All posts tagged: financial pressures

Why the cost of living crisis could put your marriage in jeopardy | UK | News

Why the cost of living crisis could put your marriage in jeopardy | UK | News

Legal and General found financial pressures held up 19% of divorces, particularly since 2020. The financial services provider found the income of nearly half of those who split fell by an average of £9,700 in the year after separation. Just one in five couples discuss their pensions when dividing assets, focusing instead on things like the home. Paula Llewellyn, of Legal & General Retail, said: “Many couples have not even sorted paperwork to ensure a clean break from their financial obligation to one another. “By consulting a financial adviser, people increase the likelihood of a divorce being fair and equal.” The Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association (PSLA) is today releasing guidance on how work pension scheme providers could help those splitting up. Source link

The Humanities Are Useless – The Atlantic

The Humanities Are Useless – The Atlantic

“Go woke, go intellectually bankrupt.” That is the latest rallying cry of conservative critics in America’s forever war over the state of higher education. In this case, the man on the attack was Joseph Massey: a self-described “not woke” conservative poet and alleged victim of cancel culture who blasted the recent announcement that Harvard’s English department would feature a course on Taylor Swift. “Come for the intifada rallies, stay for the course on the literary genius of Taylor Swift,” Massey quipped. The idea that radical faculty members are destroying majors like English by teaching classes on the “queer subtexts” of Taylor Swift, rather than the poetry of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, makes for a provocative talking point. But narratives like this unwittingly turn the problem inside out. If the humanities have become more political over the past decade, it is largely in response to coercion from administrators and market forces that prompt disciplines to prove that they are “useful.” In this sense, the growing identitarian drift of the humanities is rightly understood as a survival strategy: …

Where Are All the Missing Students?

Where Are All the Missing Students?

In 2006, the School District of Philadelphia, in partnership with Microsoft, opened the School of the Future. The idea was simple enough: Establish a learning environment centered on technology—no textbooks, just laptops and Wi-Fi—that would provide students in relatively poor districts the same benefits that those in wealthier areas enjoyed. The district built a handsome, well-lit building and filled it with state-of-the-art trappings including electronic lockers and Italian-marble bathrooms. It was heralded as a path-defining achievement for public-private partnerships in education. Two years later, Michael Gottfried, now an economist at the University of Pennsylvania but then a graduate student there, was part of a team examining whether such a technological revolution actually made a difference in student achievement. But he soon realized that the technology was somewhat beside the point: “We were talking to a teacher [at the School of the Future] and she said, ‘Here’s the thing, we can talk all you want about smart boards and laptops per student and curriculum moving online, but I have a bigger problem: Half of my class …