RIVERA: Dreaming up charter school possibilities
Imagine high school graduates from the Eli Lilly or the Cook Pharma Charter School of Chemistry.
Imagine high school graduates from the Eli Lilly or the Cook Pharma Charter School of Chemistry.
The relative autonomy of charter schools will allow them to focus on their internal success in spite of the chaos of system breakdown around them.
For traditionalists, IPS faces a perfect storm. For a thoughtful mayor, it is a perfect opportunity.
It was not until the city was asked to act that latent objections emerged.
The primary effect of a voucher is not to benefit the religious school. It’s to educate the child.
Without standards of performance, taxpayers sign blank checks while children are set up for future failures.
Forgive me, but I am perplexed as to why this issue is so controversial.
Thomas M. Meredith [April 2 letter] wrote that Greg Morris’ [March 26 column] was “pure fear mongering, filled with innuendos and false statements.” Nothing could be further from the truth.
[Greg Morris’ March 26 column] reads more like an audition to be the next fear-mongering talking head on Fox News instead of the thoughtful commentary we have come to expect from the IBJ.
Bruce Hetrick [March 26 column] included a paragraph which seemed to demonstrate what many professional journalists decry in the social media.
In the April 2 [Forefront] Thomas Sowell attacks the credentials and worthiness of Professor Derrick Bell to serve as a professor at Harvard Law School.
Adopting the new code would result in even greater savings for Indiana home buyers.
In a recent New York Times column, Gail Collins observed “the thing that makes our current politics particularly awful isn’t procedural. It’s that the Republican Party has become over-the-top extreme.” She left out “mean-spirited and patriarchal.”
So, what would make Community Health Network’s president and CEO, Bryan Mills, star in a video dressed as a caveman? It could only be United Way’s “Give Gleefully” YouTube video competition.
No one benefits when unprepared or disinterested students are herded into colleges.
As our devices become more aware of our travels, our preferences, our contacts, our messages, our photographs and even our dexterity, the line between convenience and spying is crossed without us even being aware of it.
Second in a month-long series of reviews of eateries in and around City Market. This week: Papa Roux and Miguel’s Southern Kitchen.
Securities regulators are looking into several issues raised in the aftermath of the failed initial public offering of BATS Global Markets on March 23.
Structural unemployment is a byproduct of healthy technological progress, and those who can learn new skills flourish.
This week: a small but strong show at the IMA, plus thoughts on the Humana Festival, A&E road trips, and some Disney magic.