Louisiana Lawmakers Will Make Kids Study Cursive—Yes, Cursive—for Years
As the world becomes more digital, why must students be taught an archaic skill?
As the world becomes more digital, why must students be taught an archaic skill?
New data from the Education Department underscores the problem.
Transgender boy demanded right to use men's room at school.
Eleven sue the Departments of Justice and Education.
Harmless toy was "Frozen" themed.
Possible threat of legal action?
"The medium is not the issue," says a U.S. District Court, if the message itself is "problematic."
She did nothing wrong. But even if she had, a chicken nugget scam is not a matter for the cops.
In the name of cyberbullying and suicide prevention, unintended consequences are not being considered.
Silly oversized masks and a benign, wordless, apolitical dance routine was too hot for a Massachusetts public school to handle.
Jonathan Swift "A Modest Proposal" assignment goes awry because everything is offensive.
Joshua Kehm failed to submit incident report, and when he did, he called it an "accidental fall."
A variation on beer pong, it pits Jews against Nazis, each with their own symbolic cup formation.
You can trace today's police-on-student violence to post-Columbine overreactions.
Bathroom panic strikes again.
"I regret it because I didn't know it would lead to this."
Bill would have forbidden students from using facilities of opposite sex.
Your rights end where their feelings begin.
Sanity prevails for two Escondido high schoolers.
Charges could prevent one teen from joining the Marines, and the other teen from attending college.
The schools are supposed to get the funds when police seize assets, but that's not happening.
Says government has to identify its problems and solve them.
The kid, 15, could be placed on the sex offender registry.
School choice frees teachers to enchant their students.
No good dead goes unpunished by school officials.
Why all kids deserve school choice.
Thin-skinned bureaucrats strike again.
Choking on zero tolerance.
Product placement masquerading as science
New Jersey's anti-bulling law jeopardizes students' speech rights.
Supreme Court will hear the case next week.
As it stands, convicted child pornographers in the Bay State can still retire on the state's dime.
Stop the fear: Children are more likely to die in a car crash.
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