Did NYC Schools Retaliate Against Parents Who Asked Too Many Questions?
Parents of disabled children say the schools filed false neglect reports against them.
Parents of disabled children say the schools filed false neglect reports against them.
But Chris Rufo bragged about breaking the law anyway.
At this rate, the Southern Poverty Law Center's notorious hate map might eventually describe everyone as an extremist.
Doctor sanctioned for comments to journalists about transgender athletes
A new working paper finds that borrowers whose loan payments were paused actually had more debt at the end of 2021 than those whose loans were never paused.
Current culture wars are just one more manifestation of the reality that public education routinely devolves into indoctrination and imposition of majoritarian ideology on dissenters. But school choice can help mitigate that problem.
Plus: A listener question considers the pros and cons of the libertarian focus on political processes rather than political results.
Stop quoting him out of context on taxation, education, and monopoly.
The Rubin Report host makes the case for the Florida governor, who courageously defied lockdowns but is quick to use the state to punish corporations he doesn't like.
The state is the latest of several in recent months that have moved to eliminate college degree requirements for the vast majority of state government jobs.
If the debt ceiling bill passes, the Education Department will be barred from extending the student loan repayment pause yet again.
The stunt comes days after Justice Gorsuch warned of officials addicted to emergency decrees.
The number surged during the pandemic.
Sometimes he calls for freedom, and sometimes he preaches something darker.
The decision sets a dangerous precedent licensing the use of facially neutral policies to discriminate against minorities in various contexts.
Despite only spending a few years in the classroom, taxpayers could end up shelling out over $200,000 in a public pension for AFT president Randi Weingarten.
Plus: Naked Feminism, marijuana legalization in Minnesota, and more...
Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana have all seen dramatic improvements in reading scores by investing in "science-based" reading instruction.
Media literacy education invites a slew of nonprofit organizations and consultancies into the public school system, many of whom may have their own political agendas.
The former president reminds us that claiming unbridled executive power is a bipartisan tendency.
A demand letter states that the Uvalde school district is infringing on Adam Martinez's First Amendment right to criticize the government.
The lawsuit claims that the pause has cost taxpayers "$160 billion and counting."
Biden v. Nebraska has far-reaching implications for presidential power.
While city policy dictates that 911 calls should only occur when a student poses a genuine safety threat, parents say it's become a run-of-the-mill disciplinary tactic.
"If you don't trust central authority, then you should see this immediately as something that is very problematic," says the Florida governor.
"The greatest thing that ever happened to me was to be born in a free country of modest means and to have opportunities," says the Nobel Prize–winning economist.
Education officials unveiled new rules on Tuesday which will mandate that city elementary schools use one of three "research-backed" reading curricula.
Not only is that claim factually incorrect, but it's also wrong to be so pessimistic about young people's economic future.
Legal scholar and blogger Eric Segall puts forward several excellent suggestions.
Here are three people whose record on COVID-19 shouldn't be forgotten.
A new report purporting to show that Missouri's arguments for standing in Nebraska v. Biden are based on a lie fails to deliver.
Uncowed, the protest organizer is suing.
Unlike the Education Department's estimates, a CBO analysis considers how the new rules will encourage more students to take out loans they won't be able to pay back.
The teachers union head honcho is trying to engage in some astonishing revisionism, claiming she actually wasn't opposed to school reopening.
"If there is freedom, private property, rule of law, then Latin Americans thrive," says the social media star.
Plus: A listener question scrutinizing current attitudes toward executive power
"Criticism of the president is core political speech protected by the First Amendment," says the students' attorney.
Morgan Bettinger might sue the University of Virginia for violating her First Amendment rights.
The time and money spent on college can often be used more productively.
Morgan Bettinger was accused on social media of telling protesters they would make good "speed bumps." It was more than a year before investigations cleared her.
The authors of Mediocrity say it's well past time to end "factory schooling" and set kids free to learn.