Analyst's note: You will read this about three times, then shake your head to see if your eyes are still working. Then I'm just not sure if you'll laugh or cry. Either will be perfectly normal. If the first item does not work, then the second, third, forth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, or tenth will. I could go on with such items as Warren Buffett: The Billion-Dollar King of Abortion who donated enough money to abortion groups to perform as many abortions as there are people in the entire city of Chicago.
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New Hampshire Senate Kills In-State Tuition Bill for Illegal Aliens
by Brian Hayes | Top Right News
The New Hampshire Senate spiked a bill making students who entered the country illegally eligible for in-state tuition rates at University System of New Hampshire schools
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Price for Nevada dad to see state's school files on his kids: $10G
Published May 13, 2014
When Nevada dad John Eppolito requested data collected by the school system on his four kids he was told it would cost more than $10,000.
Nevada dad John Eppolito got a bad case of sticker shock when he asked state education officials to see the permanent records of his four children.
He was told it would cost $10,194.
A Lake Tahoe-area real estate agent by trade and a fierce opponent of Common Core, Eppolito was concerned about Nevada's recent decision to join a multi-state consortium that shares students’ data. He wanted to know exactly what information had been compiled on his school-age kids. But state officials told him he would have to pay fees and the cost of programming and running a custom report.
“The problem is that I can’t stop them from collecting the data,” Eppolito told FoxNews.com. “I just wanted to know what it [collected data] was. It almost seems impossible. Certainly $10,000 is enough reason to prevent a parent from getting the data.”
“This data is for everyone except the parents. It’s wrong.”
- John Eppolito
Nevada has spent an estimated $10 million in its seven-year-old System of Accountability Information in Nevada, known as SAIN. Data from county school systems is uploaded nightly to a state database, and, under the new arrangement, potentially shared with other counties and states. But Eppolito wonders why the state is collecting data that parents can't even view. [….]
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