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« le: Décembre 09, 2024, 01:32:17 am »
Pnph Protests Mark Cincinnati Anniversary
 The high school class of 2003 earned an average composite score of 20.8 on the ACT college entrance exam, matching last year s total, but the test-maker warned that more than half of this year s students may not be r stanley usa eady for college-level coursework in either math or science.Nearly 1.2 million high-schoolers took the nation s second-largest admissions test, a record number, up from about 1.1 million last year. In stanley canada  Illinois and Colorado, the exam is part of state-mandated testing.The ACT scale ranges from 1 to the highest possible score of 36. The organization was formerly known as American College T stanley cup esting, but now uses only the acronym.Richard Ferguson, chief executive officer of the Iowa City, Iowa-based nonprofit, was encouraged that overall scores remained steady even as the number of test-takers grew by more than 5 percent. We might expect the average score to decline, since we are likely adding students from a wider range of academic achievement,  Ferguson said in a prepared statement Tuesday.  Instead, we have seen remarkable stability in the average ACT score.         However, this year the ACT also examined test scores to look at skills students will need for first-year math, science and English courses in college.Researchers concluded that just 26 percent of test-takers were ready to handle the coursework in science and 40 percent in math. In English, 67 percent of students were prepared. The ACT said students who take more and tougher math and science courses in high Hyls This dog and cheetah are best friends and it is the best thing
 There   nothing gentle or delicate about this butterfly. Despite its pleasant appear stanley en mexico ance, the Butterfly Nebula has a dying star at its center that has a temperature of 250,000 degrees C.     The image, captured by NASA   Hubble Space Telescope   Wide Field Camera 3, shows the bright cavi stanley cup ty of ionized gas that surrounds the central star. Situated 4,000 light-years away in the Scorpion constellation, It should be fairly clear where it gets its name from. [NASA]                                          stanley taza                AstronomySpace