The Watertown Unified School District’s superintendent, Cassandra Schug, blamed staffing shortages in a response to Wisconsin Right Now’s questions and says the district hopes to have the kids back in person on Monday. However, the sudden switch to virtual schooling for some special ed students in the high school has left working parents
By Wisconsin Right Now Staff. -. February 2, 2022. The state Department of Public Instruction told Wisconsin Right Now that its school choice application page crashed “due to a technical issue arising from a high volume of visitors accessing the application portal.”. A local school told parents it was due to a “major coding issue” and was the “first time they (DPI) ...
Watertown Unified School District Puts Some Special Ed Kids With Disabilities Online Wisconsin Right Now Watertown Unified School District Puts Some Special Ed Kids With Disabilities Online By - January 21, 2022 “How is a non-verbal mentally disabled and physically disabled student supposed to do virtual schooling?” – Michelle Sukow.
the wisconsin school choice program allows lower-income parents to send their child to a private school of their choice. private schools must meet a strict set of regulations for student safety, standardized testing, public audits and publicly reporting student performance. knowing this, does it make you favor or oppose the wisconsin school choice program? ...
March 30, 2022. By: George Mitchell. While Superintendent of Public Instruction, Gov. Tony Evers wrote to legislators a decade ago that expanding the Wisconsin Parental Choice program was “morally wrong.”. Evers said he reached that conclusion because the program “has not improved overall student achievement.”. Fast forward to the present.
The report, issued August 17, 2021, calls for universal, informed parental school choice throughout Wisconsin to improve educational outcomes, along with other measures designed to empower parents. It builds on the past successes of the school choice movement in the state. The POWER policy blueprint was authored by McCoshen, Rose Fernandez
People of all income levels support universal school choice. 64% under age $40,000; 57% are $40-74,000 and 59% are $75,000 and up. When it comes to party affiliation, 75% of Republicans support universal school choice; 61% of independents support it, 31% of Democrats support it, and 34% listed as other support it.
WTMJ-TV ran an online story from the Associated Press that similarly did not mention that low-income kids would still qualify for free Waukesha school lunches (media outlets sometimes shorten AP stories to fit their own news holes, but they shouldn’t do so in a way that twists stories by removing key context).
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