Education is the best investment.

October 2, 2007

While your kid is teen you are thinking about college, kid is college student you are thinking about grad school, or an adult attending college or returning to college, anytime you think about their future, you try to help them to chose right way in the life. Also we don’t set aside in home tutoring, rather! Because we know exactly there is no another way than education to bring our children a better life and success in the future. An education is an extraordinarily profitable investment. Every dollar spent on a young man’s education produces $34.85 in increased lifetime income. Any Wall Street stockbroker would envy that kind of investment yield — especially these days.

Ans it’s no wonder that US President Bush and Education Secretary Margaret Spellings met with New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Chancellor of Education Joel Klein to discuss how No Child Left Behind (NCLB) is producing positive results for students across the country and record high scores for minority students. Yesterday, the latest results of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), or Nation’s Report Card, were released. The Report Card shows record results for our Nation’s students in reading and math. Scores are improving and achievement gaps are beginning to close.
• Chancellor Klein is strongly supportive of NCLB, calling it “one of the great bipartisan compromises in education” and praising its “focus on accountability.” With the support of Mayor Bloomberg, he’s made tough decisions that are getting great results in closing the achievement gap and raising achievement for New York City students.
• As the positive results from our Nation’s Report Card show, children can learn when standards are set high and results are measured.
• The President calls on Congress to reauthorize NCLB and give our teachers, parents, and children the educational tools they need. Now is not the time to water down standards, or roll back accountability and options for parents.

Entry Filed under: Education, News. .

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