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         Ohio Parochial Schools:     more detail
  1. Administration of the Teacher in the Parochial Elementary Schools of Ohio. Abstract of a Dissertation .... (The Catholic University of America) by James W. Malone, 1957
  2. A struggle to be separate: A history of the Ohio Amish parochial school movement by Noah Hershberger, 1985
  3. A study of leisure-time activities of seventh and eighth grade students of three east side parochial schools of Youngstown (Ohio. State University, Kent. ... Masters Theses. Department of Education) by Mary Esther Stoltz, 1944
  4. Wheeling Rediscovered: Essays, Sketches and Photographs on Wheeling's Past, Present and Future by Private and Parochial Schools Ohio County's Public, 1976
  5. Wheeling Rediscovered by Private and Parochial Schools Ohio County's Public, 1976
  6. Ohio Educational Directory 2005-2006 School Year (Ohio Educational Directory)
  7. Islamic School Scandal Sparks Voucher Review In Ohio Legislature.: An article from: Church & State
  8. Supreme test: supreme court agrees to hear landmark Ohio case challenging voucher subsidies for religious schools. (Cover Story).: An article from: Church & State by Rob Boston, 2001-11-01
  9. Bush administration, pro-voucher groups Bombard High Court with briefs in Ohio case. (People & Events).(Brief Article): An article from: Church & State
  10. Exhibit of parochial schools in connection with the German Evangelical Lutheran Synod of Missouri, Ohio and Other States at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, 1904 by F Lindemann, 1904
  11. Parochial education and public aid: Today's Catholic schools by Christopher Connell, 2000

21. Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly . COVER STORY . School Vouchers And Religious Schoo
Because there is limited space in the parochial schools, all voucher Its state profile on ohio s school choice issues includes background on the
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/week524/cover.html
Week of September 23, 2005
Cover Story

Perspectives

Feature

Headlines

COVER STORY:
School Vouchers and Religious Schools
February 15, 2002 Episode no. 524
Current Stories Vatican Seminary Reviews Rebuilding Communities After Katrina Hurricane Katrina: Sacred Objects Headlines: This Week in Religion News BOB ABERNETHY : This coming week, the Supreme Court hears arguments in a case that could have a major impact on all church/state relations. At issue is the Cleveland school voucher program. Under it, the state of Ohio gives money to poor families who want to take their children out of troubled public schools and send them to private schools. But, in Cleveland, almost all the nonpublic schools are religious. Does that mean the state is unconstitutionally entangled with religion? Phil Jones reports.
PHIL JONES : As far as Victoria Pope is concerned, the issue before the U.S. Supreme Court is one of quality education for her children. Should she and other parents be able to use taxpayer-funded vouchers to send them to better schools, even if they are parochial?
VICTORIA POPE : Anybody wants their children to go to the best schools. When I go to that school I know if they miss homework they're going to get a detention, and I like that. That holds them accountable. Whereas in the public schools they would fall through the cracks.

22. Online NewsHour: School Vouchers -- September 2, 1999
As you pointed out earlier, the ohio Supreme Court addressed this very same issue We may not force them into parochial schools by targeting vouchers at
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/education/july-dec99/vouchers_9-2.html
SCHOOL VOUCHERS
September 2, 1999
The two sides involved in Cleveland's landmark school voucher case discuss the issue with Elizabeth Farnsworth, after a background report. Aug. 25, 1999:
A Gergen dialogue with two principals turned authors
Aug. 24, 1999:
Mandatory summer programs in the U.S
April 22, 1999:
A discussion with teachers on keeping kids safe at school
March 8, 1999:
Ending social promotion
in schools Feb. 11, 1999:
California's politics of education Feb. 10, 1999: Raising educational standards in the U.S. Oct. 20, 1998: A background report on education reform Sept. 16, 1998: How are schools handling the teacher shortage Sept. 15, 1998: Should teachers be graded April 29, 1998: The school voucher debate. March 17, 1998: Pricing student loans Feb. 4 , 1998: The president's proposal to reduce class sizes.

