In the meantime, here's the weekly list. Remember-- you can amplify the voices that you believe should be heard.
Amanda Tyler's opinion piece for CNN is one of the better takes on the continued efforts to jam the Bible into the classroom.
Historian Kevin Kruse has some lessons for the Christianity-in-our-classrooms crowd.
The least surprising development in this ongoing saga.
Some scholarly work from Elena Aydarova. You may want to skip past the scholarly part to the findings, which are pretty hefty all by themselves.
Hot Fun in the Summertime
It's test score time in Tennessee, and TC Weber has some thoughts about the "increasingly irrelevant" results.
Jan Resseger reminds us that at one point we made a real dent in child poverty. Now, we're just never-minding our way past it.
Conservatives Go to War — Against Each Other — Over School Vouchers
Alec MacGillis reports for ProPublica on the phenomenon of conservative supporters of local public schools.
From New York Times. LA schools thought they could hire someone to replace support staff with a chatbot. Not so much.
Thomas Ultican takes a look back at Karen Fraid's reform-to-English dictionary, and it turns out that after more than a decade, it holds up depressingly well.
Colleen Scerpella writing for the Center for Media and Democracy looks at some of the folks behind the recent alarms over higher education.
This week at Forbes.com, I reminded you (again) that you ought to pick up a copy of The Education Wars.
And at The Progressive, I responded to some Corey DeAngelis talking points.
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