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Teachers Pay Teachers (sometimes abbreviated as TPT) is an online marketplace and an American educational website for buying and selling educator resources. It focuses on a PreK-12 audience. It focuses on a PreK-12 audience.
Twin Cities Public Television, Inc. (abbreviated TPT, doing business as Twin Cities PBS [4]) is a nonprofit organization based in Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States, that operates the Twin Cities' two PBS member television stations, KTCA-TV (channel 2.1) and KTCI-TV (channel 2.3), both licensed to Saint Paul.
Tuscaloosa City Schools is a public school district headquartered in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, United States. The district's boundaries include almost all of the city limits of Tuscaloosa. [2] There are approximately 10,000 students enrolled in Tuscaloosa City Schools. [3]
Self-access language learning is closely related to learner-centered approach, learner autonomy and self-directed learning as all focus on student responsibility and active participation for his/her own learning. [2] This style of instruction is most often done in the setting of a self-contained learning environment or self-access center.
In the 2007–2008 school year, 10,000 eligible school children in Minneapolis choose to attend other schools such as ones in suburban school districts, private schools, or charter schools. [7] The number of students enrolled in Minneapolis Public Schools is expected to drop under 30,000 students from 2007 to 2011. [ 8 ]
TPT may refer to: TPT (software), Time Partition Testing; Transaction privilege tax, in Arizona, US; Twin Cities Public Television, Minneapolis–St. Paul, Minnesota, US; Tara Palmer-Tomkinson (1971–2017), English television personality; Tramway de Pithiviers à Toury, a French railway; Totul pentru tara, a Romanian fascist party 1935-1940
The Center for Accessible Technology, formerly the Disabled Children's Computer Group (DCCG), was started in 1983 [1] in El Cerrito, California, by several parents, educators, and assistive technology developers who felt that the new computer technology could assist children and adults with disabilities to speak, write, read, learn, and participate in a larger world.
Schools in the district (with 2019–20 enrollment data from the National Center for Education Statistics [9]) are: [10] [11] [12] Elementary schools. Holly Glen Elementary School [13] with 437 students in grades K-4 Karen Pontano-Crossley, principal; Oak Knoll Elementary School [14] with 529 students in grades K-4 Kristy Baker, principal