Islamic charter school may have violated California regulations. (People & Events).A publicly funded charter school in California is under investigation for teaching Islam to students, the San Francisco Chronicle The San Francisco Chronicle was founded in 1865 as The Daily Dramatic Chronicle by teenage brothers Charles de Young and Michael H. de Young.[2] The paper grew along with San Francisco to become the largest circulation newspaper on the West Coast of the has reported. Silicon Valley Academy in Sunnyvale is part of a network of 14 public charter schools in the state run under the umbrella of Gateway Charter School in Fresno. Gateway is chartered through the Fresno Unified School District Fresno Unified School District (also known as F.U.S.D.) is a school district in Fresno, California, U.S.A. Facts and Figures
Fresno education officials have admitted that oversight of far-off schools has been lax LAX - LAnguage eXample. A toy language used to illustrate compiler design. ["Compiler Construction", W.M. Waite et al, Springer 1984]. . "We inspect these schools as soon as we find out about them, and so far all we've found is good teaching," said Jill Marmolejo, district spokeswoman. "But it's difficult because there's a lot of travel, and we have 95 schools of our own to worry about." A surprise inspection by the Chronicle indicated that Silicon Valley Academy was operating as a religious school. There were Korans in the principal's office, along with a children's version of the Muslim scriptures titled My Little Qu'ran. Students reported that they prayed in class with teachers and studied ill the tenets of Islam. Parents picking up children after school told the paper they believed the school was religious. The Chronicle also reported that the school's website promised to provide moral instruction based on dedication to Allah. The principal, Mazhar Jamil, told the newspaper the site was outdated and would be re-done. The investigation uncovered other irregularities at the school. Under state law, charters are not allowed to charge tuition, yet Silicon Valley's website listed tuition fees of $350 to $400 per month. Gateway severed sev·er v. sev·ered, sev·er·ing, sev·ers v.tr. 1. To set or keep apart; divide or separate. 2. To cut off (a part) from a whole. 3. ties with the Islamic school after the Chronicle published the results of its investigation. Gateway denied that any public money ever went to the Islamic academy The Islamic Academy is a religious and political foundation and charity in Bangladesh. It had been briefly banned in 1972 for alleged support for the Pakistani Army against the Awami League. The academy has been blamed for working to Islamize politics in Bangladesh. , but the newspaper noted that the firm had received more than $1 million for all of the students at its charters and that without an audit it would be impossible to determine where the money went. Delaine Eastin Delaine Eastin is a California politician. She served as the California State Superintendent of Public Instruction from 1995 to 2003. A native Californian, Eastin received her bachelor's degree from the University of California, Davis, and her master's degree in political science , California schools chief, said she would withhold with·hold v. with·held , with·hold·ing, with·holds v.tr. 1. To keep in check; restrain. 2. To refrain from giving, granting, or permitting. See Synonyms at keep. 3. state funds to Gateway unless the mess were cleaned up. "There needs to be more control, especially if a public school is doing something illegal, like teaching religion or charging tuition," Eastin said. "The idea of charter schools was not to create the McDonald's Happy Meal approach to education. The legislature set up a limit to how many charter schools could operate in the state, but what good is that if one charter school multiplies and becomes 147" Meanwhile, some state legislators are saying that California's charter law was never intended to allow groups chartered through one school district to open institutions in other parts of the state and have vowed to tighten up Verb 1. tighten up - restrict; "Tighten the rules"; "stiffen the regulations" constrain, stiffen, tighten confine, limit, throttle, trammel, restrain, restrict, bound - place limits on (extent or access); "restrict the use of this parking lot"; "limit the the law. The Chronicle reported that the revelations about religious content at Silicon Valley Academy are only the latest in a list of problems confronting Gateway. The school network is $1.3 million in debt, and students at the school performed below grade level on standardized tests A standardized test is a test administered and scored in a standard manner. The tests are designed in such a way that the "questions, conditions for administering, scoring procedures, and interpretations are consistent" [1] given last year. |
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