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Editorial
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Title: Texas Public Schools: Still Teaching Creationism
Source: [None]
URL Source: [None]
Published: Jan 28, 2013
Author: http://www.motherjones.com/blue-marble/2
Post Date: 2013-01-28 13:36:13 by tom007
Keywords: None
Views: 235
Comments: 21

Texas Public Schools: Still Teaching Creationism

—By Josh Harkinson | Mon Jan. 28, 2013 3:01 AM PST

85

Williac/Flickr

In Texas public schools, children learn that the Bible provides scientific proof that Earth is 6,000 years old, that the origins of racial diversity trace back to a curse placed on Noah's son, and that astronauts have discovered "a day missing in space" that corroborates biblical stories of the sun standing still.

These are some of the findings detailed in Reading, Writing & Religion II, a new report by the Texas Freedom Network that investigates how public schools in the Lone Star State promote religious fundamentalism under the guise of offering academic courses about the Bible. The report, written by Mark Chancey, a professor of religious studies at Southern Methodist University, found that more than half of the state's public-school Bible courses taught students to read the book from a specifically Christian theological perspective—a clear violation of rules governing the seperation of church and state.

Many school districts pushed specific strains of fundamentalism in the classes:

"The Bible is the written word of God," proclaims a slide shown to students in suburban Houston's Klein Independent School District (ISD). Another slide adds: "The Bible is united in content because there is no contradictions [sic] in the writing. The reason for this is because that Bible is written under God's direction and inspiration." A PowerPoint slide in Brenham ISD in Central Texas claims that "Christ's resurrection was an event that occurred in time and space—that is was, in reality, historical and not mythological." (emphasis in original) In North Texas, Prosper ISD promotes the Rapture, claiming in course materials that "the first time the Lord gathered his people back was after the Babylonian captivity. The second time the Lord will gather his people back will be at the end of the age."

Some Bible classes in Texas public school appear to double as "science" classes, circumventing limits placed on teaching creationism. Eastland ISD, a school district outside Fort Worth, shows videos produced by the Creation Evidence Museum, which claims to posess a fossil of a dinosaur footprint atop "a pristine human footprint."

Perhaps the wackiest Bible lesson was the one presented to students at Amarillo ISD titled: "Racial Origins Traced from Noah." A chart presented in the classroom claims that it's possible to identify which of Noah's three sons begat various racial and ethnic groups. Chancey explains:

According to the chart, "Western Europeans" and "Caucasians" descend from Japeth, "African races" and Canaanites from Ham, and "Jews, Semitic people, and Oriental races" from Shem. A test question shows that the chart was taken seriously: "Shem is the father of a) most Germanic races b) the Jewish people c) all African people."

In Texas, public schools have the legal right to offer these kinds of classes—up to a point. In 2007 the state legislature passed a law allowing school districts to offer "elective courses on the Bible's Hebrew Scriptures and New Testament." The Supreme Court long ago ruled that such classes pass constitutional muster, as long as they don't advocate for a specific religious view. As Chancey points out, the state of Texas obviously needs to do a much better job of educating its teachers about what that means. 85

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#6. To: tom007 (#0)

We have a bucket load of problems, and I personally don't consider this one of them. I sent my kids to private school. They in turn, are sending theirs to public. Whatever. Home schooling seems the best option frankly.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2013-01-28   20:54:50 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Jethro Tull (#6)

I sent my kids to private school. They in turn, are sending theirs to public. Whatever.

My sister did private with my nephew. He had such a classical education - real history, real science, real math, real English literature and he learned how to properly express himself orally as well as in writing. But the tuition cost an arm and a leg. Catholic schools are a bit cheaper but there are long wait lists.

Maybe your children are sending their kids to public schools because it's cheaper and less of a hassle to get in.

scrapper2  posted on  2013-01-28   21:01:10 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: scrapper2 (#8)

My oldest daughter & her hubby quit the NJ corporate rat race and followed us here in the middle of PA. We spent a bundle for her HS, complete with a semester of study in Europe. She benefited greatly and earned a degree in biology along with an MBA. The options here for her son are more limited and the public school is one of the best in the state so it appears to be the right move. Time will tell as he is only in the 2nd grade.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2013-01-28   21:29:40 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Jethro Tull (#9)

With public schools, parent ( maybe even grandparents?)volunteers are welcome in elementary. If your daughter or son-in-law have flex time jobs, they should definitely try to volunteer 1 shift a week or every 2 weeks, so they can see what's going on at the school and also so they can project a positive helpful cooperative image to teachers. This might pay dividends to your grandson in the classroom.

