Wednesday, February 27, 2013

The truth behind the push for "School Choice."

Courtesy of Salon:  

To still relatively scant notice, the call for “School Choice” or Vouchers continues to play out in state capitols across the nation in an effort to increase Biblically based education through a redirection of tax dollars from public to private religious schools. In order to accomplish the end goal of Christianizing all students, stealth remains largely the rule of the day. In 2002, Dick DeVos told The Heritage Foundation.

“We need to be cautious about talking too much about these activities. Many of the activities and the political work that needs to go on will go on at the grass roots. It will go on quietly and it will go on in the form that often politics is done – one person at a time, speaking to another person in privacy. And so these issues will not be, maybe, as visible or as noteworthy, but they will set a framework within states for the possibility of action on education reform issues.” 

During the 2011-2012 school year, thirty-two private school choice programs were in place with more than $800 million available for vouchers and scholarship tax credits, money that by all rights should have gone to our public school systems, many of which are in dire need. Groups with heart-warming names like The Alliance for School Choice and American Federation for Children encourage naive donors to support vouchers for reasons that are as deceptive as they are fundamentally non-democratic. 

Additionally, over the years, far too many of these overzealous Christians have quietly insinuated themselves onto School Boards across the country and are hard at work challenging the historical mandate to provide a religion-neutral public education by insuring that the Bible become part of high school curricula. 

In 2007, a piece of legislation backed by the Center for Reclaiming America for Christ and the American Family Association, passed in the Texas State House. The bill stated that Texas public schools must offer, as required curriculum the “history and literature of the Old and New Testaments.” Recently, the Texas Freedom Network (TFN) issued a chilling report on a study they coordinated with Mark Chancey, Professor of Religious Studies at Southern Methodist University. 

In his report, Chancey stated that “at least 57 (Texas) school districts and three charter schools taught courses about the Bible in 2011-12, a number that more than doubled the districts teaching such courses in the 2006-07 school year.” The oversight spelled out in the bill that should have protected students from religious indoctrination was largely ignored leaving whole districts with Biblically driven curricula. At the time of the bill’s implementation, the bill’s co-author, Rep. Leo Berman, blatantly stated, “I don’t believe there’s such a thing as the separation of church and state.” 

Of particular concern is the textbook-like use of scripture to condone homophobia, to slander blacks and Jews, and to deny basic climate and evolutionary science. And Texas is not alone. According to The National Council on Bible Curriculum in Public Schools’ website over a half a million students have already taken these courses nationally for credit. Take a half a million public school minds along with those who are already enrolled in religious schools or who are homeschooled, multiply it by a decade and it’s easy to see why it matters.

This agenda to undermine public education and reintroduce Christianity into the classrooms was the brain child of Jerry Falwell and the so-called Moral Majority, back in the 1980's. And even after Falwell's death it continues apace.

This is why on the local level it is important to keep the Fundamentalists out of our school boards and fight at every turn the idea of charter schools, school vouchers, and "teaching the controversy."

If we are not vigilant these anti-education trolls will destroy the very foundation of America's educational system in the hopes of keeping them ignorant and uninformed enough to continue voting Republican candidates, and continuing to support old fashioned religious faiths that are soon to go the way of the dinosaurs.

And that would be the ACTUAL dinosaurs, not those silly animatronic ones they have hanging out with primitive people at the Creation Museum.

Dinosaurs and humans were NEVER alive at the same time, but you will not learn that in many charter schools.

12 comments:

  1. Anonymous2:41 AM

    As with most religious/republican schemes, Show Me The Money should be their chant. They are privatizing prisons, too and failing to treat prisoners properly. Dickless Chaney has $80 million invested in those. There is an article on AlterNet about the corrupt Vatican bank. Religion and politics are closely related - both very corrupt.

