Because the conservatives most likely to be employed in academia are of the neo variety, students may not get an accurate picture of conservatism or, for that matter, America.
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Liberals Seize Educational Reform
The educational reforms some conservatives have championed for decades may actually have a chance at a second life now that a few liberals have embraced them.
Welfare As We Want It
A historian at Penn makes the case that education is a welfare benefit then goes on to virtually endorse it as such.
Green Grads in Maryland
In a coordinated move by state and Federal officials and advocacy non-profits, Maryland may soon hold preeminent status as the most environmentally friendly state in the nation.
Hollow Common Core
In their frustration with education reform, conservative theorists often fall prey to the same inclination of their putative opponents—nationalization.
Home: Where the school is
Apparently, staying at home not only helps you get over an illness, it can also help students recover from public schools.
Wholesale National Health Care
Law school professors used to teach their students that hard cases make bad law. Now, budding barristers learn how to make bad law.
Unsafe at D.C. Schools
Heritage Foundation scholars recently received data on the number of police-notified incidents at District of Columbia public schools.
The Ivory Bench
It turns out that another modern-day concept bizarre to some of us old-timers—that of judges acting as de facto school boards—also, like so many other exotic trends, has its roots in academia.
A Job to Downsize
David Long, California’s Secretary of Education, resigned on August 10, the fourth such Secretary to resign in the past five years. California should take this opportunity to eliminate this position, which Mr. Long’s brief 18-month tenure confirms to be redundant.