbers for ailing schools don't work
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#1
Anonymous
on
04/09/10 at 07:51 AM
Most of the time if you keep doing what you have always done you keep getting what you always got. Money is a great motivator and possibly is the only way schools so embedded into a reactive vs. a proactive mindset could possibly change. This program could do some good if managed properly.
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