Learning is a Joy: What’s the Difference?
So, what's the main difference between the types of education choice?
So, what's the main difference between the types of education choice?
The difference between funding systems and funding students is a matter of focus.
Ultimately, the Abbeville ruling reinforces what we already know: too many students do not have access to a quality education in South Carolina.
While deep division runs between America’s two main parties on many issues, school choice is increasingly becoming a point of bipartisanship.
Every Monday in the coming weeks, we plan to publish a new blog post as part of the series “Learning is a Joy.”
A healthy and productive civil society requires both a modern education system and the opportunity for parents to make substantive decisions.
This Letter To The Editor was written by Ellen Weaver and was published in The Post and Courier on 4/22/16. As we celebrate the remembrance of Passover I was interested to note the repeated use of the word “exodus” in The Post and Courier’s article: Schools continue struggle with exodus of students under school choice. The
South Carolina Can Survive and Thrive Through Hurricane Gray. Find out how.
There is no silver bullet to fix education inequities in our state. But that’s the point: only a wide and growing array of options can provide the best chance for every child to find the education that’s right for them. Let’s give every South Carolina student the opportunity to write their own education success story.
Today, Palmetto Promise Institute announced the release of the 2015-2016 version of its annual education catalog, Empower Opportunity. This user-friendly, family-focused catalog is written to equip South Carolina families with the information they need to understand and access the various forms of education choice that exist in the Palmetto State.