23. Cincinnati Ohio Yellow Pages. ADMINISTRATION OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS Listings
PRIVATE/parochial schools. 10969 REED HARTMAN HWY, CINCINNATI, OH 45242 ohio drivers can save hundreds of dollars on auto insurance. How?
http://www.hellocincinnati.com/YP/c_ADMINISTRATIONOFEDUCATION.Cfm

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24. Cincinnati Ohio Yellow Pages. SCHOOLS, ACADEMIC PRESCHOOLS & KINDERGARTENS Listi
schools, ACADEMIC PREschools KINDERGARTENS Cincinnati ohio Yellow Pages. PRIVATE/parochial schools. 2479 CROWNE POINT DR, CINCINNATI, OH 45241
http://www.hellocincinnati.com/YP/c_SCHOOLSACADEMICPRESCHOOLS.Cfm

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Akron Canton Charlotte ... HelloMetro.Com: 450 Local City Guides > HelloCincinnati.com Cincinnati, OH
Search the Yellow Pages Get Matched to Prescreened Cincinnati Contractors List of Services… ADT Home Security DISH Network Refinance Home Equity Loan ... Vinyl Siding More Services: Directory of Prescreened Home Contractors in Cincinnati Click Here Yellow Pages by Zip Code! Instantly Build your Yellow Pages using only one Zip Code Yellow Pages by Area Code! Instantly Build your Yellow Pages using only one Area Code New ! With our HelloMetro toolbar you can access your city's information with one click. Includes a free pop-up blocker and Local Search 100% Free Download - More Info. Top Education
Cincinnati Ohio Education Directory Showing Records 1 through 75 (85 total) LAST NEXT 3-C NURSERY SCHL 5742 HAMILTON AVE CINCINNATI, OH 45224 map it! ABC CHILD CARE-PRESCHL 6945 HARRISON AVE CINCINNATI, OH 45247 map it! ALLIANCE FRANCAISE DE CINCINNATI, OH 45202 map it! ANDERSON HILLS METH PRESCHL 7515 FOREST RD CINCINNATI, OH 45255

25. Maureen McCabe - HER Real Living, Real Estate In Columbus And Central Ohio
Private and parochial schools. Links to featured Central ohio private and parochial school websites. Catholic schools Christ the King Columbus Academy
http://www.herrealtors.com/maureen.mccabe/EducationPrivate.asp
Home About Me About You Auction ... Education Public Education Private Education Rating e-PRO Fall Fix-It Up Featured Home ... Your Home's Value
Maureen McCabe
Direct: Office: Fax: Maureen.McCabe@RealLiving.com Private and Parochial Schools Links to featured Central Ohio private and parochial school websites Catholic Schools Christ the King Columbus Academy Columbus Jewish Day School ... Xenos - Christian Schools Catholic Schools / Christ the King / Columbus Academy / Columbus Jewish Day School / Columbus School for Girls / Torah Academy / Tree of Life Christian Schools / Wellington School / Worthington Christian Schools / Xenos - Christian Schools
HER, Inc.
Modified: 9/7/2005 3:20:23 PM The information provided herein is supplied by several sources and is subject to change without notice. HER, Inc. does not guarantee or is any way responsible for its accuracy, and provides said information without warranties of any kind, either express or implied.

26. Firstamendmentcenter.org: Analysis
25 to take up the issue in the context of ohio s voucher program — one of only three currently High court OKs taxpayer funds for parochial schools
http://www.firstamendmentcenter.org/analysis.aspx?id=4593

