And yes, I still have some stuff for you to read, if you have a spare minute.
Jennifer Cohn at the Bucks County Beacon has been doing some tremendous job tracking both the Moms and the christianist right. This piece does some tremendous dot connecting.
Cory Doctorow considers the future of AI. "AI is a bubble, and it’s full of fraud, but that doesn’t automatically mean there’ll be nothing of value left behind when the bubble bursts."
The Community Schools Movement Is Running Headlong Into Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’s Hard-Right Agenda
What happens when schools designed to meet the needs of communities and families run into the DeSantis agenda? Jeff Bryant has the story.
Yes, competition is swell, but charter fans would like to give their schools some extra tools to help them "compete."
At The Nation, Ramona Pierce looks at how reading repression is playing out in Kentucky, where students and the community are fighting back.
I loathe headlines with "takedown" in them, but this piece highlights Zander Moricz. You may remember him from his graduation speech in which, forbidden to mention gay students, he talked about those with "curly hair" instead. He went back to Sarasota (he's a student at Harvard now) to take Bridget Ziegler to task for condemning publicly what she herself does privately. It is a great speech.
Gerrymandered school remain a popular segregation tool. A federal judge has told Georgia to shape up. Jeff Amy reports for the AP.
The indispensable Mercedes Schneider takes a look at the strange coalition that has come up to fic high stakes testing, and how it compares to some bizarre coalitions of the past.
Once again, this time in Massachusetts, somebody decided to call the law to go into a school to look for a naughty book. Quite a surprise to the English teacher who was still in the classroom when the cop showed up.
Chloe Rusek is a journalism student at New College, the one that Ron DeSantis is trying to turn into a conservative powerhouse. This is her story of trying to interview university president Richard Corcoran. And trying and trying.
Will Bunch at the Philadelphia Inquirer says that what's happening is not as important as what's happening at the many public universities where most students attend. And what's happening is a version of The New College--party hacks are being put in charge.
Thomas Ultican reads the latest chicken littling from The 74 and says, "Hey, wait a minute." And he has data.
Nancy Flanagan offers a holiday reflection.
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