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  2. Anonymous2:57 AM

    FRnakly, I can think of nothing more boring than a class entitled "The BIble as literature." But at least they recognize that it is mostly fiction. I believe that Jesus lived, and if these nuts were teaching peace and love and turning the other cheek, and admitting that other ancient religious leaders believe the same things, this could be a good thing. However, I expect that these 'required' classes teach nothing of the sort, but glorify the violence of the OT, ignore Jesus' true message, and somehow make it all about the picked upon white male, who needs guns to defend his turf. Or something. This would be funny if they weren't indoctrinating kids.
    And here you thought it was President Obama who was doing the indoctrinating! That's what Fox told us.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous3:24 AM

    Ikea has a special on T-Rex meatballs today.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous3:58 AM

    Funds in school and hospital boards, they patiently test the barriers to see when the public is paying attention.

    If they deny their motives, introduce th teaching of other faiths and watch their masks fall. It's all Xtian oriented. They are such a small
    Part of the population, but they

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous4:02 AM

    Are organized, pool their resources and vote.

    We, the public, are left letting our tax dollars foot their Bible-thumping fantasies.

    They aren't the majority, they aren't that smart. They rent wealthy

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous4:05 AM

    They aren't powerful or the majority, they are realtors and gun dealers. Even bootleggers. We just need to not pay attention for them to be affective - Joe Miller's primary win for example. The normal citizenry put that nonsense down!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anonymous5:38 AM

    Abortion Wars Revived in Alaska Legislature

    JUNEAU, Alaska -- Some Alaska legislators think they, not doctors, should be the ones to decide when an abortion is medically necessary. And they'll be getting support Wednesday from a panel of national medical professionals who will help decide which conditions constitute a medically necessary abortion, and which do not.

    The Alaska Supreme Court decided in 2001 that the state must pay for abortions for people in the Medicaid program if the procedure is "medically necessary," but provided little guidance on how that term should be defined.

    That gray area includes a debate over whether mental health issues can be considered among factors contributing to medical necessity for abortion.

    Fervent abortion opponent Sen. John Coghill, R-North Pole, said he fears that without a definition, women may be able to get abortions under Medicare which are not medically necessary.

    To prevent that possibility, Coghill's sponsored Senate Bill 49, which he said will "prevent public funds from being used to pay for elective abortions." ...

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alaskadispatchcom/abortion-wars-revived-in_b_2770471.html?utm_hp_ref=politics

    http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/alaska-lawmakers-get-professional-help-decide-when-abortion-medically-necessary

    ReplyDelete
  8. Randall6:22 AM

    If you have to lie to further your idea of "education" (i.e. humans and dinosaurs were alive at the same time) then perhaps you need to realize that what you're doing is NOT "education". And maybe you should be a little bit ashamed. Maybe a LOT.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Anonymous6:32 AM

    Just watched a bit of Good Morning America and was stunned, once again, to see that the History Channnel will soon be hosting a series on the Bible. It was backed annd made by the biggest reality show producer. Hmm, somehow seems fitting because we all know those rality shows are faked.

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  10. Anonymous6:46 AM

    Testimony will be taken on the voucher bill here in Alaska Friday morning at 8 am at the LIO. Please show up or call in and don't let this happen to our state school system.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Anonymous7:01 AM

    When my children were growing up I would have used a voucher to enroll them in a parochial school because the education was better overall and the tuition more affordable. I knew other parents who would have accepted vouchers primarily seeking education curriculum void of motivation to demand religion in public schools nor obstruct science.

    That said, the audacity of religious zealots to manipulate public education provide their religion's core beliefs is disturbing.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Could this be why the test scores in science for the U.S. continue to drop?

    And you know who gets the blame, right? Public schools. This is used as an excuse to direct more funding away from public schools towards the very charter schools for the reality challenged that are causing the problem.

    Is there a solution? Yes. It was on a TED weekend interview I heard on NPR. We need to totally restructure our schools away from the factory worker model and towards a graduate that will have the skills to handle whatever the 21st century may need of them. That is NOT the current school model.

    But it will take money and our school funding is antiquated and insufficient for the task. So how we fund schools need a major revision first. Then we need to tackle completely changing our K-16 model. That's right. All the way through college. It also will not lend itself to standardized testing or evaluation. This will not sit well with the politicians and right wing nutjobs that demand accountability of everyone but themselves (and the banks, Wall St., etc.)

    ReplyDelete

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