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Students have been flocking to Christian colleges in recent years as enrollments in public universities have been declining.
Overall, the national enrollment rate of college students has been falling.
However, Christian colleges and universities are seeing an increase in enrollment, according to higher education experts.
During the fall 2022 semester, the national undergraduate enrollment rate dropped by 1.1 percent.
Since 2020, the rate declined by a total of 4.2%, according to the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center.
Yet many faith-based institutions saw an increase in enrollment.
Higher education experts claim this is because of these institutions’ commitment to their roots.
“We have doubled down on our core essence and purpose as an institution and made that well known to prospective students,” Jonathan Sanford, University of Dallas (UD) president, told the Daily Caller.
UD, a “Catholic, liberal arts university known for [its] intellectual rigor and [its] deep commitment to the Catholic faith and a robust, Western-based classical education,” according to Sanford, welcomed its second-largest incoming class to the Texas school in fall 2022, its website reads.
The school set its record enrollment rate during the 2021-2022 academic year and welcomed 487 freshman students.
“I think there’s a deep hunger in the souls of all individuals, but particularly in this generation, for a real education and real exposure to the timeless ideas and classical texts as well as real exposure to how to build upon those timeless truths and classical texts in order to be innovative contributors to the renewal of culture,” Sanford said.
Stephen Johnson, director of marketing and communications at Benedictine College in Kansas, revealed that the Catholic liberal arts school had “record enrollment once again for Fall 2022 and recruiting is going strong for Fall 2023.”
“It is heartening that schools like Hillsdale College—schools that take a classical approach to the liberal arts—are seeing an increase in student interest, and that the media are taking note,” said Emily Stack Davis, executive director of media relations and communications at Hillsdale College.
“At Hillsdale, we recognize that education should point to the permanent things—an understanding of what it means to be human, how to live a good life, and what leads to happiness.”
During the fall of 2021, Hillsdale College enrollment increased by 16%, according to MLive.
It experienced a 53% boost in applications, as well. ...
More than 3.2 million US public school students are covered by guidance that blocks parents from knowing whether their child identifies as a different gender in the classroom — which could become federal policy if President Biden’s Title IX proposals are approved in May.
At least 168 districts governing 5,904 schools nationwide have rules on the books that prevent faculty and staff from disclosing to parents a student’s gender status without that student’s permission, according to a list compiled by the conservative group Parents Defending Education and shared with The Post.
anything would be better and a free market would be MUCH better. fund every kid. make the schools compete for them by offering good product not this “take or pay” dumpster fire that forces contribution even if you want to opt out.
no other rules. no “certification,” no credentialing, no approved lists or mandated curricula. just choice. free, unfettered, self-adapting choice.
we must tolerate bad choices or choices we disagree with to ensure that the truly good choices are free to emerge. the speed with which this will lift all boats and take us to levels dizzyingly above those of today will be so stark as to be unmissable. it’s why the teachers unions will do anything and everything to prevent it. they are 100% cognizant of the fact that the garbage they peddle cannot survive competition.
and make no mistake, “garbage” is likely charitable as a descriptor.
this is a bar so low you could trip over it in the dark. and the arguments about “well we need rules and accreditation or some kid might learn some dumb thing i don’t like” fall awfully flat in the face of what the kids ARE learning now. maybe you cannot “save” everyone, but there is no way we cannot do 10 times better than this.
there is no way the current school system is more useful or better suited than a choice based system would be. the germans have, to great success, replaced many high schools with vocational tracks to become skilled technicians, plumbers, electricians, repairers of engines and operators of equipment. and the US has shortages of all these things and great career prospects within them. and not every kids wants a “liberal arts” education. so offer the option, see what happens.
there is no way the current school system is more useful or better suited than a choice based system would be.
We're likely going to send our daughter to Catholic high school. Arizona apparently expanded their school choice program to every kid in the state, and standard assistance is $7,000. How's that for choice!
That's the way it ought to be... convert the per pupil spending to a voucher.
My 6-year-old just came up to me, tears in his eyes, and said "Mommy, why do the evil Republicans want to take away my gay porn books?"
I - I have no words.
Got our grant approval for Arizona next year, $1,900 a quarter to not attend public school. All they require is your proof of your Arizona address, and your kid is over over five years old, that's fuckin it.
Got our grant approval for Arizona next year, $1,900 a quarter to not attend public school. All they require is your proof of your Arizona address, and your kid is over over five years old, that's fuckin it.
The money goes into some virtual "wallet", and payments have to go from there directly to an approved institution of activity.
If you go to a charter, you get a choice, but otherwise, no, have to go to the one in your district. There's only one large private school in Yuma, they haven't raised tuition, and they are already full. The other two are quite small, also haven't changed their tuition, neither is full, or seems like it will fill up.
So, it seems most people prefer their local public school?
This Illinois teacher tried to recommend books with gay themes to kids in order to indoctrinate them into the modern leftist religion and the media treats her like she's a hero.
And this isn't just a book that has some gay characters in it, that would be bad enough. She recommended the book called "This Book is Gay," which is an extremely graphic book describing homosexual sex acts to kids.
One of those books was Juno Dawson's "This Book is Gay." It's a bestselling nonfiction book that's billed by its publisher as an entertaining and informative "instruction manual" for anyone coming out as lesbian, gay, bisexual or trans.
"By Wednesday, I received notice that parents had gotten a hold of pictures from that book that their child had taken in class," Bonner says. "By Friday, I was told that parents had filed a police report against me for child endangerment."
She hasn't been back to school since because SHE feels unsafe.
Sure, she's handing out gay porn books to kids, but SHE's the one who feels endangered.
The book she tried to push on students includes graphic descriptions of sex and encourages children to explore their sexuality and join homosexual dating apps like Grindr.
A perfectly reasonable excuse to contact the cops.
This teacher is a groomer.
Hopefully, the child endangerment charges stick.
Teachers need to know that sexualizing children and grooming them into the LGBT lifestyle is completely unacceptable.
Based pastor embarrasses school board by reading pornographic book available in school library
MSU Professor Forces Students to Purchase Annual Subscription to Her Own Website; Claims Proceeds Will Be Donated to Planned Parenthood
Amy Wisner, a professor at Michigan State University, is on temporary leave after requiring students enrolled in her Marketing Communications course to purchase annually renewing subscriptions to her personal “Patriarchy Rebellion Community” website.
The leftist professor, who has taught in the business school at MSU since 2011, included the $99 membership requirement in the course’s syllabus.
A landing page from which students were required to purchase platform access describes the website as a “virtual community” that “exists far, far away from the internet bullies and trolls.” Wisner offered a more frank description of her “community” in a now-deleted June Facebook post, writing, “The Rebellion community is a safe place to coordinate our efforts to burn everything to the fucking ground.” She added that “100% of membership fees are donated to Planned Parenthood.”
Behind the paywall, she posted PDF files and YouTube videos that promoted her social justice agenda rather than anything remotely relevant to the subject matter of the business course.
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