Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Freedom of Choice, or Free transfer plan, was the name for a number of plans developed in the United States during 1965–1970, aimed at the integration of schools in states that had a segregated educational system.
Freedom of education is a constitutional (legal) concept that has been included in the European Convention on Human Rights, Protocol 1, Article 2, International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights Article 13 and several national constitutions, e.g. the Belgian constitution (former article 17, now article 24) and the Dutch ...
Americans want school choice and they're happy when they get it. There's a lesson in there. The post This National School Choice Week, It's a Boom Time for Education Freedom appeared first on ...
For those who support education freedom, this might seem like the holy grail of K-12 policy—but there's good reason to be wary of federal involvement in school choice.
The constitutionality of state-sponsored school choice laws has been challenged by school board associations, public school districts, teacher unions, associations of school business officials, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Freedom From Religion Foundation, and People for the American Way.
(The Center Square) – Universal school choice and clearance of 55,000 on a waiting list helped lift North Carolina 23 spots to 12th nationally in the 2025 Education Freedom Report from the ...
Jason Critchlow seems to have his chickens and eggs mixed up (Viewpoint, Feb. 5). Public schools are not failing because parents are sending their kids to charter/private/Catholic schools.
According to The Organisation Internationale pour le Droit à l'Education et la Liberté d'Enseignement (OIDEL; English: International Organization for the Right to Education and Freedom of Education [51]) the right to education is a human right and parents should be able to choose a school for their children without discrimination on the basis ...