BREAKING NEWS
The following news story appeared in numerous publications across the country during the late summer and early fall of 2006. A partial listing of those publications carrying the story can be found at the bottom of the page.
Evangelicals Intensify Calls for Parents to Pull Kids From Public Schools
Led mainly by evangelical
"The courts say no creationism, no prayer in public schools," said Roger Moran, a member of the Southern Baptist Convention executive committee. "Humanism and evolution can be taught, but everything I believe is disallowed."
The father of nine homeschooled children, Moran co-sponsored a resolution at the Southern Baptists' annual meeting in June that urged the denomination to endorse a public school pullout. It failed, as did a similar proposal before the conservative Presbyterian Church in
Still, the movement is very much alive, led by such groups as Exodus Mandate and the
One new campaign aims to monitor public schools for what conservatives see as pro-gay curriculum and programs; another initiative seeks to draw an additional 1 million children into homeschooling by encouraging parents already experienced at it to mentor families wanting to try it.
"Homeschoolers avoid harmful school environments where God is mocked, where destructive peer influence is the norm, where drugs, alcohol, promiscuity and homosexuality are promoted," says the California-based Considering Homeschooling Ministry.
Though the movement's rhetoric strikes public school supporters as extreme, some of its leaders are influential. They include R. Albert Mohler Jr., president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, who last year said the denomination needed an "exit strategy" from public schools, and the Rev. D. James Kennedy, pastor of 10,000-member Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church in Fort Lauderdale, Florida and host of a nationally broadcast religious program.
"The infusion of an atheistic, amoral, evolutionary, socialistic, one-world, anti-American system of education in our public schools has indeed become such that if it had been done by an enemy, it would be considered an act of war," Kennedy said in a recent commentary.
Overall, public schools are in no danger of withering away. The latest federal figures, from 2005, show their total K-12 enrollment at 48.4 million, compared to 6.3 million in private schools -- most of them religious. However, the
Moreover, the private school figures don't include the growing ranks of homeschoolers -- there were at least 1.1 million of them in 2003, according to federal figures, and perhaps more than 2 million now, according to homeschool advocates.
According to a federal survey, 72% of homeschooling parents say one of their primary motivations is to provide stronger moral and religious instruction.
The president of the largest teachers' union, Reg Weaver of the National Education Association, says public school critics use increasingly harsh language, "but they're not as successful as they'd like to pretend."
"The overwhelming majority of our folks," Weaver said of his union members, "are not being pulled off the agenda of great public schools for all children."
Charles Haynes of the
"School leaders know they're facing the perception that public education has somehow become hostile to religion," Haynes said. "They understand there's no time to be lost."
Some districts have moved proactively to address parents' concerns, he said, "but many more have put their heads in the sand over this, afraid of controversy or litigation."
Haynes says public school critics have gained an audience with shrewd Internet-based communication tactics, quickly spreading anecdotes -- real or exaggerated -- of incidents perceived as anti-religious or too approving of homosexuality and teen sexual freedom.
For example, word spread among conservatives last year that school officials in the
"Parents all over the country get the few bad stories and believe this is what public schools are all about," Haynes said.
Enrollment at conservative
Joyce and Eric Burges of Baker,
Black or white, parents can be financially challenged by a move away from public schools. Tim Sierer, headmaster of a
The head of
However, Mohler, the Southern Baptist seminary president, says court rulings and government mandates have sharply limited the ability of parents and local school boards to control public education. It's become a "new normal" for younger parents to consider alternatives, he said. "It's a very different assumption from their parents' generation."
Yet even as he urges an "exit strategy." Mohler says there will be a cost to
A sampling of publications that carried the story is:
CNN.com
The Argus, CA
Fort Worth Star Telegram
International
The Trentonian, NJ
WTOL-TV,
Worldwide Religious News
Star Tribune,
Dakota Voice – ND & SD
The
National Educators Writers AssociationPublic Education Network
Covenant Newswire Service
The Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life