Unsplash/ Thomas Park
Education is in crisis. Teachers, students, parents all know it; anyone with even a tenuous connection to the education system knows it. A global pandemic did not cause this crisis, but it has shown a spotlight on increasing problems and turned subtle warning signs into glaring marquees of distress. Cracks in the system that have been noticeable for decades now seem as deep chasms that perhaps cannot be bridged, let alone mended. At a time when societyâs push for individual rights is at an all-time high, accommodation for individual educational needs is at an all-time lowâeven though the technology is available to do it. This is because the promotion of state-mandated conformity and the promotion of contrived individualism are mutually exclusive. One cannot accommodate the other. Thatâs why a new approach is needed. The church can provide a solution.
Supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump protest outside the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, in Washington, D.C. Demonstrators breached security and entered the Capitol as Congress debated the 2020 presidential election Electoral Vote Certification. | ALEX EDELMAN/AFP via Getty Images
Recently the Huffington Post ran an article that was extremely hostile to Christian education here in the United States. The overall implication of the article was that the January 6 rioting at the Capitol building was directly tied to the government allowing and possibly funding conservative Christian education in the US. Specific curricula were cited and quoted (specifically, A-Beka, Bob Jones and Accelerated Christian Education) and blame was explicitly and carelessly lobbied at these schools and curriculum.
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Rotary lauds Kalyesubula for uplifting Nakaseke communities
February 17, 2021 Written by John Vianney Nsimbe Dr Kalyesubula (3rd L) receives his award from officials of the Rotary Club of Kampala Ssese Islands
On February 4, the Rotary Club of Kampala Ssese Islands presented Dr ROBERT KALYESUBULA with a vocation award in recognition for his outstanding work in improving the healthcare and education of vulnerable communities in Nakaseke through his African Community Centre for Social Sustainability (ACCESS), writes John Vianney Nsimbe.
When you talk to Dr Robert Kalyesubula, a medical practitioner, one major character trait stands out; the meekness and a non-presumptuous warmth towards people.