KOHEI
What does this mean? "They will have to really believe that all students can achieve high standards. This is a matter of faith as much as hard evidence and no one should underestimate the difficulty of achieving this shift, day to day, classroom to classroom across a country." "They" are teachers and I can understand the first sentence but I am not sure about the latter one. Especially, I am not sure what "matter of faith as much as hard evidence" mean. Could you write it in another way?
Oct 9, 2015 1:06 AM
Answers · 2
2
It's something like "This is about faith (or trust), as much as it is about facts...", or "Both faith and facts are substantial factors here" In other words - "the teachers have to believe in the children, as well as seeing the evidence. It is going to be a difficult task to achieve this change - in every classroom in the country"
October 9, 2015
Thanks a lot.
October 9, 2015
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