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Trends in Education
In 1963 the Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional a Pennsylvania law
requiring public schools to have daily devotional Bible readings. The
Court noted, however, that "it might well be said that one's education
is not complete without a study of comparative religion or the history
of religion and its relationship to the advancement of civilization." School Dist. of Abington Township v. Schempp, 374 U.S. 203, 225 (1963).
Since then there have been many attempts to teach about the Bible or
about religion in the public schools, some that have resulted in
litigation. There have also been collaborative efforts to produce
consensus guidelines for a constitutional approach to teaching about
religion in the public schools. Visit the Resources section of the BJC
Web site to view "Religion in the Public Schools: A Joint Statement of Current Law ,"
which was endorsed by 30 religious, civil liberties, and educational
organizations and largely incorporated into Department of Education
guidelines.
A number of debates over Bible curriculum in public schools have
been reported in the national media recently. Following a story in
April 2005 about the issue in Ector County I.S.D. in Odessa, Texas, the
Texas Freedom Network (TFN) commissioned a study of a frequently used
and aggressively promoted curriculum. TFN's report made headlines,
including an August 1 article in The New York Times, when it
found the curriculum "advocates a narrow sectarian perspective taught
with materials plagued by shoddy research, blatant errors and
discredited or poorly cited sources." Last fall, a new textbook was
released by the Bible Literacy Project titled The Bible and Its Influence. The book takes a very different approach and has expanded the interest in the topic.
The following is a summary of the interest groups and their curricula, and in the case of TFN, a discussion of their critique.
National Council on Bible Curriculum in Public Schools: (www.bibleinschools.net)
NCBCPS of Greensboro, N.C., was founded in 1993 by Elizabeth Ridenour,
a former commercial real estate broker and paralegal. The group
advances a goal of "bringing back Bible curriculum as an educational
tool to public schools in all 50 states." Its purpose is to study the
Bible as a foundational document of society. NCBCPS claims that more
than 300 U.S. school districts in at least 37 states have approved use
of its curriculum. The curriculum consists of The Bible in History and Literature,
a teacher's guide. Students use the King James Version of the Bible as
their textbook. The 300-page curriculum includes a CD-ROM, student
lesson plans and activity ideas. The NCBCPS Board of Directors and the
group's advisory board include many prominent religious right figures
(many who work tirelessly to undermine church-state separation),
including Steven Crampton, chief counsel for American Family
Association's Center for Law and Policy; Dr. D. James Kennedy, head of
Coral Ridge Ministries and the Dominionists; and David Barton, head of
WallBuilders. Its curriculum has been endorsed by such organizations as
the Christian Coalition, Liberty Counsel, Center For Reclaiming
America, Eagle Forum, Concerned Women for America, Family Research
Council and Liberty Legal Institute.
The Texas Freedom Network Report: The Texas Freedom
Network is a religious and civil liberties advocacy organization in
Austin, Texas, that commissioned a report of the NCBCPS product
described above. Dr. Mark A. Chancey, a Biblical scholar at Southern
Methodist University, reviewed the curriculum, and in August 2005, TFN
released the report finding the curriculum advances a sectarian
perspective and that it "improperly endorses the Bible as the 'Word of
God.'" It found the curriculum "attempts to persuade teachers and
students to adopt views of the Bible that are common in some
conservative Protestant circles but rejected by most scholars."
According to the report, the curriculum also contains shoddy research
that distorts history and science, as well as many factual errors. The
report found the curriculum did not properly credit sources and
includes several pages taken word for word from the Microsoft Encarta
Encyclopedia 2001.
The NCBCPS dismissed its critics as a "small group of far left,
anti-religion extremists ... desperate to ban the Bible from public
schools." And yet, in September 2005 following the publication and
media coverage surrounding the Texas Freedom Network's report, NCBCPS
released a revised edition which made many of the recommended changes.
In October 2005, Dr. Chancey reviewed these changes and issued another
report based on the new version. He concluded that while the new
curriculum had been improved, especially regarding editing and citation
corrections, the overall tone continues to reflect a right-wing
political agenda. The curriculum tends to "Christianize America and
Americanize the Bible."
The Bible Literacy Project: (www.bibleliteracy.org )
The Bible Literacy Project, Inc. is a "non-partisan, non-profit
endeavor to encourage and facilitate the academic study of the Bible in
public schools." The Bible Literacy Project believes "that failure to
teach about the Bible leaves students in ignorance and cultural
illiteracy." The project was founded by Chuck Stetson, a venture
capitalist. Stetson, along with Cullen Schippe, a retired vice
president at textbook publisher Macmillan/McGraw-Hill, co-edited The Bible and Its Influence,
a textbook released September 22, 2005. It is an attempt to follow the
guidelines set out in "The Bible and Public Schools: A First Amendment
Guide," a project that began in 1999 by the Freedom Forum's First
Amendment Center to broker an agreement among various diverse
educational and religious organizations regarding the proper way to
teach the Bible in public schools.
The Bible and Its Influence has been endorsed by: Robert
Alter, Hebrew professor at the University of California, Berkeley;
Harold Bloom, Yale University literary critic; Charles Colson, prison
evangelist; Ted Haggard, president, National Association of
Evangelicals; Marc Stern, attorney with the American Jewish Congress;
Dr. Leland Ryken, professor of English, Wheaton College, Ill.; Dr.
Charles C. Haynes, The First Amendment Center; and Dr. Amy A. Kass,
senior lecturer, University of Chicago.
In our view
While The Bible and Its Influence
has also been criticized, it does not suffer from the same defects as
the other textbook. Criticism of the Bible Literacy Project has focused
on Stetson's strong ties to Chuck Colson and the apparent evangelical
motives for producing the textbook. Some reviewers have found the
textbook appeals to a broad religious and political spectrum but goes
too far in promoting an entirely positive view of Scripture. While it
demonstrates religious motivations and use of the Bible in positive
social movements, it fails to recognize them against important social
advances.
The Bible Literacy Project's product is a
very welcome development in the discussion about what can be taught. It
directly and tangibly illustrates one approach that would likely be
found constitutional. The curriculum is new and will benefit from
revisions in response to criticism. Note that any product can be used
in an unconstitutional or otherwise improper manner. Teacher training
is very important. Some discussion about these texts may lead districts
to a more thoughtful approach to religion in the public schools.
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