27. Editorial: Voucher Victory / The Court Unwisely Upholds An Ohio Plan
In upholding an ohio law that uses state funds to allow parents in Cleveland In the 1950s and 1960s, opponents of state aid to parochial schools could
http://www.post-gazette.com/forum/20020630edvoucher0630p1.asp
Pittsburgh, PA
Saturday
September 24, 2005 News Sports Lifestyle Classifieds ... About Us Take me to... Search Local News Nation/World Sports Obituaries Lifestyle Business Opinion Photo Journal Weather Classifieds PG Store PG Delivery Web Extras Contact Us About Us Help Corrections Site Map Opinion Previous Articles Editorials Letters ... Opinion Editorial: Voucher victory / The court unwisely upholds an Ohio plan Sunday, June 30, 2002 In upholding an Ohio law that uses state funds to allow parents in Cleveland to pay for tuition at parochial schools, the U.S. Supreme Court last week gave its blessing to a program that, in effect if not in intent, provides a significant subsidy to Catholic education. For that reason, in our view, the 5-4 decision tilts too much in the direction of the "establishment of religion" prohibited by the First Amendment. That is true even though Catholic and other religious schools undeniably provide a service to the larger society by ably educating their pupils in secular subjects. Granted, the "wall of separation" between church and state in the educational area has always been a porous one the high court has allowed state governments to provide parochial-school students with secular textbooks, transportation and even tuition tax credits.

28. The Supreme School Board By PAUL E. PETERSON - Education Next - Summer 2002
It was Justice David Souter who first posed the central question to ohio In their eyes, the high performance of parochial schools relative to the public
http://www.educationnext.org/20022/34.html
The Supreme School Board
by PAUL E. PETERSON
The waiting line to hear oral argument before the U.S. Supreme Court formed the night before February 20. Anyone joining after 5 A.M. never got in—except those given special seating, including such notables as Senator Edward Kennedy, Health and Human Services secretary Tommy Thompson, and former White House counsel C. Boyden Gray. It was well worth the wait. Persistent questioning, passionate debate, direct self-contradictions, an electric atmosphere—all were there. As the 80-minute conversation came to an end, a pro-voucher resolution seemed to have just barely emerged, the outcome turning as much on educational facts as constitutional questions. The Court seemed as much a national school board as an interpreter of the Constitution’s Establishment Clause. Questions seldom focused on past jurisprudence—probably because earlier decisions have constructed a wall of separation between church and state as serpentine as the one Thomas Jefferson designed for the University of Virginia’s campus. Instead, the day’s focus was on vouchers, charter schools, and the woeful state of public education in Cleveland. The justices seemed to realize that they were discussing the future of low-income, inner-city children, not just fine points of legal doctrine. It was Justice David Souter who first posed the central question to Ohio assistant attorney general Judith French: “Isn’t it true that something like 99 percent of the students who were receiving these vouchers are in religious schools?” Such restricted choice was very different from the “choice from [among] the great universe of colleges and universities,” where federal aid to religious institutions has been generally regarded as constitutional.

29. Vouchers On Trial By JOSEPH P. VITERITTI - Education Next - Summer 2002
Preoccupied with the religious character of parochial schools, the majority also In Zelman, the ohio attorney general further pointed out that schools
http://www.educationnext.org/20022/24.html
Vouchers on Trial
by JOSEPH P. VITERITTI
Legal experts are already drawing analogies between Zelman v. Simmons-Harris and landmark rulings like Brown v. Board of Education and the seminal First Amendment decisions that have shaped American jurisprudence over the past half century. How the U.S. Supreme Court rules on the constitutionality of Cleveland’s school-voucher program will not only define the legal boundary between church and state more clearly; it could also help redefine the meaning of public education and expand the range of opportunities available to poor children. In December 2000, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit affirmed Judge Oliver’s ruling by a 2–1 vote. The appeals court relied heavily on legal precedents set down by the Supreme Court in 1973 in Committee for Public Education v. Nyquist . At issue in Nyquist was a New York State program that gave low-income parents a partial tuition reimbursement for private-school tuition. The Nyquist Court found that the tuition-grant program had the “impermissible effect of advancing religion.” It concluded that direct or indirect aid to sectarian schools is essentially a government-subsidized incentive to practice religion. The thinking in Nyquist was remarkable on several counts. Inherent in the incentive concept is the assumption that parochial schools are so superior to public schools that the opportunity to attend the former is irresistible, even to those parents who do not want their children educated in a religious environment. Reasonable people can conclude that the lure of a safe and sound education is an argument for choice rather than against it. Preoccupied with the religious character of parochial schools, the majority also presumed that the court is capable of looking into the minds of legislators to determine their motivations. Using effect to derive intent, the court concluded that incidental aid to religious institutions in the form of tuition relief to parents is tantamount to a purposeful government act to promote religion.

