To keep his mother from being elected PTA president, Chris decides to spread a few harmless rumors about her. He soon finds out there's actually something worse than being the PTA president's son.
Fed up with being teased by the school bully, Chris blurts out that he's going to the school dance on Friday with the prettiest girl and that he's taking her in a limousine. Can Chris get out of this mess without getting caught or beaten up?
Students at Corleone Junior High write and perform skits at the school's first annual black history assembly depicting famous African Americans who fought for civil rights.
Greg convinces Chris to audition for the school play as a sure way to get girls. But Chris thinks he's met the girl of his dreams when a new family moves into his building. The only thing standing in his way is the fact that Janelle's family has a longstanding feud with his mom, Rochelle. That feud is soon broken, though, when Chris saves Janelle from drinking some spoiled milk.
After Chris's mom gives him money to buy a new pair of jeans, Greg convinces Chris to buy a new game for Greg's Atari instead. He gives Chris a pair of his old jeans and promises that Chris's mom won't know the difference.
When Chris accidentally saves Teresa Johnson from a bully, he finds himself her unwilling boyfriend, and decides he must put Operation Rid Ourselves Of Teresa into action if he ever wants to hang out with his friend Greg again.
Indexes popular fiction series for K-6 readers with groupings based on thematics, consistant setting, or consistant characters. Annotated entries are arranged alphabetically by series name and include author, publisher, date, grade level, genre, and a list of individual titles in the series. Volume is indexed by author, title, and subject/genre and includes appendixes suggesting books for boys, girls, and reluctant/ESL readers.
The empirical focus of this book is on the twenty year struggle by parents and members of the Black community in Toronto to introduce an Africentric Alternative School (AAS) with Black-focused curricula. It brings together a seemingly disparate series of events that emerged from equity and multicultural narratives about the establishment of the school – violence, anti-racism and race-based statistics, policy entrepreneurs, and the re-birth of alternative schools in Toronto - to illustrate how these events ostensibly functioned through neoliberal choice mechanisms and practices. Gulson and Webb show how school choice can represent and manifest the hopes and fears, contestations and settlements of contemporary racial biopolitics of education in multicultural cities.
In 1983 the seminal report issued by the National Commission on Excellence in Education, "A Nation at Risk," charged that most American high schoolers were following a general course of instruction, choosing neither the college-preparatory track nor the vocational option. This pattern, the report complained, had fostered low expectations and a curricular hodge-podge of classes that failed to prepare students for college or work. The commission called on states to implement academic requirements for all students, regardless of background, including four years of English and three years each of science, mathematics, and social studies. Students should not be sorted by their presumed future destinations, the commission reasoned, but should be offered an equal opportunity to get a high-quality education to fit them either for postsecondary education or the modern workplace. Two decades after the commission called on states to reform the high school environment and raise graduation requirements, the Brown Center on Education Policy at the Brookings Institution convened a a group of prominent scholars to explore the current state of America's high schools, focusing on new research about reforming these institutions that are so important in the lives of the nation's adolescents. The questions considered reflected the diversity of the participants and covered a variety of areas—historical, international, sociological, and practical. Data gathered by the U.S. Department of Education show students today are taking many more advanced courses in mathematics and the sciences, while at the same time test scores do not reflect the increases in enrollments in academic courses. In addition, large score gaps remain among students from different social groups. Reform of the high schools must take into account the elementary and middle schools that prepare students and the postsecondary institutions to which students aspire. Adolescent culture and students' views about school and academic work play important roles in student achievement, as do the family and contemporary society in shaping of adolescent behavior. No matter their background, all participants agreed that the key to a successful high school rests with the extent to which it recognizes and strengthens its commitment to the intellectual growth of its students.