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The students in the coding class have even more access to technology but unlike their peers on the outside, they only get limited hours each day on the laptops they use to code and they can only ...
On Fridays, students are permitted to wear a Friday shirt (such as club shirts and class shirts). In 2007 principal Carol Mosteit said that the uniforms were intended for students to, in the words of Sarah Viren of the Houston Chronicle, "look the part" for law enforcement jobs that the students may take in the future. [18]
The school was renamed "Rainard School for Gifted Students" in 2010. The school is the only non-profit 501c(3) school in the Houston area totally devoted to gifted students. In 1996, 2006, and 2015, respectively, it added a middle school, a high school, and a preschool. [3] By 2019 its high school had closed and Rainard was now a K-8 school. [4]
The greater Houston area is home to a large homeschooling community with an estimated 40 to 50 thousand homeschooled students, based on 300,000 homeschool students in Texas [28] and 2.04 million in the U.S. [29] Over 100 organizations, support groups, and co-ops provide classes and resources for homeschool families.
Circa 1996 the annual cost per student incurred by each student was over $16,000; around that time the average per-student cost in Houston-area school districts was $4,000-$5,000. [107] Other schools Kaleidoscope Middle School (Houston) (moved to 6501 Bellaire Boulevard from 5909 Glenmont in 2007 [108]) - combined into Long Middle in 2012 [109]
The SafetyNet Attestation API, [2] one of the APIs under the SafetyNet umbrella, provides verification that the integrity of the device is not compromised. [3] [4] [5] In practice, non-official ROMs such as LineageOS fail the hardware attestation and thus restrict the user from using a non-compliant ROM while being able to use third-party apps (mainly banking) that require the API.
The Houston Area Independent Schools (or HAIS) is a non-profit association of more than 50 private schools located in the Houston, Texas area of the United States. Member schools [ edit ]
The number of students in public schools in Houston increased from 5,500 in 1888 to over 8,850 in 1927. [8] In the 1920s, the school district expanded its infrastructure to accommodate a growing number of black students. There were 8,293 students in Houston's schools for black students in the 1924-1925 school year. [9]