ACTA in the NewsHistorical Literacy
National group backs NC REACH Act
RALEIGH — A national group focused on academic freedom and excellence is backing a North Carolina House bill that would increase courses in American history and government.
Niall Ferguson and Ayaan Hirsi Ali will receive ACTA’s 2016 Philip Merrill Award. St. Katherine College joins the top 2% of schools in What Will They Learn? with an “A” for its strong core curriculum. ACTA was featured on the front page of The Chronicle of Higher Education and testified before Alaska legislators on the crisis in civic literacy. While Stanford rejected a Western Civilization requirement, Texas Tech’s Institute for Western Civilization offers a compelling model for renewal.
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RALEIGH — A national group focused on academic freedom and excellence is backing a North Carolina House bill that would increase courses in American history and government.
On April 2, Nick Down, ACTA’s Associate Director of External Affairs, offered proponent testimony before the North Carolina House Higher Education Committee on H. 7. This legislation would require all students attending public colleges and universities within the state to take a three-credit hour course in American history prior to graduation. Read the full testimony […]
In this episode, ACTA Vice President of Policy Bradley Jackson talks with Jane Calvert, director of the John Dickinson Writings Project and a member of ACTA’s National Commission on American History and Civic Education.
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