In a city that faces some of the greatest challenges in education, Miami Dade College students step up and speak out regarding Florida education reform. Bud Chiles and the Worst to First team joined students to march through downtown Miami to help raise awareness and to encourage others to engage [...]
Tag archives for Florida Education Reform
Are you ready for the Rally in Tally?
Miami Dade College campus leaders speak out
Miami Dade College campus leaders speak out about budget cuts and funding issues that impact students across the state of Florida.
What are some of the impacts you see on your campus?
The time to demand more is now!
Your Mission: Create a Summer to Remember
During the summer and away from the classroom, students tend to take a break from books and retreat into a more relaxed approach to life. While summer is a time for students to recharge and refuel in preparation for the upcoming school year, the break they take from reading can be detrimental. Unfortunately, the gap [...]
Breaking Down Education Spending in Florida
Article IX of the Florida State Constitution reads:
The education of children is a fundamental value of the people of the State of Florida. It is, therefore, a paramount duty of the state to make adequate provision for the education of all children residing within its borders. Adequate provision shall be made by law for a [...]
How do you respond to an F on your report card?
Did you know there are schools all around the country that focus on the strengths of their students first in their approach to education?
How would things change if we as a state began to focus on the strengths of our children?
Florida ranks 49th - Number of uninsured children
Florida ranks 49th. About 19 percent, or 763,000 of our children, do not have health insurance, versus a national average of 11 percent. Source: The Annie E. Casey Foundation Kids Count Data Center
Florida ranks 48th - Juvenile violent crime
Florida ranks 48th in the nation in juvenile incarceration rates, with a custody rate of 451.8 per 100,000 children ages 10 and up. Source: Every Child Matters Education Fund, “Geography Matters: Child Well Being in the States,” 2008


