Disruption, or Development?
Disruption, or Development? There are few questions as contentious in education as what the curriculum should be and why. As Charlotte Mason pointed out over a century ago, […]
Disruption, or Development? Read More »
Disruption, or Development? There are few questions as contentious in education as what the curriculum should be and why. As Charlotte Mason pointed out over a century ago, […]
Disruption, or Development? Read More »
Bethune: Relentless Hope Mary McLeod Bethune was born on July 10, 1875 in Mayesville, South Carolina to parents who were enslaved, the fifteenth of seventeen children born to Sam
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Student Essay:The Role of Evil Would we appreciate goodness if evil did not exist? Because evil’s shadow threatens to destroy goodness, humans fight to conquer evil daily; for
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Light at the Port By Jeremy Tate In 2014, I had an experience at Franciscan University, Steubenville, that I will never forget. I arrived on campus sometime before 6
Top Ten With West We recently had the pleasure of hosting Ivy League scholar Dr. Cornel West on our weekly podcast, Anchored. An immensely literate man, it was hard
Stowe: A Little Woman And a Great War By Matt McKeown Few authors have done more to rouse the conscience of a nation. Born into one prominent abolitionist
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Student Essay: Siblings in Pride and Prejudice By Marie Vyleta Often celebrated for its intertwined love stories, Austen’s novel tells us as much about family as it does
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The Great Conversation: Custom & Convention By Matt McKeown Habit is second nature. But what is habit? One of the oldest conversations in philosophy is about the contrast—to
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Don’t Cancel the Classics By Tyler Bonin When we invited Wall Street Journal columnist Meghan Cox Gurdon to the Anchored podcast to discuss her editorial “Even Homer Gets Mobbed,” we little suspected
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Washington: The Long Game for Equality By Gabriel Blanchard We often take for granted what, for Washington, was the sweat of years to obtain. The close of the
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