Rarely do pedagogues attack anything with the word liberal attached to it. Thus it is somewhat newsworthy when one does.
Rarely do pedagogues attack anything with the word liberal attached to it. Thus it is somewhat newsworthy when one does.
In an age rich in anomalies, here is yet another one: The very quarter which pumps out reams of studies on the dangers of sexism can’t get its collective mind off the root of that word.
Do you know what the Pilgrims were thanking God for at the first Thanksgiving celebration in Plymouth? If you go to Wikipedia you will not find the answer.
The president just expanded the U. S. Department of Education by executive order.
The president’s favorite think tank wants to improve teacher quality but is less clear about how its proposals differ from policies already in place.
What Milton Friedman said half a century ago is now obvious.
Two weeks ago the Los Angeles Teachers Union called for its members to boycott the Los Angeles Times over the impending publication of a study that rated the effectiveness of some 6,000 elementary school teachers.
New Jersey’s conservative education commissioner Bret Schundler asked to be fired rather than resigning so that he could collect unemployment benefits.
A remark by Rand Paul, GOP nominee for the U. S. Senate, on the Rachel Maddow Show on May 19, in which he expressed reservations about the 1964 Civil Rights Act, sent the media into a feeding frenzy.
In the wake of the Climategate scandal, panelists and audience members at the Fourth International Conference on Climate Change (ICCC4) indicated growing confidence that the tide is turning in favor of those who believe that man-made global warming is not a crisis.