A Minnesota middle school lesson plan for eighth-graders asks students to consider whether Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers have gone “too far,” claiming that the agency is arresting legal immigrants and U.S. citizens, who have reportedly been "dragged, tackled, beaten, tased and shot.”
Two education entities are pursuing a federal lawsuit to strike down a Colorado state constitutional amendment that prohibits public funding for religious schools, arguing it violates the rights of faith-based schools and religious families.
An Illinois school district has been accused of mistreating Good News Club chapters by imposing stricter access restrictions than those for secular student clubs.
Oklahoma officials have rejected an application to create a Jewish charter school, citing a recent court decision against the creation of a virtual Catholic charter school.
The U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights declared that San José State University must resolve its Title IX violations by apologizing to female athletes for allowing a male athlete to play on the women’s volleyball team.
In the aftermath of last Sunday's storming of Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota, a nonpartisan civil liberties group says that the First Amendment does not protect protesters who interrupt church services, refuting claims made by political commentator Don Lemon.
The Waco, Texas-based lifestyle company founded by Christian reality TV stars Chip and Joanna Gaines made the largest donation to the baseball program at Baylor University in its history, the school announced earlier this week.
Federal prosecutors are calling for an end to more than five decades of court oversight over a Texas school district’s half-century-old desegregation policies that the U.S. government says are outdated.
A federal judge has ruled in favor of a Christian parent seeking to have his kindergarten-aged child excused from classroom lessons on sexual orientation and gender identity as litigation surrounding the matter continues.
A mother in Maine whose parental rights were usurped by school officials who gave her gender-confused daughter a chest binder and referred to her by using a male name and pronouns without her consent is taking her case to the U.S. Supreme Court.