30. In The News: Ruling Voids Use Of Vouchers In Ohio Schools
Excerpts from RULING VOIDS USE OF VOUCHERS IN ohio schools By Jodi Wilgoren Helms, which upheld the purchase of computers for parochial schools .
http://edreform.com/news/001212nyt.htm
CER and Education Reform In The News Excerpts from RULING VOIDS USE OF VOUCHERS IN OHIO SCHOOLS
By Jodi Wilgoren

New York Times
, December 12, 2000 A federal appeals court declared a Cleveland school voucher program unconstitutional yesterday, upholding a lower court ruling that the use of public money to send thousands of children to parochial schools breaches the First Amendment's separation of church and state. The 2-to-1 decision, which included a vitriolic exchange among the judges, sets the stage for a United States Supreme Court showdown on one of the most contentious issues in education politics today. It comes a month after voters in Michigan and California roundly rejected school voucher programs in ballot initiatives and is the most significant legal decision yet on the question. "We certainly hope everyone will get the message," said Robert H. Chanin, general counsel for the National Education Association, the nation's largest teacher's union, who argued the case for a group of parents and teachers challenging the vouchers. "The message is, let's focus on improving the public schools and stop playing around with vouchers as a panacea." In the ruling, Judge Eric L. Clay of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit said the Cleveland program did not present parents with a real set of options, because few nonreligious private schools and no suburban public schools had opened their doors. In 1999-2000, 96 percent of the 3,761 voucher students attended sectarian schools, receiving up to $2,500 each to offset tuition....

31. Center For Education Reform
In 2005, Arizona, Florida, ohio and Utah enacted new or expanded school of children to parochial schools breaches the First Amendment s separation of
http://edreform.com/index.cfm?fuseAction=states§ionID=58&stateID=33&altCol=2

32. How To Reform Education In Ohio: A Symposium By Patrick A. Sweeney
childhood while sending them to Cleveland’s many parochial schools. Patrick A. Sweeney, a Democrat, is an ohio State Senator from Cleveland.
http://www.ashbrook.org/publicat/onprin/v5n6/sweeney.html
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... Other Sites of Interest How to Reform Education in Ohio: A Symposium
On Principle December 1997 by: Patrick A. Sweeney The number one concern for the average citizen of the U.S. isn’t crime or the economy — it’s education. As you may well know, there is much controversy over what needs to be done to improve the quality of education in the Cleveland Public School System, and to a lesser extent, the Cleveland suburban school districts. The best thing we can do to provide the necessary education to prepare our children for the future is to guarantee choice, namely choice in the form of school vouchers and pilot programs like the Hope Academies. In the city of Cleveland, there is a phenomenon of parents taking choice of schools into their own hands. Many families retain residence in the city of Cleveland during their sons’ and daughters’ childhood while sending them to Cleveland’s many parochial schools. When their children reach the eighth grade, the families then move to suburbs with highly rated public schools like Rocky River, Fairview, and Lakewood. If people had options like school vouchers, they wouldn’t be forced to move to ensure that their children gained adequate instruction, and the city of Cleveland wouldn’t be hurt by "educational exoduses." School vouchers allow lower-income parents to have a choice about where their children attend school who otherwise couldn’t afford to send their children to private or parochial schools or who couldn’t afford to move to the suburbs. Choice, or pluralism in higher education, is what has given America the world’s best collegiate system, and choice, implemented via vouchers, can hopefully bring our primary and secondary schools up to par. There are many pilot programs involving vouchers now, and two such experimental programs are the Hope Academies.

