According the 2000 census figures:
In 2000, 79.1 million people aged 3 and older were enrolled in school.
Of that total, 8.9 million were enrolled in nursery school, preschool, or kindergarten.
More than one- half, 49.8 million, of the enrolled population in 2000 was enrolled in grades 1 through 12.
A total of 20.5 million were enrolled in college or graduate school.
As many as 40% of the children in elementary and secondary school are not becoming fluent readers. Parents are advised to teach their children to read at home.
The answer to this question depends on the size of the district and how spread out or large the district is. In a place like NYC the figure would be low, but in many CA schools the numbers are quite high. A good guess would be 85-90% of the students come to school by school bus. My school runs 5 buses every afternoon so there are five bus routes to take students home.
German Children travel to school basically the same way we do. They walk, bike take the car but they also take the tram that no many people in the UK do. :)
By walking , but most take buses to get to school because unlike the US , the parents chose were the children should go to school , so some do travel and take many buses to get to their school , and it also depends on the schools reputation .
you take them to school because if you said bring them to school it sounds as if you are going to school and you are taking the child with you
Spanish and math
1 hour
They can take the school bus, cab, walk them,etc.
As in the US, some walk to local schools. Preschools and kindergarten and some other schools take a bus. Many middle school and high school students ride bikes.
The children of Ireland travel to school like any other children in any other country they may take te car, school bus, cycle, walk or even get the train.
By thinking that they pay money for that
they walk, drive and take the tram
Yes. Most presidents do.
The motto of The Sage School is 'Where Gifted Children Grow'.