The Republican Party line — derail Obama
Our greatest thinkers and leaders compel us to believe in ideas that transcend the world we live in.
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Our greatest thinkers and leaders compel us to believe in ideas that transcend the world we live in.
Sports fans go to games to cheer on their teams and escape from the chaos of everyday life. Attendees of these sporting events bask in wins and agonize in losses.
When discussing the pitfalls of high-stakes standardized testing, critics often point out the enormous pressure put on individual students.
When historians analyze the Watergate scandal that doomed former President Richard M. Nixon’s second term in office, transparency is not a word usually deployed to describe Nixon’s response to the situation.
In the litany of bad substitute teaching experiences, Anthony Hill’s account would rank among the worst. “Would” being the key word, as Hill’s comments cannot be taken as reality.
America, a country of immigrants, has a fortunate history of being on the receiving end of many of the poorest countries’ talented peoples, also known as a “brain drain” for these countries.
The recent spate of wacky bills debated in the Arizona Legislature is further proof of the schism between the few pragmatic politicians who serve this state and the out-of-touch sponsors and supporters of these pieces of legislation.
“I’ll just find the answer on Wikipedia at home” is definitely nowhere to be found on the much discussed international assessment on which America fared so poorly late last year.
Question: Should universities restrict student-athletes from using social media?
In K-12 education, teachers grade students all day, every day. Therefore, educators in classrooms and professors of education understand the stains and shortcomings of grading better than perhaps anyone else in America.
President Barack Obama presented a passionate appeal for education reform during the State of the Union address. This provided education reformers sufficient justification to convince antagonists that outdated methods need to change. These old methods prevent our education system from regaining top status globally.
Kelley Williams-Bolar, mother of two from Akron, Ohio, was jailed last month for falsifying residency documents after successfully switching her children to the Copley-Fairlawn school district, which allowed them a chance to prosper in a wealthier and better academic school district than their own.
Arizonans are reasonable and logical people. This is no revelation to us, but to the rest of the country it may be. We can attribute this, in part, to the fact that much of the ill-conceived legislation coming out of Arizona’s Legislature is neither reasonable nor logical.
As Americans, we have grown up to view our national heroes as more than human. This is true with figures from George Washington to Franklin D. Roosevelt. And we sometimes struggle to separate fact from fiction.
At the first-ever Community College Summit in October, President Barack Obama called the institutions “a gateway to millions of Americans to good jobs and a better life,” and a place “where workers can gain new skills to move up in their careers.” Obama has since moved to financially back his statement by directing $12 billion in federal stimulus money to our nation’s community colleges.
A monumental decision earlier this month by the California State Supreme Court suggested that while the state may be headed for utter fiscal ruin, basic principle and logic are not headed toward a similar abyss.
Four Loko has gone viral. YouTube has numerous videos of people chugging the drink for the camera as well as raps dedicated to the drink with tens of thousands of views. Facebook has 87,000 people who like it enough to join a group devoted to the drink.
Budget cuts have once again taken an ax to the arts.
Last week, several students took their lives.
Injuries have always been part of football’s narrative, yet never before has a specific injury been as scrutinized as it has this season.
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