NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

Education debates are rife with references to war – but have they gone too far?

  • Written by Mark Hlavacik, Associate Professor of Communication Studies, University of North Texas
imageBattlefield analogies are a long-standing feature of public debates about education.Colin Anderson Productions pty ltd/Getty

As President Joe Biden oversaw the transfer of the remains of the U.S. soldiers killed in a suicide bomb attack at Afghanistan’s Kabul airport on Aug. 26, 2021, former Education Secretary Arne Duncan took to Twitter....

Read more: Education debates are rife with references to war – but have they gone too far?

More Articles ...

  1. At my hospital, over 95% of COVID-19 patients share one thing in common: They’re unvaccinated
  2. When human life begins is a question of politics – not biology
  3. How the Purdue opioid settlement could help the public understand the roots of the drug crisis
  4. 20 years of 'forever' wars have left a toll on US veterans returning to the question: 'Did you kill?'
  5. Feds are increasing use of facial recognition systems – despite calls for a moratorium
  6. Zinc-infused proteins are the secret that allows scorpions, spiders and ants to puncture tough skin
  7. What's on the agenda when Ukraine president meets Biden?
  8. What are the Jewish High Holy Days? A look at Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur and a month of celebrating renewal and moral responsibility
  9. State efforts to ban mask mandates in schools mirror resistance to integration
  10. Calculating the costs of the Afghanistan War in lives, dollars and years
  11. Hurricane Ida turned into a monster thanks to a giant warm patch in the Gulf of Mexico – here’s what happened
  12. Even with the eviction moratorium, landlords continued to find ways to kick renters out
  13. Afghanistan has vast mineral wealth but faces steep challenges to tap it
  14. Microeconomics explains why people can never have enough of what they want and how that influences policies
  15. Refugees after the American Revolution needed money, homes and acceptance
  16. Do US teens have the right to be vaccinated against their parents' will? It depends on where they live
  17. Bilingual people with language loss due to stroke can pose a treatment challenge – computational modeling may help clinicians treat them
  18. Lessons about 9/11 often provoke harassment of Muslim students
  19. New gene therapies may soon treat dozens of rare diseases, but million-dollar price tags will put them out of reach for many
  20. Autonomous drones could speed up search and rescue after flash floods, hurricanes and other disasters
  21. What do Muslims believe and do? Understanding the 5 pillars of Islam
  22. Understanding Islam - a brief introduction to its past and present in the United States
  23. Why some Muslim women feel empowered wearing hijab, a headscarf
  24. Islam's deep traditions of art and science have had a global influence
  25. America's Muslims come from many traditions and cultures
  26. How much do you know about Islam?
  27. What is Sharia? Islamic law shows Muslims how to live, and can be a force for progress as well as tool of fundamentalists
  28. What happens when the COVID-19 vaccines enter the body – a road map for kids and grown-ups
  29. Breathing wildfire smoke can affect the brain and sperm, as well as the lungs
  30. Drink less, exercise more and take in the air – sage advice on pandemic living from a long-forgotten, and very long, 18th-century poem
  31. What is Wicca? An expert on modern witchcraft explains.
  32. Data privacy laws in the US protect profit but prevent sharing data for public good – people want the opposite
  33. Is it a crime to forge a vaccine card? And what’s the penalty for using a fake?
  34. Why is it so difficult to fight domestic terrorism? 6 experts share their thoughts
  35. Hurricane Ida: 4 essential reads about New Orleans' high hurricane risk and what climate change has to do with the storms
  36. The Taliban reportedly have control of US biometric devices – a lesson in life-and-death consequences of data privacy
  37. CDC eviction ban ended by Supreme Court: 4 questions about its impact answered by a housing law expert
  38. Poison ivy can work itchy evil on your skin – here's how
  39. TikTok, #BamaRush and the irresistible allure of mocking Southern accents
  40. How public health partnerships are encouraging COVID-19 vaccination in Mississippi, Michigan, Indiana and South Carolina
  41. Assassinations and invasions – how the US and France shaped Haiti's long history of political turmoil
  42. The invasive emerald ash borer has destroyed millions of trees – scientists aim to control it with tiny parasitic wasps
  43. Do I need a booster shot if I got the Johnson Johnson vaccine? A virologist answers 5 questions
  44. Vaccines could affect how the coronavirus evolves - but that's no reason to skip your shot
  45. What is ISIS-K? Two terrorism experts on the group behind the deadly Kabul airport attack and its rivalry with the Taliban
  46. Racial income and wealth gaps are huge – but the Fed doesn't have the right tools to fix them
  47. American religious groups have a history of resettling refugees – including Afghans
  48. Do star athletes who want to play for the NBA really need college? What LaMelo Ball got right – and wrong – about why they don't
  49. Why students learn better when they move their bodies – instead of sitting still at their desks
  50. These 3 energy storage technologies can help solve the challenge of moving to 100% renewable electricity