Title: Religious Pluralism in Secular Classrooms
1Religious Pluralism in Secular Classrooms
Chapter Nine
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2Rationale for Attending to Religion in Public
Schools
- Americans have always been concerned with the
role of religion in matters of state - Early colonists came to escape religious
persecution later immigrants have brought a
variety of religious beliefs, rituals, and habits
of mind - Much of the cultural capital of the United States
has emerged from attempts to answer basically
religious questions - cont.
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3- Connections to religious ideas and symbols
emerges, in part, from a universal human need for
a spiritual dimension - While religion in some societies permeates the
whole culture, in the United States, the founders
were concerned that religion be separated from
the state in concrete ways cont.
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4- The Constitutional language of the First
Amendment tries to guarantee that separation - Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, establishment clause
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof
prohibition clause - These two clauses have created a field on which
battles of interpretation have been fought for
225 years
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5Definitions of Religion
- Universal Definitions
- a system of beliefs and practices by means of
which a group of people struggle withthe
ultimate problems of human life (Yinger) - a unified system of beliefs and practices
relative to sacred thingsbeliefs and practices
which unite into some single moral community
(Durkheim)
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6- Sectarian Definitions
- Define and describe particular religious
denominations in terms of - Theological point of view
- Religious practices
- Religious experience
- Knowledge of scriptures and traditions
- Consequences for daily life
- Consequences for falling away from the faith
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7Changes in the United States Over Time
- The degree to which religious belief has been
deemed necessary to public life has altered - Technology, especially television, has enabled
people to have knowledge of religion without
actually attending services - The increasing interdependence of the worlds
social systems means that one religious system
can have an enormous impact on other religious
systems, and, indeed, on daily life around the
world
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8Religious Pluralism in the United States
- Prior to Colonization a wide variety of
religious beliefs and practices by native peoples - The centrality of a Creator
- A reverence for the natural world
- A belief that human beings were obligated to
preserve and protect the natural world
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9- Religion in the Colonial Era
- Christianity and Judaism
- Historically western and European
- A belief that human beings were destined to rule
over the natural world - Dominance of different religious sects in
different parts of the colonies
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10- New England a Puritan Protestantism
- The Middle Colonies greater diversity, including
Catholic, Quaker, and Anabaptist -- no particular
denomination prevailed - The South largely modeled on the Anglican Church
of England - Jews were also among the earliest immigrants, and
were spread over the colonies
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11- 17th -19th Centuries
- African nativist religious ideas were brought to
the colonies by captured slaves - Combined with and enriched the primarily
Protestant Christian traditions. After slavery
was finally abolished, the African-American
churches grew stronger, and had an immense
influence on the cultural and educational lives
of its members, which continues today
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12- 19th - 20th Centuries
- Introduction of Islam to the United States
- The Muslim faith is currently one of the fastest
growing religious in the United States - Membership is in part African American (e.g., the
Nation of Islam) - Members are also immigrants from Middle Eastern
countries (e.g., Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria),
from both north and sub-Saharan Africa, and from
Malaysia
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13Characteristics of a Classroom That Attends to
Religious Pluralism
- Pedagogies Old and New
- Teachers should know the backgrounds of their
students and their students families - Teachers should know something about the
worldview of particular religions represented in
their classes - Teachers should adapt instruction as required to
give all students the chance to learn effectively
and to practice learning in different ways
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14- Roles Old and New
- Because of potential conflict, teachers need to
assume a role as interpreter and sometimes,
mediator - School rules and customs such as dress codes may
have to be amended for those from different
religious backgrounds - The school calendar may also have to take a
variety of religious holidays into account
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15- Place of Content Knowledge Old and New
- While schools have tried to cope with religious
controversy by trying to avoid it, religious
history, as well as religious architecture, art,
music, and ideas can become the basis for an
enriched and affirming classroom - Remember that the Supreme Court has not, in any
of its decisions on the subject, prohibited
discussions about religion in schools
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16from the decision by Justice Clark
-
- it might well be said that ones education
is not complete without a study of comparative
religion or the history of religion and its
relationship to the advancement of civilization.
- It certainly may be said that the Bible is worthy
of study for its literary and historic qualities.
