Teens in the South more likely than other U.S. teens to experience religion in public school
Teens in the South express their religion in school more often than teens in other parts of the United States.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Teens in the South express their religion in school more often than teens in other parts of the United States.
About a quarter of teens who identify with a religion and attend public school say they regularly pray before eating lunch at school.
A projected 50.7 million pre-K-12 students will return to the classroom in U.S. public schools this fall. As the school year gets underway, read key findings about America’s students and their experiences.
Interactive brackets let you see how the 32 nations competing in the World Cup stack up on 70 different sporting, economic and social indicators.
Hate-speech laws exist in 89 countries around the world (45%). In some countries, the laws protect only certain religious or social groups, while others have broader laws, covering words or actions that insult, denigrate or intimidate a person or group based on race, gender, religion, ethnicity or other traits.
About three-quarters of Russians don’t think homosexuality should be accepted by society.
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