Schools
in sentence
1903 examples of Schools in a sentence
It's the dependence on farm subsidies and under-performing
schools
and higher poverty rates in rural areas than in urban.
Racially, the county is about 60 percent African-American, but what happens in the public
schools
is most of the privileged white kids go to the private Lawrence Academy.
He started some of the country's first charter
schools
in the late '80s in the U.S.
This is in response to the awful mobile trailers and the outdated textbooks and the terrible materials that we're building
schools
out of these days.
Every year when it comes to the cotton harvest, the government shuts down the schools, puts the kids in buses, buses them to the cotton fields to spend three weeks harvesting the cotton.
There is a side that fights, and there is a side that keeps the
schools
and the factories and the hospitals open.
There is a side that thinks that peace is the end of fighting, and there is a side that thinks that peace is the arrival of
schools
and jobs.
First of all, I would like to say that I'm really amazed at how easily kids are led to believe all the marketing and advertising on TV, at public
schools
and pretty much everywhere else you look.
He sent us to one of the best
schools
in the city and gave us the best education.
So a few years ago, L.A. County decided that they needed to spend 2.5 billion dollars to repair the city
schools.
And Andy and his team discovered that they were going to spend 200 million of those dollars on asphalt to surround the
schools
themselves.
And by presenting a really strong economic case, they convinced the L.A. government that replacing that asphalt with trees and other greenery, that the
schools
themselves would save the system more on energy than they spend on horticultural infrastructure.
So ultimately, 20 million square feet of asphalt was replaced or avoided, and electrical consumption for air-conditioning went down, while employment for people to maintain those grounds went up, resulting in a net-savings to the system, but also healthier students and
schools
system employees as well.
The goal is to meet the cities' institutional demands for hospitals, senior centers, schools, daycare centers, and produce a network of regional jobs, as well.
All these
schools
in Texas compete with one another to achieve these milestones, and there are bonuses and various other treats that come if you beat the other
schools.
Their culture isn't working in schools, and I'm going to share with you ways that we can think about overcoming that problem.
And the point is that, for boys, the way that they exist and the culture that they embrace isn't working well in
schools
now.
This makes university administrators very nervous, because girls don't want to go to
schools
that don't have boys.
There are three reasons that I believe that boys are out of sync with the culture of
schools
today.
We need to change the mindset of acceptance in boys in elementary
schools.
We have to change the culture and the feelings that politicians and school board members and parents have about the way we accept and what we accept in our
schools
today.
If we change these things, if we pay attention to these things, and we reengage boys in their learning, they will leave the elementary
schools
saying, "I'm smart."
We had sexuality
schools
that taught social and erotic cues.
We had the Tonga, the Bemba, the Sande and other similar sexuality
schools
of thought that taught young women about the power of this inner force.
And there's
schools
and clinics and shops.
And we were the first non-Muslims to teach in the state
schools
there in Kuwait.
In China for example, one mid-level employee initiated the largest social action competition in China, involving more than 1,000
schools
in China, working on issues such as education, poverty, health care and the environment.
And we went to school districts where now companies are making their way into cash-strapped
schools
all across America.
No special needs
schools.
They're there to build
schools
and help people.
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