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Showing 31 to 45 of 70 results Save | Export
Perko, F. Michael – 1982
In Cincinnati, Ohio, between 1836 and 1853, controversy over religious education resulted from religious, ethnic, and political factors. Debate began between Catholics (mostly German and Irish immigrants) and Protestants over which Bible should be used in the public schools. (It was accepted that daily Bible readings were to be a part of religious…
Descriptors: Catholics, Educational History, Ethnic Groups, Political Issues
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Knoerle, Jeanne – Contemporary Education, 1983
Three issues--the Catholic school experience, the ruling of the Supreme Court on abortion, and the nuclear debate--are discussed from the point of view of a Catholic living in the United States. (JM)
Descriptors: Abortions, Catholic Schools, Catholics, Elementary Secondary Education
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Vile, John R. – West's Education Law Reporter, 1989
Summarizes court cases bearing on religion in the school setting and the use of the three-part "Lemon" test in Establishment Clause cases; and examines a Louisiana District Court decision that affirmed the action of a school principal prohibiting a religiously oriented valedictory address. (MLF)
Descriptors: Commencement Ceremonies, Constitutional Law, Court Litigation, Federal Courts
Hitz, Randy; Butterfield, Paula – American School Board Journal, 1994
When the debate heats up over the separation of church and state issue board members need to be keenly aware of the fine line that exists between promoting nonreligious activities in school and encouraging an antireligious sentiment. Ten reminders are given for board members and administrators to remember when addressing the issue of religion in…
Descriptors: Church Role, Compliance (Legal), Elementary Secondary Education, Legal Responsibility
Neuhaus, Richard John – 1985
The people of the United States have always been determinedly religious. What is new is the public recognition of this fact and the debate over the problems that attend it. In high schools and colleges across the country, students are reading textbooks that state as fact that the United States is, or is rapidly becoming, a secular society, an…
Descriptors: Church Role, Modernism, Nonprofit Organizations, Religious Conflict
Parker, Franklin – 1987
Organization and financing have enabled the religious right to bring their textbook censorship campaign into the U.S. federal court system. Denouncing secular humanism, these groups have initiated steps to obtain federal funding for private religious schools. Over the last 100 years public school textbooks have been revised to reflect various…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Censorship, Freedom of Information, Moral Issues
Nasman, Dan – School Administrator, 1993
In 1990, a new ultraconservative religious group in San Diego County began an all-out war on public education. This article describes mainstream efforts to combat curriculum challenges and "stealth" board election tactics devised by Citizens for Excellence in Education and other fundamentalist factions. Meanwhile, the new CEE-majority…
Descriptors: Activism, Boards of Education, Conservatism, Curriculum Problems
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Scherer, Marge – Educational Leadership, 1999
Harold Kushner, the author of "When Bad Things Happen to Good People" (1981), insists that public schools should never advocate particular religious views nor serve as forums for debating religious values. However, shared values such as truthfulness, accuracy, personal responsibility, acceptance of limitations, kindness, and cooperation…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Moral Values, Public Schools, Religious Conflict
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Haynes, Charles C. – Educational Leadership, 1999
History (embodied in Horace Mann's "nonsectarian" Protestant practices) reminds us that today's "generalized spirituality," if encouraging students to explore the inner life and ultimate questions, will not free public schools from anti-Establishment Clause claims. However, First Amendment neutrality does not mean being neutral…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Definitions, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education
Williamsburg Charter Foundation, Washington, DC. – 1988
The religious liberty clauses of the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States are the most important political decision for religious liberty and public justice in history. Two hundred years after their enactment, they stand out boldly in a century darkened by state repression and sectarian conflict. The controversy now surrounding…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Civics, Civil Liberties, Constitutional Law
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Brandt, Ron – Educational Leadership, 1996
There is growing agreement from right to left concerning the role of religion in public schools. Under the First Amendment, public schools can neither inculcate nor inhibit religion. Neutrality means fairness. Students' religious liberty rights must be protected by school policies and practices. Also, religion must be treated fairly in the…
Descriptors: Christianity, Civil Liberties, Conservatism, Curriculum
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Grathwohl, Linda – Great Plains Quarterly, 1993
In North Dakota during 1948, the Committee for Separation of Church and State succeeded in passing an "anti-garb" initiative, which targeted Catholic nuns who taught in public schools because of a teacher shortage. The committee protested the wearing of the religious habit claiming it had a religious influence on students. (KS)
Descriptors: Catholic Educators, Catholics, Dress Codes, Educational History
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Thurau-Gray, Lisa H. – Journal of Law and Education, 1998
Two cases illustrate that whenever the schools or courts abandon the Establishment Clause and embrace "child benefit theory," religious schoolchildren are the only winners. Application of "child benefit theory" has engendered religious strife, increased public funds for religious schools, increased sectarian control of public…
Descriptors: Childrens Rights, Constitutional Law, Court Litigation, Elementary Secondary Education
Scribner, Jay D.; Fusarelli, Lance D. – 1996
Having been schooled in the intellectual tradition of the strict separation of church and state, educational researchers have devoted little scholarly attention to how religion affects education. This paper delineates the ways in which religion and politics intersect to shape society, particularly, the impact of the intersection on education. The…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education, Policy Formation, Political Attitudes
Bauer, Norman J. – 1994
This paper examines the rhetoric and consequences of extreme religious right-wing groups' attack on American public schools. The first section identifies two competing world perspectives, the modern and postmodern perspectives. The second section identifies the fundamental principle that enables the two competing perspectives to coexist: the First…
Descriptors: Christianity, Civil Rights, Cultural Pluralism, Elementary Secondary Education
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