If Amendment 7 passes on Nov. 3, parents will be able to take vouchers into an independent and churchrelated educational sector. 80% of the schools surveyed enroll the majority of their students from families making less than $50.000 per year, and 40% have a significant proportion of black and Hispanic students. Two-thirds of the church-related schools report significant enrollment of children from outside their denomination.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Quality Alternatives To Government Schools in Greater Denver
If Amendment 7 passes on Nov. 3, parents will be able to take vouchers into an independent and churchrelated educational sector. 80% of the schools surveyed enroll the majority of their students from families making less than $50.000 per year, and 40% have a significant proportion of black and Hispanic students. Two-thirds of the church-related schools report significant enrollment of children from outside their denomination.
Original Description:
Original Title
Quality Alternatives To Government Schools In Greater Denver
If Amendment 7 passes on Nov. 3, parents will be able to take vouchers into an independent and churchrelated educational sector. 80% of the schools surveyed enroll the majority of their students from families making less than $50.000 per year, and 40% have a significant proportion of black and Hispanic students. Two-thirds of the church-related schools report significant enrollment of children from outside their denomination.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as pdf or txt
0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes)
41 views30 pages
Quality Alternatives To Government Schools in Greater Denver
If Amendment 7 passes on Nov. 3, parents will be able to take vouchers into an independent and churchrelated educational sector. 80% of the schools surveyed enroll the majority of their students from families making less than $50.000 per year, and 40% have a significant proportion of black and Hispanic students. Two-thirds of the church-related schools report significant enrollment of children from outside their denomination.