The American Curriculum
Is the U.S. a Democracy? A Social Studies Battle Turns on the Nation’s Values
Michigan spent five years debating how to teach American history. One of the biggest questions was how to describe the nation’s government.
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Michigan spent five years debating how to teach American history. One of the biggest questions was how to describe the nation’s government.
By DANA GOLDSTEIN
College athletes, who have had to settle for hollow victories in court, have the leverage to overhaul a system of sham amateurism and reap their share of the riches they bring.
By MARC TRACY
An immersion camp in California that aims to revitalize Hupa is part of a growing worldwide effort to revive endangered languages.
By MIHIR ZAVERI
The Education Department failed to approve a single application for student loan relief in the second half of last year, according to new data, defying court orders.
By ERICA L. GREEN
As U.S.C. has fought to attract low-income students, the campus has become a vivid microcosm of the economic disparities in Los Angeles.
By JENNIFER MEDINA
In lawsuits filed Wednesday, groups said the Agriculture Department illegally issued rules that weakened Obama-era standards for school meals.
By ERICA L. GREEN and SEAN PICCOLI
The end of senior year is now often characterized by a sense of purposelessness. Here are five ways high school seniors can connect with what matters to them.
By NED JOHNSON
Five dormitories and the dining hall at SUNY New Paltz in New York will feature Native American names instead of the town’s slave-owning founders.
By CORINA KNOLL
A lawsuit against Holland Christian High School has turned Betsy DeVos’s alma mater into Exhibit A as the education secretary moves to lighten the rules governing school sexual assault.
By ERICA L. GREEN