The municipal government in Washington, D. C.–which does not have a great track record in management, let alone education–thinks it does.
Monthly Archives For April 2018
Berkeley Student Senator Tries To Redistribute Wealth
Or at least student government funding.
Is Black Political Power Overrated?
Two African-American scholars argue that it is.
Tent Accused of Being a Teepee Stirred Controversy at USC
In the “you have to be kidding me” kind of news, USC students were unhappy at a teepee-like tent on their college campus because it was allegedly ‘culturally appropriating’ the Native American teepee.
Georgetown University Campus Police aren’t Armed, but One Student Group Petition Asks for a Change
Apparently, Georgetown University does not arm its campus police officers with sidearms, but with pepper spray and batons. One group at the university is petitioning the university to change that practice.
Moving the Tassel Further by the Decade
In the latest issue of Accuracy in Academia’s monthly Campus Report newsletter, we look at the increasing drift to the left in academia.
The Public School Cookie Jar
Yet another public school official got his hand caught in it.
School Officials Grapple With Bullying
The federal government has compiled more detailed statistics on bullying and local school officials have gone high tech in attempting to curtail it but might they be missing a key component?
Will Maricopa Community College Have A Hostile Takeover?
The American Association of University Professors (AAUP) seems to think so.
Charter School Deserts
A team of researchers led by Miami University (of Ohio) Assistant Professor Andrew Saultz has compiled a map of “charter school deserts,” or poor areas where charters are hard to find but quite desired.