- Nothing we have said here indicates that such
study of the Bible or of religion, when presented
objectively as part of a secular program of
education, may not be effected consistent with
the First Amendment. - Abington v. Schempp (1963)
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17- Examples of Religious Content
- Dietary regulations in heath or home economics
classes - Islamic geometrical designs in math classes
- Major works of art depicting religious themes in
art classes - Religious music in music classes
- Studies of comparative religion in history or
social studies classes
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18- Assessment Old and New
- Use sensitivity when creating exam questions on
subjects related to religion (e.g., on evolution) - Use sensitivity when deciding upon the use of
psychological testing (some families believe
these are a corruption of family values) - Use sensitivity when deciding about the use of
various health screening techniques, especially
invasive ones
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19Perspectives on Religion and Schooling in the
United States
- Constitutional language in the First and
Fourteenth Amendments has been both the source of
religious freedom and the source of educational
battles
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20Sources of tension include
- The need for schools, as an arm of the state, to
support a basic freedom guaranteed by the
Constitution - The need for schools, also as an arm of the
state, to uphold the separation of church and
state
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21Two Broad Categories of Debate (R. Freeman Butts)
- Educations role in protecting private freedoms
- those that inhere in the individual, and
therefore may not be invaded or denied by the
state.
- Educations role in guaranteeing public freedoms
- those that inhere in the welfare of the
democratic political community
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22Private Freedoms and Some Relevant Court Cases
Education has a role to play in protecting
private freedoms, or those that inhere in the
individual, and therefore may not be invaded or
denied by the state. Among these are compulsory
attendance and the individual practice of
religious beliefs in classrooms, including prayer.
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23- Compulsory Attendance
- Pierce v. Society of Sisters (1925) children
must go to school, but private religious schools
satisfy that requirement - Wisconsin v. Yoder (1972) the so-called Amish
exception Old Order Amish can disobey
Wisconsins compulsory schooling law and withdraw
their children after the eighth grade
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24- The Practice of Religious Beliefs in Classrooms
- Meyer v. Nebraska (1923) the right of parents to
guide their childrens education is affirmed - West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnett
(1943) no one can be forced to salute the flag
or say the Pledge of Allegiance if it violates
individual conscience
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25- School Prayer
- Abington v. Schempp (1963) requiring student
participation in sectarian prayers and reading
from the Bible, particularly the New Testament,
is unconstitutional - Lee v. Weisman (1992) sectarian prayers at high
school graduations are unconstitutional - Santa Fe Independent School District v. Doe
(2000) sectarian prayers at high school football
games are unconstitutional
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26Public Freedoms and Some Relevant Court Cases
Education also has a role to play in protecting
public freedoms, such as the need of the nation
for an educated citizenry and the need of the
society for the socialization of its children in
moral and ethical behavior. Issues raised here
include public funding for private religious
schools and the provision of religious
instruction.
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27- Public Funding for Religious Schools
- Cochran v. Louisiana Board of Education (1930)
use of public funds to purchase textbooks for
private schools is constitutional - Everson v. Board of Education (1947) use of
public funds to bus students to religious schools
is constitutional - The National Defense Education Act (1958) and the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act (1965)
provided funds for some aspects of private
religious schooling
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28Alternatives to Public Schooling, Often Based on
Religious Views
- Charter Schoolspublic schools funded by the
state but run by local councils funding is taken
away from public schools - Home Schoolingparent-taught education, often
using commercially prepared curricula and lessons - Voucher Programsfunding (vouchers) attached to
the child for use in private, often religious
schools, as alternatives to the childs public
school
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29- The Provision of Religious Instruction
- McCollum v. Board of Education (1948) religious
instruction in public schools is unconstitutional - Zorach v. Clausen (1952) religious instruction
during school hours is constitutional if it takes
place off school grounds
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30Other Important Court Decisions
- Epperson v. State of Arkansas (1968) statutes
criminalizing the teaching of evolution are
unconstitutional - Lemon v. Kurzman (1971) Court outlines a
three-pronged test for deciding whether any state
statute violates the establishment clause of the
First Amendment
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31- Lemons Three-Pronged Test
- Does the challenged practice or policy have a
secular purpose? - Does it have the effect of neither advancing nor
inhibiting religious practices? - Does the practice or policy avoid an excessive
entanglement between government and religion?
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32Perspectives on Religious Identity
- Religious identity has its roots in the family
- It is perhaps the most common, and also perhaps
the strongest source of identity - Religious identity places an individual in a
particular relationship with a deity
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33The Influence of the Religious Right
- While the so-called religious right is a
contemporary conservative political movement of
Protestant Christians, it is not the only
conservative religious movement - Fundamentalist movements are prevalent in all
major religions around the world
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34- Particular educational interests of
fundamentalist movements - Prayer in schools
- Curriculum content
- Teaching of morality and character
- Funding for private and parochial schools
- Censorship of books available to or required of
students
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35Ethical Issues
- Responsibility of teachers to be aware of and
understand the religious background of their
students - Responsibility of teachers to know the law with
respect to religious issues - Responsibility of teachers to be sensitive to
students religious beliefs with respect to
curriculum content, religious dress, religious
holidays, and methods of instruction
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36Something to Think About
-
- The principle of separation of church and
state has not prevented many people from
believing that schools should be a repository of
morality the question has always been, Whose
morality are we talking about?
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