One thing my sister learned (the hard way) when she tried out a local public school for my nephew is that boys ( at least in CA) are treated as 2nd class citizens in the class room. Girls get asked all the questions even if their hands are not up. Girls get all the praise even if their work is just ok. Boys if they fidget even innocently are spoken to in not very friendly tones. That's why my nephew ended up going to private school. Your daughter needs to keep a close eye on any signs of favoritism shown by the teacher to girls. Kids see thru that attitude pretty quickly and then they give up showing interest in academics because they don't want to be ignored by the teacher.

scrapper2  posted on  2013-01-28   21:52:09 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: scrapper2 (#10)

Thanks for these interesting comments scrap. It never occurred to me that gender favoritism was a possibility. I guess I'm not adjusting very well to the propaganda tossed at kids today. I can tell you this, if my wife had her way, Kevin would be in the local Catholic school. He's staying put partially because he's a huge kid - 5'0", 100 pounds and loves basketball and football. Around these parts, that's gold.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2013-01-28   22:46:10 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Jethro Tull (#11)

It never occurred to me that gender favoritism was a possibility.

It's become a very serious issue. Your daughter and son-in-law need stay on top of what is happening in the classroom with your grandson. That's why keeping a profile through volunteering can give them a way into the school to project a helpful image and also to snoop.

www.cbsnews.com/8301-18560_162-527678.html

"The Gender Gap: Boys Lagging"

snip

Thirty years after the passage of equal opportunity laws, girls are graduating from high school and college and going into professions and businesses in record numbers.

Now, it's the boys who could use a little help in school, where they're falling behind their female counterparts.

And if you think it's just boys from the inner cities, think again. It's happening in all segments of society, in all 50 states. That's why more and more educators are calling for a new national effort to put boys on an equal footing with their sisters. Lesley Stahl reports.

...“Girls outperform boys in elementary school, middle school, high school, and college, and graduate school,” says Dr. Michael Thompson, a school psychologist who writes about the academic problems of boys in his book, "Raising Cain." He says that after decades of special attention, girls are soaring, while boys are stagnating.

...While there are statistically more boy geniuses than girl geniuses, far more boys than girls are found at the very bottom of the academic ranks. School districts from Massachusetts to Minnesota to California report that boys are withdrawing from the life of schools, and girls are taking over.

“Girls are being told, 'Go for it, you can do it. Go for it, you can do it.' They are getting an immense amount of support,” he says. “Boys hear that the way to shine is athletically. And boys get a lot of mixed messages about what it means to be masculine and what it means to be a student. Does being a good student make you a real man? I don't think so… It is not cool.”

Boys are falling further behind girls in reading and writing, and still, there's no public outcry the way there was for girls, and we wanted to find out why.

“All the rhetoric in the gender equity movement is about how schools shortchange girls. There was almost nothing about how we could reach out to boys,” says Christina Hoff Sommers, a former college professor, now at the American Enterprise Institute. She blames the lack of attention to boys' problems on feminists.

“In order to advance girls, they exaggerated how vulnerable girls were, and they understated the needs of boys. They depicted boys as ... the privileged beneficiaries of a patriarchal society that oppresses women, demeans them and trains young men to be sexist, misogynists,” she says.

Sommers targets groups like the AAUW, the American Association of University Women, and feminist scholars. She says they published a blitz of studies and popular books depicting girls in crisis at precisely the moment when statistics showed girls were catching up to boys or moving past them in most academic areas. Sommers says the efforts on behalf of girls turned into what she calls a war against boys.

Sommers calls the AAUW and other similar organizations the "gender bias industry.” Woods disagrees: “Most people understand that gender equity is about making sure that both boys and girls have equal access to educational opportunities.”

Sommers also accuses women teachers of favoring girls over boys. She says they reward classroom behavior that girls find easier, like sitting still, and punish boys for being, well, boys.

“If boys are obstreperous and high-spirited and competitive, which most of them are, this is seen as behavior which is not tolerated. They see that as an expression of a toxic masculinity,” she says.

theboysinitiative.wordpre...ost-underserved-students/

theboysinitiative.wordpre...e-red-boys-and-education/

scrapper2  posted on  2013-01-28   23:17:09 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: scrapper2, Jethro Tull, 4 (#12)

WildestColts.com make the best horses.

Lod  posted on  2013-01-29   6:54:15 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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