Some Bavarian politicians don’t think so.
Fix the schools.
Egypt’s president has denounced radical Islam. Now he needs to act on his words.
A defense that amounts to no defense at all.
The philosopher Justin P. McBrayer was astounded to learn that his son, currently in the second grade, was being taught a distinction between “facts” and. . .
Were he appointed dictator for a day, Gilad Alper knows what he would do to fix Israel’s economy: abolish certain taxes, deregulate imports from Europe. . .
Does the doctrine of separation of church and state mean that any discussion of religion in public schools is dangerous and out of bounds? That. . .
A recent trend among religious Christians allows children to decide whether to attend church. They must come to their own conclusions about religion, the thinking. . .
The percentage of Arab students at the Technion, Israel’s prestigious science and engineering university, has tripled over the past quarter-century, bringing it into line with. . .
The founders of a local Palestine Solidarity Committee in Washington State are peddling a new curriculum for teaching the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to secondary-school students. They. . .
For some time now, humanities professors have bemoaned the declining interest in their courses, and enrollment statistics back up their complaints. An exception can be. . .
The public commentator Reza Aslan recently announced on Twitter that “Iran currently has the highest number of US college alums serving in any foreign government. . .
Instead of being asked what they make of the Holocaust, American eighth-graders should be taught what the Nazis made of Jewish children.
The emigration of highly educated Israelis is not the brain drain feared by Israel’s government; it is a necessary step toward closer international ties and foreign investment.