It took me about 30 seconds to find such a course at Harvard Law School.
I am sorry it was so hard for you. I wonder now if it really was that easy for you to understand the course you have claimed to take.
As for paying for education, Thomas Jefferson is just one founding father who believed in funding public education, and setting up a system in the new country he had helped formed.
Yes someone has the right to be home schooled, but if you don't think the founding fathers wanted the public to have the right to an education. You should go take a few more history courses.
Now please continue to blow smoke etc.... It's what you are good at.
I'm sure you can post a link to the prospectus of the class you say meets my criteria for teachng Constitution? Or are you one who rarely reads below the headlines or course title?
And yes, Jefferson was huge on public education at the STATE level, not fedeal level. And he was 100% opposed to it being made mandatory that parents put their children into public schools as he felt that violated everything the Constitution was designed to protect. He was further opposed to the state choosing the text book or curriculum to be used in the classroom but thought that should be left to the teacher.
Jefferson, in other words, saw homeschooling or the rights of parents to determine the education of their children as an unalienable right.
So, according to you no law schools teach the Constitution, whatever that is supposed to means.
That would mean that none of the many conservative law schools in this country teach the Constiution either.
So apparently in your world, not teaching the constitution is supported by educators all across the political spectrum.
I don't know actually. I've asked for somebody, anybody, to find something that would prove me wrong about that. Are there conservative law schools? Where would those be?
But after looking at a few course offerings here and there around the country, talking with attorney friends, and reading up on it, I am of the opinion that law schools are probably not teaching Constitution as a stand alone document--they aren't teaching the concepts and theories that went into it or what the Founders intended that to be. They don't care about any of that. They rather focus on case law and judicial rulings that may or may not demonstrate that original intent.