In 1875, education in prisons was not common or widespread. Most prisons at the time focused more on punishment and confinement rather than rehabilitation through education. There were limited efforts in some places to provide rudimentary education or religious instruction to prisoners, but it was not a structured or comprehensive system as we see today.
Some argue that school uniforms can stifle individuality and self-expression among students. Allowing students to choose their own attire can encourage creativity and help them develop their own sense of style. Additionally, uniforms can be costly for families who may struggle to afford them.
Yes because some teens are so worried about what they look like and to impress others that they don't seem to care about their grades and learning ability.........um......hello..........thats why they fail.....Dah.....a dummy could figure that one out
Sounds like gobbledygook that some politician has given as a psuedo explanation.
Suppositions are more like assumptions or beliefs based on limited evidence or guesswork. They are not as concrete as guesses, which typically involve making a judgment or prediction without having all the facts.
A door in an average maximum security prison is made of iron and steel; most prisons still have the kind of doors that look like iron bars, while some have a solid steel door, heavily reinforced, with a small window (bulletproof and unbreakable) that enables the guards to look in and observe what the inmate is doing. There are also some minimum security prisons where the inmates stay in dorm-like rooms, which have what looks like normal doors, but they are reinforced with steel, and have locks that can only be opened from the outside by the correction officers.
If you look at most of the serious criminals in prisons across the country, most of them dealt with some sort of abuse.
There are over 70 State Prisons in New York. This does not count Federal Prisons of County Jails. Some like Rikers Island, Auburn and Sing Sing are infamous.Over 70 not counting Federal institutions and county jails.
Usually you'll take it in 12th grade and college, but some highschools will let you take it earlier
Some look like office buildings, some look like mansions, some look like falling down shacks.
Yes. In prisons with cells, toilets are available in each cell. Some prisons have rooms that two or more people share; in these the commode may be inside the room, or in a communal restroom. In the lowest level prisons, toilets are communal.
Every bacterium is unique. Some do look like worms, some look like lunar landing modules, and some look like octopuses.
yes, some prisons offer this drug program
Most clubs have a youth layer (under-19s, under-15s, etc), and some highschools have teams as well.
Some of them look like people worshiping God and some of them look like they think they are worshipping God.
It's so many prisons to account for , I am sure these programs are working in some. However you will have some prisons that need improvement. To make any program work successfully, you need good supervisors and workers.
The low pants showing off underwear fashion originated in prisons. If a prisoner was wearing his pants low, that meant he was "available" for... homosexual activities. Some gangsters must have thought it looked cool to look like a prisoner, and it caught on.