Independent School League

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    How I Got A Promotion

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    for college and my sister for grad school, so there was nothing holding him back. We talked about what it would mean for our family. This was no small transition; I knew it would be a momentous change. From our house in Jew Jersey to the new home in Oregon is 2,906 miles away, to travel would be 45 hours by car and 18 hours by plane. My mom and dad would live in Oregon, my sister would stay in New Jersey to finish school, and I would now live full time at school in Ohio. My parents would have to move

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    Baby Suggs Dichotomy

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    While the lash marks from whippings remain on their skins, the former slaves within Toni Morrison’s Beloved are scarred most by their mental trauma. While connecting to the community is used as part of the healing process, Morrison abolishes the concept that all communities are healing. Specifically, communities in which the relations of power are equal and members treated as ends in themselves are critical in overcoming adversity, while an imbalance of power, as well as seclusion, can incite the

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    The First Amendment gives us the essential freedoms we as United States citizens deserve. This amendment gives us Freedom of peaceful assembly, speech, press, religion and the freedom to petition the Government. It is thought to be the most important freedom of the United States. Only because of this right we are able to speak our mind freely, pray without judgment, express ourselves, and protest peacefully. Our Founding Fathers had been Framers of the Constitution and they are responsible for all

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    The Battle Over the Religious Homework Eventually, teachers, in the public school system, will find themselves in the crosshairs in the debate over a student’s expression of religious beliefs within the classroom. What should a teacher do if a student decides to submit an essay on Jesus as their hero accompanied by a drawing of the Last Supper? Should the teacher accept the student’s submission? If so, will the assignment be displayed on the classroom wall? By investigations the students’ religious

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    Eventually, teachers, in the public school system, will find themselves in the crosshairs in the debate over a student’s expression of religious beliefs within the classroom. What should a teacher do if a student decides to submit an essay on Jesus as their hero accompanied by a drawing of the Last Supper? Should the teacher accept the student’s submission? If so, will the assignment be displayed on the classroom wall? By investigations the students’ religious rights under the First Amendment

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    extent of how much is allowed and how much is prohibited. Prayer in school can be a controversial topic, with many overlapping matters and the line between what is acceptable religious expression, and what is not, is a line that gets blurry and is misunderstood. As the courts have reiterated the First Amendment does not relegate public schools as religiously void place. The main point made throughout these landmark cases is that a school cannot encourage or endorse prayer or religion, but cannot discriminate

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    Kids, in elementary school and middle school especially, are constantly being bombarded with propaganda. People love to push things on other people

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    suspended.2 Despite the Principal’s warning, the students still wore the black armbands.3 On December 16, Christopher Eckhardt and Mary Beth Tinker wore their black armbands to school and were sent home. The next day, John Tinker wore his armband and was also sent home. Because of the protest, the students did not return to school until after New Year’s Day. This was the date they planned to end the protest.4 Parents, of the children who were sent home, were furious.

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    One of the most well-known Supreme Cases involving student rights was the Tinker v. Des Moines Independent School District decision of 1969. The verdict quickly became a precedent for many other decisions involving school issues and is very relevant today. In December of 1965, students attending Des Moines Public Schools held a meeting at Christopher Eckhardt 's house to conduct a plan to show their support for a truce in the ongoing Vietnam War. They resolved to wear black armbands during the holiday

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    Liberty High School. This rural school of 400 students knows Flynt as someone willing to test school policy at his own sacrifice. Describing himself as a “button-pushing anarchist-ish civil libertarian,” Flynt is occasionally getting into trouble with school authorities for furthering his civic engagement with school policy and politics. His keenness for politics and constitutional school policies has led him again into more trouble. During Flynt’s senior year, he was suspended from school for actions

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