Politicians Need To Get Serious About Retaining Foreign Graduates
Donald Trump had a point before his campaign walked it back.
Donald Trump had a point before his campaign walked it back.
The candidate who grasps the gravity of this situation and proposes concrete steps to address it will demonstrate the leadership our nation now desperately needs. The stakes couldn't be higher.
The case hinged upon the idea of what a publicly funded school can teach. But parents do have a role to play in that conversation.
Of the 21 Texas House Republicans who joined Democrats to kill school choice during the special sessions, only seven survived their primaries.
Both rulings were by Democratic-appointed judges - a result that bodes ill for the plan's future.
The fines, which can reach over $750, are disproportionately likely to be handed out to black students, a complaint with the Education Department alleges.
Pastor Joshua Robertson stepped up when his community asked for support. His efforts have more people realizing that there is an alternative to the failing school system.
My response to Harvard's Dean Lawrence Bobo
The Congressional Budget Office reports the 2024 budget deficit will near $2 trillion.
Two public university professors were disciplined for posting fliers saying a colleague was racist, and that a student group (Turning Point USA) was a racist "national hate group" with "ties to white supremacy."
Plus: War in Sudan, federal homeschooling regulations, E.A. vs. progress studies, and more...
We could grow our way out of our debt burden if politicians would limit spending increases to just below America's average yearly economic growth. But they won't even do that.
A letter from higher education professionals warns that next year's FAFSA will likely face delays.
"of prescription medication, search her bag without permission, and find a firearm inside? And what happens when school board officials find out and want to question the perpetrator? Has the Fourth Amendment been transgressed?"
A Harvard Dean suggests universities can and should limit controversial speech.
This isn't the first time a student event has been canceled over alleged safety issues.
The new FAFSA form is like HealthCare.gov but for college students.
The president has tried to shift blame for inflation, interest rate hikes, and an overall decimation of consumers' purchasing power.
The decision allows the lawsuit to proceed, albeit with fewer plaintiffs.
Government school advocates say competition "takes money away" from government schools. That is a lie.
Several lawsuits are attempting to stop the SAVE program but with uncertain impact.
"I'm shaking and crying because I'm like, 'Oh my god, I'm gonna get shot,'" one student told a Vermont newspaper. "It felt so real."
Harvard is taking steps away from politicization. Will other schools follow?
Protesters came back to Columbia during reunion weekend. Palestinians tried to share their tragedies amidst the carnival-like atmosphere of campus politics.
Students have a constitutional right to refuse to say the Pledge of Allegiance, no matter what school officials think.
The University of Texas is just one campus that has seen police arrest pro-Palestine demonstrators.
Even in an era of police militarization, there’s something shocking about seeing cops in riot gear on college campuses.
Following months of campus protests over the war between Israel and Hamas, the university has announced that it will no longer weigh in on current events.
Why aren't politicians on both sides more worried than they seem to be?
Artificial intelligence writes a pretty good analysis of George Orwell's 1984.
"It really feels as though maybe we've lost touch with what's developmentally appropriate," says one Montgomery County mom.
You Can't Teach That! is in fine bookstores now
Inflation and expiring funds push public education into financial chaos.
From tattoos to abortions to gender expression, a confusing mess of laws govern which Americans are considered adults.
The anniversary is today. The American Journal of Law and Equality is publishing a symposium on Brown to mark the occasion. I am one of the contributors.
Despite headlines pointing to the contrary, high-poverty schools get more funding than low-poverty schools in almost all states.
Eric Levitz argues that the left should take a stand against censorship—for practical rather than principled reasons.
The House Oversight and Education committees are investigating the sources of “malign influence” behind campus protests. They’re using tactics Republicans used to hate.
Economist and author Phil Magness debunks a recent New York Times piece and shoddy academic work about the rich and their taxes.