This election, make the Bible your voting guide
Going back to the Bible could give us much needed context and guidance in this contentious election season.
Going back to the Bible could give us much needed context and guidance in this contentious election season.
“Teaching students how to think, not what to think” is harder business than we knew. Our trials with our seminar on race emphasized a crucial dilemma facing American colleges and universities.
One of the hallmarks of the homeschooling movement has been the high level of student outcomes, with homeschoolers consistently scoring higher on standardized tests and college graduation rates about 10% higher than their public school peers
As a lifetime educator, one of my many prayers for 2015 is that people of faith in America will more fully engage in public education and turn the public conversation about high education standards away from political wrangling to focus on improving educational outcomes for all.
Biblical illiteracy is at an all-time high. A nationwide poll found that 60 percent of Americans could not identify even five of the Ten Commandments, and another survey revealed that 39 percent of Millennials never read the Bible.