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www2.ed.gov /programs /presedaward /. The President's Education Awards Program (PEAP) is awarded on behalf of the President of the United States and the United States Secretary of Education. PEAP was founded in 1983. The purpose of the program is to recognize students in elementary, middle and high school for their educational achievements.
United States. Rowman & Littlefield Award in Innovative Teaching. American Political Science Association. Developers of effective new approaches to teaching among political scientists. United States. Ruth Shonle Cavan Young Scholar Award. American Society of Criminology.
In Canada, the terms "middle school" and "junior high school" are both used, depending on which grades the school caters to. [5] Junior high schools tend to include only grades 7, 8, and sometimes 9 (some older schools with the name 'carved in concrete' still use "Junior High" as part of their name, although grade nine is now missing), whereas middle schools are usually grades 6–8 or only ...
Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps. The Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps (JROTC, commonly pronounced JAY-rot-see) is a federal program sponsored by the United States Armed Forces in high schools and also in some middle schools across the United States and at US military bases across the world.
Educational stages are subdivisions of formal learning, typically covering early childhood education, primary education, secondary education and tertiary education.The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization recognizes nine levels of education in its International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED) system (from Level 0 (pre-primary education) through Level 8 ...
Sharon Keillor Award for Women in Engineering Education. American Society for Engineering Education. Outstanding women engineering educators. United States. The Christa McAuliffe Prize. University of Nebraska–Lincoln. Teacher in Nebraska for showing courage in education. United States. Wilbur Cross Medal.
Sequoyah Book Award. The Sequoyah Book Award is a set of three annual awards for books selected by vote of Oklahoma students in elementary, middle, and high schools. The award program is named after Sequoyah (c. 1770 –1843), the Cherokee man who developed the Cherokee syllabary —a writing system adopted by Cherokee Nation in 1825.
In 2006 alone, the school raised $35,037 the second-highest of all schools nationwide. The $29,509 raised for the program in 2005 also ranked the school second nationally. In 2006, Bel Air was one of over 25,000 schools across the country participated in the AAHPERD's basketball and jump rope fundraising programs. References