Another big news week here at the offices of ILYBYGTH International! Here are a few of the biggest headlines:
Has public education remained the same for a century? Not really, at WaPo.
The subjects that students studied, the way the day was organized, the size of classes, the kinds of supports young people received — these essential aspects of education were all different.
Queen Betsy held in contempt of court in student-loan case. At NPR.
the department “erroneously” sent messages to more than 16,000 borrowers to pay up. Some did so voluntarily. Others had their wages garnished or tax refunds seized by the government. Ten different third-party contractors were involved in collecting the loans, and the judge’s opinion notes that the Education Department didn’t do much to make sure they followed the orders, beyond sending a few emails.
It’s rare for a judge to find a Cabinet secretary in contempt of court.
Could Latinx evangelicals decide the 2020 election? At RNS.
“We’re pro-life. We want criminal justice reform. We want educational equity. We want a healthy economy,” [President of the National Latino Evangelical Coalition Gabriel Salguero] told Religion News Service this week, noting that members of the faith group also feel strongly about immigration and foreign policy. “Because we’re not one-issue voters, people think if they come to us with talking points they’re gonna get us — no.”
What is life like at an evangelical college? One alum shares her memories at RA.
“Kind of liberal, isn’t it?” sneered a girl at my church youth group, who would be attending the ultra-conservative Master’s College.
“I don’t think so?” I said, recalling that Westmont didn’t allow drinking, smoking, or overnight guests of the opposite sex. But I secretly wanted her to be right. I hoped that Westmont would help me deal with the panic I continually felt reading the Bible, that it would help me figure out how to be a Democrat, a feminist, and a Baptist.
Top historian reviews new book about evangelicals, at CT.
As for white evangelicals’ enthusiastic embrace of the Republican Party and their overwhelming support for Donald Trump, Kidd views these trends as unfortunate but—like the Scopes Trial of the 1920s—not necessarily representative of evangelicalism as a whole. . . .[but] If evangelical theology transcends racial and political lines in ways that most other religious movements in America can’t match, shouldn’t we see clearer evidence of our racial attitudes and political stances aligning with our theology?
Has America gone too far on school safety? At the Atlantic.
We have students who feel like they’re being treated like potential criminals instead of students. . . . We’ve kind of gone overboard. Not all threats are created equal.
- What about this case of finger guns at school? Too much? Just right? Here at ILYBYGTH.
The big Ed news: Senator Warren reveals her K-12 plan. Some highlights:
- Quadruple federal Title I funding for schools in high-poverty neighborhoods. . . .
- Fund the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act at the level the federal government originally promised . . .
- End federal investment in charter school expansion, ban for-profit charter schools and ensure existing charter schools are subject to the same transparency and accountability requirements as traditional public school districts. . . .
- Reinstate Obama-era protections for transgender students under federal law that were revoked by Trump and take other steps to protect LGBTQ students and faculty.
- Invest federal dollars to raise teacher pay and strengthen the bargaining power of teacher unions.
- Eliminate use of standardized test scores for high-stakes decisions. . . .
- Cancel student breakfast and lunch debt and provide free and nutritious school meals.
- Ban the storing and selling of student data.
- Expand social-emotional learning.
- Offer $100 billion in grants to transform 25,000 public schools into community schools, which provide family support and health and social services to students.
Sen. Warren follows it up with a visit to a Chicago teachers’ picket line. At CST.
“Be strong in the Chicago teachers strike … I know you are out there fighting for the future of our children. … Stay on the picket lines as long as you need to.”
Conservative critic Chester Finn on Warren’s ed plan, at EN.
it would reverse most of the major education reforms of recent decades, drive a stake through the heart of what’s left of bipartisan federal and state policy, and re-enshrine adult interests, especially those of the teachers unions, in place of children’s, while wasting immense sums of taxpayer dollars. (The total price tag is estimated at $800 billion.)
Can progressive Christians be kinder? At RNS.
I’m not advocating for us [progressive Christians] to ignore evil and to stop seeking justice wherever we go. But our posture must be one that seeks the well-being of all people, one that aims to lovingly persuade our brothers and sisters without embracing anger, bitterness and pride.
What does the economy need? Better storytellers, at WaPo.
“It’s important we don’t just talk about numbers, coefficients and rules, but stories that people can understand,” Lowe said. “Stories about how policies are contributing to economic welfare and the things that really matter to people.”
Teaching impeachment can put history teachers in a tight spot, at NYT.
“I think social studies teachers are hesitant to teach controversial topics, past and present, due to hyperpolarization or pushback from parents,” [31-year-old teacher Chris Dier] said. “Almost all of my students will be voting in the next election; they deserve teachers who do not shy away from current events because of our partisan climate.”
Joe Biden might not be able to bring Catholic voters to the Democrats anymore. At RNS.
Can new leadership save struggling evangelical colleges? At CT.
Jobe [at Moody Bible Institute] sees his first job as having to “define reality.” That includes helping team members understand the institution’s identity and next steps needed to thrive. To rebuild confidence across the campus, he also attempts to engage with the basic needs of students and staff.
Will other evangelical colleges learn from the tragic lessons of Liberty U? At JGMC.
Reforming Liberty doesn’t mean compromising its mission. Nobody is demanding that Liberty become a Christian liberal arts school in the mold of Wheaton College or Hillsdale, or a carbon copy of a secular state school. In fact, Liberty is uniquely positioned as a popular university that could be a bona fide alternative to the overwhelmingly progressive status quo in academia.