Most non-scientists»
views on education seem to be looking for easy answers.
Not exact matches
However, when theological
education's focus is
on «orthodoxy,» the relation between theory and practice
seems to be treated as though it were precisely what the first
view rejects.
In my opinion, food
education is of the same critical importance as what's
on the menu, but it
seems like it's often
viewed as an afterthought in school food reform.
In this piece from 2010, I wrote of right wing hostility to Michelle O's efforts: «Absent pre-existing political animus toward the Obamas (which of course is at work here), that
view seems about as rational to me as attacking former First Lady Laura Bush for «meddling in my child's
education» or Lady Bird Johnson for «thinking she can tell us what flowers to plant
on our highways.»
As presidential candidates trade
views on immigration, foreign policy, health care, and a multitude of other issues, one essential element of American life
seems to be missing from the conversation: K - 12
education.
You don't
seem to have this common
view on education here in the U.S..