Relying on the kindness of wealthy districts isn’t going to help students from poor districts get a better education, but cash would.
Two relatively unknown programs can change the lives of thousands of impoverished New Jerseyans.
Basic industries typically serve national or international markets, creating new wealth and funneling it into a region or state.
New Jersey can attain the advantages of RTTT, one failing school district at a time.
Paying a little more per gallon isn’t as big a burden as the cost of added debt or the damage to the environment.
Why is the property tax so bad? Let us count the ways.
Proposed voucher legislation redirects funds away from the very students who need help most.
Report reveals that new development gobbled up 44 acres per day, or more than 16,000 acres per year, over a five-year period.
The latest models for education reform refuse to acknowledge the real problem: the concentrated poverty that isolates the poorest students.
Examining the parallels between education of children of color and education of children with disabilities.
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