Washington Federation of Independent Schools
The Washington Federation of Independent Schools (WFIS) is an umbrella organization of private and independent schools in the U.S. state of Washington, informally representing Washington in the Office of Private Education.[2]
Abbreviation | WFIS |
---|---|
Formation | February 12, 1969[1] |
Type | Non-governmental organization |
Purpose | Educational accreditation |
Region served | Washington state |
Executive director | Suzie Hanson |
Parent organization | Council of American Private Education |
Affiliations | Northwest Association of Independent Schools |
Website | wfis.org |
Purpose
As laid out by the executives of the federation, the goals of WFIS are:[3]
- To promote the vital role of private schools in Washington education and their significant contributions to educating the public and promoting the common good.
- To promote the rights of parents to educate their children in the schools of their choice.
- To encourage excellence and pluralism in education, and to promote the rights of private schools to fulfill their unique missions.
- To foster the participation of the private school community in shaping the state's education agenda, and to develop and promote positions on educational policy.
- To assure equitable access to all services to which private schools are entitled, while allowing them to maintain their independence.
gollark: I know the theory gives you probability distributions over things and not some sort of deterministic function from state at t to state at t=1, but it clearly isn't complete so there could be other things going on.
gollark: It seems wrong to say that QM disproves determinism when we know that it isn't actually a complete description of physics, though.
gollark: I guess *on average*.
gollark: That's probably not true.
gollark: I fear the inevitable misunderstandings of all quantum mechanics.
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