33. Private And Parochial Schools
Private and parochial schools Holy Rosary Central School 3100 Etta Ave. Steubenville, ohio 43952 (740) 2642550. Linsly School 60 Knox Lane
http://www.ovparent.com/survivalguide/stories/privateschools.asp
Private and Parochial Schools
Abundant Life Christian School
Chapel Hill Road
Triadelphia, W.Va. 26059
All Saints School
415 N. 4th St.
Steubenville, Ohio 43952
Bishop Donahue Memorial High School
25 Logan St.
McMechen, W.Va. 26040
Central Catholic High School 14th and Eoff streets Wheeling, W.Va. 26003 Corpus Christi Grade School 1512 Warwood Ave. Wheeling, W.Va. 26003 Holy Rosary Central School 3100 Etta Ave. Steubenville, Ohio 43952 Linsly School 60 Knox Lane Wheeling, W.Va. 26003 Martins Ferry Christian School 710 S. Zane Hwy. Martins Ferry, Ohio 43935 Moundsville Christian School Moundsville, W.Va. 26041 Mt. De Chantal Visitation Academy 410 Washington Ave. Wheeling, W.Va. 26003 New Covenant Academy 67885 Friends Church Road St. Clairsville, Ohio 43950 Our Lady of Peace School Mt. Olivet Wheeling, W.Va. 26003 Olney Friends School 61830 Sandy Ridge Road Barnesville, Ohio 43713 St. Agnes Central School 212 Murdock Ave. Mingo Junction, Ohio 43938 St. Francis Xavier School

34. Columbus, Ohio :: Columbus Ohio Restaurants, Hotels, Attractions, Amusements, Ni
Marysville School District Public Library ohio State University Library Private parochial schools. Secondary Primary
http://www.columbuscene.com/resources.html
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35. Columbus, Ohio :: Columbus Ohio Restaurants, Hotels, Attractions, Amusements, Ni
Columbus, ohio most complete directory and entertainment guide including Private parochial schools. Secondary Primary Secondary/Primary
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36. TestingII
In ohio, more than 220000 children attend nonpublic schools, compared to over 1.7 million When parents entrust a child to private or parochial schools,
http://www.clevelandakronfamily.com/TestingII.htm
The Testing Grounds by Jill Miller Zimon The following article, Part II in a three-part series, examines how non-public educational settings define accountability. Do they embrace the concept at all, and if so, how? If not, why not and what do they value instead? Last month’s article explored how standards, curriculum and tests fit into Ohio’s public school system. Next month will focus on how teachers, students and parents feel about Ohio’s steps intended to improve public school education. Across the United States, millions of kids go to public school, but millions of other kids don’t. In Ohio, more than 220,000 children attend nonpublic schools, compared to over 1.7 million in public schools. When parents entrust a child to private or parochial schools, or to themselves for home education, how do they gauge what their kids should be learning and whether they’re learning it? Do some parents and kids outmaneuver the assessment wave that’s washing over our public schools, or is it a necessary component for imparting knowledge to future generations? Private Schools According to Karin O’Neil, executive director of the Ohio Independent Schools Association, most of Ohio’s independent private schools use the state’s academic

37. J. - Cleveland's Tax-based Private School Vouchers Nixed
ohio already ranks first in the nation in private and parochial-school funding, and of the 53 private schools registered in the voucher program,
http://www.jewishsf.com/content/2-0-/module/displaystory/story_id/6165/edition_i
Friday May 16, 1997 -
Thursday May 22, 1997
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Friday May 16, 1997 Cleveland's tax-based private school vouchers nixed JORDAN F. LUBETKIN
Cleveland Jewish News Cleveland's pilot voucher program granting parents tax-funded vouchers to send their children to private or parochial schools is unconstitutional, the Ohio's 10th District Court of Appeals has ruled. The vouchers violate the separation of church and state clauses in the Ohio and U.S. Constitutions, ruled Judge John Young, joined by Judges Dana Deshler and Peggy Bryant. While supporters of public education, teachers unions and civil-liberties advocates have welcomed the decision, Jewish organizations locally and nationally have mixed reactions to the court's decision. Started last fall, Cleveland's pilot program grants tuition vouchers of up to $2,250 each to 1,994 poor Cleveland children who attend kindergarten through third grade. The vouchers, redeemable at the private or parochial school of the student's choice, have transplanted $5.5 million from Cleveland's 70,000-student public-school system to private and parochial schools. Children now in the program will continue through the end of the school year. But the program's future is uncertain, even though the biennial budget for Ohio includes funding to expand the program next year to include 3,000 children in kindergarten through fourth grade.

