After a Minneapolis newspaper columnist charged that the Terek ibn Ziyad Academy, a cultural identity publicly-funded charter school, had breached the line between church and state (see prior posting), the Minnesota Department of Education this month conducted a review of the Inver Grove (MN) school's operations. As reported by yesterday's Minneapolis Star Tribune, and by a Department of Education press release, the school was ordered to make changes in two areas of operation.
The Department found that the school's 30-minute Friday prayer service held on school premises cut excessively into required instructional time. Permitting teachers to pray along with students at the service was also improper governmental endorsement of religion. Finally the Department said that busing schedules need to be changed. The 30% of the students who do not participate in after-school activities must be offered transportation immediately after classes end. The most popular after-school session is a religious studies course run by the Muslim American Society. The school's executive director told the Star Tribune that most significant was the fact that the state found no problems with the school's curriculum.