Most public school teachers hold traditional views on the subject, too.
Most public school teachers hold traditional views on the subject, too.
It’s no secret that the state of higher education in the United States is, overall, not good. This is true of both public and private colleges and universities, non-religious, religious, even specifically Christian schools. In fact, over the last few months, several long-established Christian schools announced cutbacks, budget crises, and major restructuring. In some cases, it is far from certain that they will survive.
A mother in San Diego went viral last week after she confronted a local school board about its upcoming Halloween drag show, which was dubbed "family-friendly."
Christian schools must recruit families with similar beliefs if they are to maintain their mission without being tempted or pressured to conform to the culture, says seminary president Albert Mohler.
Parents have every reason to demand transparency in school curriculums, even if contemporary curriculums did not assume ideologies that undermine Christian faith and values. But they do, as Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) has documented in its Parents Toolkit on Critical Theory. At the very least, parents should be able to opt out their kids, but they have to know when and what’s being taught in order to make the request.
Students across the globe gathered around their schools' flag poles to pray on Wednesday for the 33rd annual See You at the Pole event.
Nearly 80 percent of private Christian schools in the United States say they have experienced increased enrollment since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a new report that also says many of those same schools are struggling to meet the demand.
A Texas school district has pulled more than 40 books, including the Bible and a depiction of Anne Frank's Diary, from library shelves under a new policy that requires books that were challenged as inappropriate to be examined.
As reported by Faithwire, Biden’s remarks were met with a polarized reception on social media, including some who believed that he stressed that children do not belong to their parents when they are in the classrooms.
The California Department of Education will no longer be teaching students two religious chants to Aztec gods from its ethnic studies curriculum, following a lawsuit filed on behalf of parents.