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The Amish Village in Ronks, Pennsylvania offers exactly that kind of refreshing temporal shift without requiring a complicated time travel device.
In response, several parents sued, arguing that exposing their children to the books threatened their right to raise their children according to their faith.
The Fulcrum on MSN11dOpinion
What Remains of "Public" Education?
Recently, the Supreme Court handed down a decision that will likely reverberate through American classrooms for years to come ...
This report says that #AllMeansAll, and it is up to us to make that promise a reality. You can use this report to recognize the ways in which our systems empower – and sometimes disempower – people ...
The Trump administration has accused states and schools of using federal education grants earmarked for immigrants’ children and low-income students to help fund “a radical leftwing agenda ...
This is part of SCOTUSblog’s term in review series, in which scholars analyze some of the most significant cases of the ...
Tourists curious about the Amish flock to their communities to see them and the Amish may not like the attention, but they can make a living from it.
Tourists curious about the Amish flock to their communities to see them and the Amish may not like the attention, but they can make a living from it.