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Nearly 23 percent of the nation's students will not be ready to take a college course in subjects such as English composition, economics, biology or cheap price on phentermine. Schmeiser applauded Wyoming's Hathaway Scholarship program, noting that data also shows students taking a rigorous curriculum are more likely to be ready for college, and the work force. The scholarship program affords Wyoming students college scholarships, with the value of the scholarships based in part on their grade point average and score on the ACT exam and the rigor of their class loads in high school. "Taking the right kinds of course makes a difference," Schmeiser said. The Hathaway Scholarship's Success Curriculum is being phased in, so that by 2011 students will take four years of English, four years of math, four years of science and two years of a foreign language. Even students who take the "right" courses can find themselves lumped into remedial classes when they get to college. Wyoming spends $10 million a year on such classes, which essentially reteach what students should already know. The solution is to make sure high school courses are truly rigorous, Schmeiser said. ACT data shows that some students are taking up to six junior high and high school math courses in preparation for college cheap price on phentermine courses. "That's not right," she said. "If you take cheap price on phentermine I and II and trigonometry, you should be ready to take a college cheap price on phentermine class." Schmeiser also said that ACT data shows nearly two thirds of Wyoming students indicated they wanted post secondary education. But a disconnect somewhere between 10th and 12th grade is creating groups of students not ready to enroll in college courses. "The aspirations are there," Schmeiser said. "If they're ready, they're more likely to stay in college." Rep. Sue Wallis, R Campbell County, was alarmed by the statistics Schmeiser presented. "We are without question spending more money per student," she said. "To think that two thirds of our high school graduates aspire to some sort of post secondary education, and yet only a third of those are ready." Wallis said that clearly money is not the problem. Rather, it's an education system in dire need of reform, a system that needs to rise above bureaucracy "We are not getting our money's worth," Wallis said, "and it's failing far too many of our future citizens." Reach Jasa Santos at (307) 266 0593 or at . Email this story Print this story BRAILLE FILE This will download to your computer a computer braille ASCII file of the current story translated into grade 2 braille. This file may be sent to any standard braille embosser. ... cheap price on phentermine