A Message from God

God's passion for you, it's all about you!

God Warns America  Index

United Nations, Davis Recall Plot,  BlessedCause impacts in Politics & Whose groping Arnold Schwarzenegger?

Spirit of the antichrist alive and well in California schools

Stand up against Sex Ed Porn in public school

News Coverage of Islam in Public Schools

Free Original Christian Art, Music & Sculpture

Links Page

Militant Terrorist Islam

God blesses those who bless Israel

For Women Only

About us / Contact us

Home

 

Main Index

The Sign of Jonah explained,  God's message is heard

Islam Induction in our Public School Textbooks
actual words of Houghton Mifflin exposed and why

Quotes of Quran, Hadiths, Koran about infidels

Revelation 12

BlessedCause Footwashing Ministries

Christian Encouragement

Hearing God & Personally Witnessed  Miracles

Free Original Christian Art, Music & Sculpture

How Clinton, ACLU rigged Religious Guidelines & U.S. District Judge Phyllis Hamilton

Thank you to all vets, our troops and military! God BLESS and lead you!

John Walker Lindh & California school proselytizing

Islam proselytized in Public School

Homeschool or Public School

Militant Terrorist Islam

God blesses those who bless Israel

For Women Only

About us/
Contact

 

School comes under fire

School comes under fire for section on Islam

'You can't talk about and teach about history without bumping into religion,' administrator says

Corpus Christi Caller

By Michelle Locke Associated Press

BERKELEY, Calif. - Complaints that California schools present Islam in glowing terms but shortchange Christianity are highlighting a classroom dilemma: How do you teach, but not preach, religion?

Conservatives have been outraged to learn that seventh-graders across the state studied Islam in September, in some cases dressing up in robes and playing games about pilgrimages.

"Can you imagine replicating baptisms in the Jordan River by Jesus and John the Baptist? The ACLU . . . would be apoplectic," said Ken Connor of the Washington, D.C.-based Family Research Council.

State education officials defend their curriculum, considered one of the first to declare that students cannot learn about the civilizations without looking at the spiritual forces that shaped them.

Pretend pilgrimages

"You can't talk about and teach about history without bumping into religion," said Tom Adams, administrator for curriculum frameworks at the state Department of Education.

The course getting attention is seventh-grade world history, which runs from the Roman Empire to the late 18th century. The rise of Islam was being taught around the time of the Sept. 11 attacks.

Trouble started in January, with reports from religious news services that students in the northern California district of Byron were dressing up in robes, pretending to go on pilgrimages and taking Muslim names.

Elizabeth Lemings, whose son is a Byron seventh-grader, believes the course crossed the line separating church and state. "I do not want my child to be taught the religious faith and practices of any other religion," she said.

Peggy Green, superintendent of the Byron Union School District, said classroom activities did not stray out of academic guidelines. She said students did not simulate going on a pilgrimage; they played a game where camels were moved across a bulletin board.

They were given the option of putting on a play at the end of the three-week unit for extra credit and, for that, some students wore robes and Muslim name cards, she said.

"Basically it's like doing a colonial report and dressing up as a colonist," Green said.

Adams said state guidelines forbid acting out religious practices.

He declined to say whether it appeared Byron followed those guidelines because he does not have firsthand information and, in any case, day-to-day instruction is the responsibility of the local district. "Policing the teacher is not our role," he said.

Stacy Yount is the general manager of Interact, a southern California company that provides supplemental materials for the world history course.

She said the company cautions teachers against having children act out religious rites and also advises schools to send parents an informational letter, explaining that the history of religion plays a role in the course.

But in general she defends role-playing as a teaching tool.

"Children's retention of the materials is far greater than if they were to just have a lecture and just have a test, Yount said. "We really believe that philosophically this is the right way to teach."

Also coming under fire was the course text, "Across the Centuries," published by Houghton-Mifflin.

San Luis Obispo parent Jen T. Shroder filed an administrative complaint against her district. She objected to an exercise in which her son was asked to imagine himself as a Muslim soldier. She also says the text gives a glowing view of Islam but a critical one of Christianity.

Positive, negative portrayal

"This book . . . is a victim of political correctness gone extreme," said Brad Dacus of the Pacific Justice Institute, a conservative group that helped Shroder file the complaint.

Houghton-Mifflin defended the book, which has been used in California classrooms for several years.

"We try very hard to cover history and religion in a way that's sensitive," said Abigail Jungreis, company vice president and editorial director of the social studies text.

Scholars from the religions covered, as well as First Amendment experts, reviewed the text, she said. It does not advocate simulating religious practices, Jungreis said.

Asking students to consider events through the eyes of others is a standard teaching tool that helps develop critical thinking, she said.

As for criticism, the book dwells on Christianity's grimmer moments, such as the Inquisition, Houghton-Mifflin spokesman Collin Earnst said. And, he said, there is positive information about Christianity in the text.

Don't miss "Corruption in our children's textbooks."

        back to NEWS INDEX