Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Wednesday, March 03, 2010
High School Teacher Suspended Over Banning Wiccan Altar In Shop Class
A high school industrial arts teacher in Guthrie Center, Iowa has ben placed on paid leave pending the school's consultation with its attorney in an unusual dispute regarding student religious expression in class assignments. Yesterday's Des Moines Register reports that teacher Dale Halferty told a student that he could not build a Wiccan altar in shop class. While he could build a table that he could later use as part of an altar, Halferty told the student that he needed to keep all religious materials at home. However the student kept returning with a book on witchcraft. Halferty says he does not want any religious symbols in the shop, and previously told another student he could not build a cross in class. Almost 70 students have signed a petition saying they do not want witchcraft practiced in school. Halferty agreed, saying: "It scares me. I'm a Christian. This witchcraft stuff - it's terrible for our kids. It takes kids away from what they know, and leads them to a dark and violent life. We spend millions of tax dollars trying to save kids from that." Ben Stone, executive director of the Iowa Civil Liberties Union, says that students have the right to express their religious viewpoints within the context of a class assignment.