I immediately loved teaching here and knew I had found
the right academic home.
Not exact matches
Home schooling clearly continues to be a political (and other) movement because its advocates know they must labor to keep fundamental parental
rights over the education and upbringing of children recognized and protected from statist
academics and government violation.
This practice, diametrically opposed to that in Singapore, which outperforms the United States in reading in English in spite of the fact that nearly everyone in that city - state speaks a different language at
home, has no chance of narrowing the gap in
academic literacy with native English speakers; instead it will exacerbate it, to be followed by more civil
rights pressure on our universities to lower their
academic standards still further in an attempt to achieve equal outcomes, in a vicious cycle that will continue the degradation of America's civil and
academic life.
As for Marshall, yes, they have the winning
academic decathalon in the magnet, but it's not the same story for the
home school
right now.
Bringing
Rights Back
Home, with foreword by Lord Hoffmann — Policy Exchange: A report by political scientist Michael Pinto - Duschinsky, commissioned by the thinktank Policy Exchange, offers a strong
academic criticism of the European Court of Human
Rights» current composition and powers, as well as the affects its judgments are having in Britain.
The General Assembly is the
home of Nation - States and their governments, not of
academics nor human
rights experts.