Should schools be held primarily responsible for improving student achievement, or do they need help from health and social programs to ensure their students' success?
Two sets of prominent educators and policy leaders released statements last week emphasizing different answers to that question. But both groups acted with the same purpose: to inform and highlight the debate over education in the 2008 presidential campaign and to influence the future of the No Child Left Behind Act and oth...
REGISTER FREE or LOGIN BELOW to keep reading.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
Already have an account? Please log in.