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CONFIRMED—LEARNS hurts students with disabilities It does NOT require private schools to follow the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act even if they receive public money. Rep. Garner asks if a private school can refuse a student because of their disability — answer: YES

27,860 Aufrufe • vor 3 Jahren •via X (Twitter)

8 Kommentare

Profilbild von Renae
Renaevor 3 Jahren

And there it is … they’ve finally said it out loud. This should be the headline in tomorrows paper. Sarah better be careful about using the words “all kids.”

Profilbild von Randall Robinson
Randall Robinsonvor 3 Jahren

Sounds like an excellent business opportunity with little to no competition for a caring person to open a private school and give those kids the educating they deserve. If public school is the best option for them, that's great. They're not losing anything they don't already have

Profilbild von Danny Burdess
Danny Burdessvor 3 Jahren

I suspect none of this will hold up in court and, make no mistake, it will be challenged in court.

Profilbild von Dustin Schlake
Dustin Schlakevor 3 Jahren

If you get any form if public tax dollars from the general fund, you have to follow all legal statues including the disabilities act. This bill has no chance to hold up in court. #goodluck

Profilbild von Shawn Peterson
Shawn Petersonvor 3 Jahren

How?

Profilbild von ElizabethWingfield 🟧⚖️🦅🇺🇸
ElizabethWingfield 🟧⚖️🦅🇺🇸vor 3 Jahren

@MaEnraged And therefore #unconstitutional.

Profilbild von Evan Singleton
Evan Singletonvor 3 Jahren

Wouldn’t this free up money for disabled students? And encourage someone to create schools that can cater to their specific needs?

Profilbild von pmoney
pmoneyvor 3 Jahren

Democrats have zero common sense.

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Dr. Njoki Fernandes sat on a television studio and told Kenyans that there is a private school for every pocket and that parents should stop pushing their children into congested public schools. It is the kind of statement that can only come from someone who has never had to choose between school fees and food. Nobody takes their child to a public school because they prefer it. They take them there because it is what they can afford. The parent in Kibera, the farmer in Turkana, the bodaboda rider in Eldoret did not sit down and weigh private school options against public ones. They had one option and they took it. Telling them to consider private schools is not advice. It is an insult dressed in concern. The real question that should have been asked on that television programme is this. Why are public schools congested in the first place? Why are dormitories unsafe? Why are there not enough teachers, enough classrooms, enough fire extinguishers? The answer is that the government has chronically underfunded public education while the elite that makes policy sends their own children to private schools and international institutions. They have no personal stake in fixing what they do not use. If the government fully funded public education, ensured proper capitation from primary to secondary level and made basic education genuinely free and properly resourced, the conversation would be completely different. Parents do not need to be told to find a private school. They need a government that treats public education as a right worth funding properly. Your privilege should not be used to generalise a narrative. Dismas wa Tabu. Dreaming in installments. Billed in full.

DismasWaTabu

27,895 Aufrufe • vor 15 Tagen