adison is and animal
Ryan Adison Amen was born in August 1979, in Loveland, Colorado, USA.
Adison is originally a male name, it means Adams Son. It was made a female name through mothers liking the name and using it for their daughters. Soon enough no boys were names Adison. Nowadays no body thinks anything of it.
most definitely, just search google for adison high school scam. BBB has rated them as F. Dont waste your money.
The town with smallest area is St. George (3.66 square miles).The town with smallest population is Mount Tabor (203 people as of 2000 census).
There is noone named 'Adison' in Fallout 3; there is someone named Madision; if that is what you meant. If it is; then Madison is Dr. Li; one of the scientists which your father worked with on project purity. She can be found in the science lab in Rivet City.
the answer is the nile river
Yes you can, but only if the person's name is spelled like that.
Depending on the region you live in and the regulations applied there. Adison high is an accredited high school. Accredited educational programs are recognized in the United States. Educational credentials accepted in one country can be verified in other countries.
Depends on what you mean by good but if you mean their accreditation status, then yeah its good
There are many sites that offer advice on homeschooling. One site is at http://www.globalstudentnetwork.com/, or check out http://www.adisonhighschool.com/adison/schooling.asp
Answer 1: Yes, it is accredited by (IACOOS), International Accreditation Committee of Online High Schools, but if you check the Related Link below, you'll find Adison and IACOOS are both located at the same P.O. Box. Independent, wouldn't you think?Answer 2: Any school is legitimate if it is accredited. However you need to understand a tiny bit about how accreditation works. The school you are asking about Adison High is an accredited school. Schools may change or update their accreditation status, depending on the needs of their students, or to become a more attractive option for students.These accreditation agencies monitor the quality of educational programs offered by a school. Department of education monitors these accreditation agencies.Answer 3: I'm sorry, but the second answer is incorrect; and likely contributed, here, by a diploma millist. Or, if not, then it was contributed by someone who doesn't actually know the "tiny bit about how accreditation works" cited in his/her second sentence, and about which s/he thought s/he was educating the questioner in the rest of what s/he wrote.The first answer is trying to convey that both Adison and its alleged accreditor are bogus because they both share the same PO Box address. Instead of asking what the questioner thinks of that, though, s/he just should have said, directly, and unambiguously, that Adison is a diploma mill; that is "accreditor" is bogus; and that Adison's high school "diploma" isn't worth the paper on which it's written.Had answerer #1 done that, s/he would have been correct; and inestimably more helpful.TO BE CLEAR: Adison is a good-for-nothing diploma mill. Its diplomas aren't worth the paper on which they're written. The so-called "International Accreditation Committee of Online High Schools" (IACOOS) is not a real accreditor......but we know that not only because IACOOS and Adison share the same postal address (most diploma mill operators are smarter than that; so thank you, Adison/IACOOS, for being so stupid, and making it so easy for us).We also know that Adison and IACOOS are good-for-nothing because in the United States, only the six big "regional" accreditors, approved by the US Department of Education (USDE), may accredit high schools.Yes, there are USDE-approved "national" accreditors, and their accreditation is of very good quality. However, there is a decided anti-"national" and pro-"regional" accreditation bias regarding high school diplomas among employers, colleges/universities, the military, etc. Only a "regionally" accredited high school diploma has any real value in the real world.And IACOOS is not one of the six big "regional" accreditors. In fact, it's not even one of the USDE-approved "national" accreditors. In fact, it's not USDE-approved -- or approved by anyone else, for that matter -- at all!Avoid Adison -- and IACOOS -- like the plague!
He invented electricity for example and he tried more than 800 times and people was asking him: Don't you give up? He says no and keep on trying again and again.