38. OHS - Ohio Historic Preservation Office - Preservation Toolbox - Preserving Hist
ohio School Facilities Commission Now Allows Waivers for Older/Historic School Significant in parochial school history as an early centralized Catholic
http://www.ohiohistory.org/resource/histpres/toolbox/schools.html
Legislative Update Our History Vision 2000 Board of Trustees ...
SOCIETY MEMBERSHIP
Preserving Historic School Buildings
Prepared by Martha J. Raymond, Technical Preservation Services Department Head, and Barbara A. Powers, Planning, Inventory, and Registration Department Head, Ohio Historic Preservation Office Many Ohio communities treasure their historic school buildings as centers for neighborhood or community activity, symbols of civic pride, and often as local architectural landmarks. At the same time, communities face the challenge of ensuring that older school buildings meet the needs of today’s students and teachers. Meeting the challenge requires good planning, knowledge of preservation tools, and, at times, creative design solutions.
Here are some ideas to help your community plan for the long-term preservation of historic school buildings, for continued school use or adapted for new uses.
Planning for Rehabilitation - Some Helpful References
The Historic Schools Technical Assistance Consortium, Final Report

39. ORTHODOX UNION ACCEPTS OHIO SUPREME COURT SCHOOL VOUCHER DECISION; SAYS GOOD NEW
ORTHODOX UNION ACCEPTS ohio SUPREME COURT SCHOOL VOUCHER DECISION; private or parochial schools is not an improper establishment of religion.
http://www.ou.org/public/statements/1999/nate12.htm
Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America
Institute for Public Affairs Main Office:
333 Seventh Ave.
New York, NY 10001 Phone: 212-613-8124
Fax: 212-564-9058
E-mail: ipa@ou.org Washington Office:
1640 Rhode Island Ave NW
Washington, DC 20036 Phone: 202-857-2770
Fax: 202-331-9161
E-mail: ipadc@ou.org Prof. Richard Stone Chairman Nathan Diament
Director Betty Ehrenberg More From The OU/IPA OU IPA About The OU IPA Press Statements Int'l Briefs Summer Internships Community Concerns Israeli MIA's Create a Local IPA Action Network OU.ORG Site Map OU IPA Election Central OU Public Relations Jewish Lawyer What's New? May 27, 1999 ORTHODOX UNION ACCEPTS OHIO SUPREME COURT SCHOOL VOUCHER DECISION; SAYS GOOD NEWS OUTWEIGHS BAD Today, the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, through its Institute for Public Affairs, accepted a long awaited opinion by the Ohio Supreme Court on Cleveland's school voucher program. The state's highest court ruled that the program does not violate the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment, but did invalidate the program under technical provisions of the Ohio Constitution that require legislative bills to contain only a single subject matter. The UOJCA had filed a friend of the court brief in support of the Pilot Scholarship Program.

40. Private Vs. Public Schools: What's The Difference? - Ohio - GreatSchools.net
Private vs. Public schools What s the Difference? ohio - Greatschools.net. parochial schools generally charge somewhat less. Admissions
http://www.greatschools.net/cgi-bin/showarticle/oh/197/
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Private vs. Public Schools: What's the Difference?
(Page 1 of 3) Your goal is to find a school that will meet your child's needs. But how do you choose between a public school and a private school? By Victoria Thorp and Jesse James, GreatSchools.net Staff
Cost
Public schools cannot charge tuition. They are funded through federal, state and local taxes. When you pay your taxes, you are paying for your child's education and the education of other children in your community.

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