Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Saturday, November 18, 2006
Ohio High School Gives Independent Study Credit To Faith-Based Classes
Friday's Columbus Dispatch reports that an Ohio high school may have found a loophole in the constitutional ban against teaching of religion in public schools. Upper Arlington High School has approved independent-study academic credit for 25 students enrolled in an English and a History class that meet at a local Baptist church. Using Christian educational materials published by Veritas Press, the classes are not taught by public school teachers. Students pay for their own books and pay $600 tuition to cover teachers' salaries and class materials. School administrators say they have no problem with the courses so long as they teach the skills required by state standards. However, Rick Dickinson, general counsel for the Ohio School Boards Association, says he believes that independent-study classes are subject to the same Establishment Clause constraints as other courses taught in the public schools. [Thanks to Blog from the Capital for the lead.]