Teachers

Using a Moment of Silence at School

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Thirty-four states currently have a provision that either mandates or allows for a moment of silence in the classroom at the beginning of every day.

To help students actually begin the day in prayer, Gateways has created a prayer card that students can use in the classroom. The size of a business card, these easily fit in a wallet or binder. Wouldn't it be great if students prayed the following: 

Heavenly Father, 
Grant me each day the desire
to do my best, 
To grow mentally and morally
as well as physically, 
To be kind and helpful to my classmates and teachers, 
To be honest with myself as
well as with others, 
Help me to be a good sport
and smile when I lose as
well as when I win, 
Teach me the value of
true friendship, 
Help me always to conduct myself so as to bring credit to my school. 
Amen

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Download a sheet of the cards and print out as many as you can use.

Or you can purchase a set of 100 prayer cards for $15

CLICK HERE to read about the news event that gave birth to this strategy.

 

FAQ
 

How do I know if my state allows for a moment of silence?

CLICK HERE for a list of the states that mandate or allow a moment of silence.

How do I know my school observes a moment of silence?

Contact your school secretary and ask if the students are given a moment of silence at the beginning of each day.

What to I do if my state allows or mandates for a moment of silence but my school district doesn’t observe it?

1. Check with your school superintendent’s office to see if there is a school board policy addressing a moment of silence that has been neglected.

2. If your school board has no such policy, meet with the superintendent to express your desire to see a policy implemented.  Bring two or three friends with you.  You can also meet with school board members individually to express your desire and gain their support.

What do I do if my school district has a policy but it is not being observed at my child's school?

Make a copy of the policy and contact your school principal. Use the “help me understand” approach to address the issue.

If the principal is disinterested or unwilling to implement the policy contact your superintendent. Explain to him that you are interested in seeing the current school district policy implemented in your child's school.

What do I do if my school already observes the moment of silence? 

Print out or purchase a set of Gateways School Prayer Cards. Give them to your own children to give to their friends. Ask your school’s Christian Club to distribute them to students. Provide them to parents of public school children in your church.

Commemorating Religious Freedom Day

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Religious Freedom Day

Each year, the President declares January 16th to be “Religious Freedom Day,” and calls upon Americans to “observe this day through appropriate events and activities in homes, schools, and places of worship.” It is the anniversary of the passage, in 1786, of the Virginia Statute Virginia Statute on Religious Freedom. Thomas Jefferson drafted the legislation and considered it one of his greatest achievements. It stopped the practice of taxing people to pay for the support of the local clergy, and it protected the civil rights of people to express their religious beliefs without suffering discrimination. (Download our free Religious Freedom Day Guide.)

The men who drafted the U.S. Constitution leaned heavily on Jefferson’s statute in establishing the First Amendment’s guarantee of religious freedom.

Today, that protection is as important as ever. In too many instances, public school teachers tell students they cannot include their faith in their homework assignments or classroom discussions.

The U.S. Department of Education has issued guidelines explaining students’ religious liberties. Talking about religious liberties (especially explaining students' liberties to parents) will make an administrator’s job easier because it will clarify that schools need not be “religion free zones.” It is often the case that parents who complain to school officials about what they think are violations of the separation of church and state do not understand the appropriate and lawful place religious expression can have at school. 

The Message of Religious Freedom Day 

The main message students need to hear is that they shouldn't feel like they have to be “undercover” about their religion – that somehow, they have to keep quiet about their family's beliefs. School officials might be hesitant to acknowledge Religious Freedom Day thinking they will need to have a school assembly giving a platform to various religious speakers. This is not necessary. Religious Freedom Day is an opportunity for a civics lesson regarding Americans’ freedom to express and live out their faith.

Commemoration Ideas 

In commemorating the day, a school could have an assembly or could ask teachers to recognize it in their classrooms. Either way, here are some ideas for acknowledging Religious Freedom Day at your school: 

1. Read the Presidential Proclamation. You will find this at www.whitehouse.gov. At the White House Web site, enter a search for “Religious Freedom Day.” If this year’s proclamation is not posted in time for you to use it in class, consider using previous year’s proclamations. For links to previous proclamations go to www.ReligiousFreedomDay.com.

2. Have students write a paper on “What religious freedom means to me.”

3. Distribute to students copies of the U.S. Department of Education’s guidelines on students’ religious liberties. If you did nothing else to commemorate Religious Freedom Day, this alone would do more to promote real freedom at your school. You could also write a letter to parents and staple it to the guidelines. The letter can introduce Religious Freedom Day and convey, “Our school is a safe place for your child to express your family’s religious faith.” (Visit www.ReligiousFreedomDay.com for more information.)

4. Talk about countries where freedom of religion is not allowed. For research on this, visit http://www.uscirf.gov/

5. Distribute and discuss the Virginia Statute on Religious Freedom drafted by Thomas Jefferson. (January 16 is the anniversary of the passage of this statute). For a copy of the statute, and an easier-to-read paraphrase of this document, visit www.ReligiousFreedomDay.com

Religious Liberties 

Freedom of speech can take different forms. It includes what you say to other people as well as your freedom to speak to God in prayer; it includes what you write in school assignments or what you create in an art class; it includes the words you give to a friend either by speaking or in writing. The information below comes from the U.S. Department of Education’s document Guidance on Constitutionally Protected Prayer and Religious Expression in Public Elementary and Secondary Schools (Jan 2020)

Here is a summary of the U.S. Department of Education’s guidance:

Students

  1. You can pray, read your Bible or other religious material, and talk about your faith at school.

  2. You can organize prayer groups and religious clubs, and you can announce your meetings.

  3. You can express your faith in your class work and homework.

  4. You can wear clothing with religious messages.

  5. You may be able to go off campus to have religious studies during school hours.

  6. You can express your faith at a school event.

  7. You can express your faith at your graduation ceremony.

  8. You can pass out religious literature at school.

Educators

  1. Educators and school employees can pray at school.

  2. Educators can teach about religion in class.

  3. Schools can accommodate religious instruction and prayer during school.

Accountability

In 2002, Congress amended the Elementary and Secondary Education Act to require that public schools certify they have no policy against students praying at school. That is a rather low bar. A school might not have an official policy against prayer, but in practice they might repress it.

As of January 2020, schools must report any complaints against them. Under DeVos’ leadership, the Department of Education has made clear that states must have a process for students, parents and teachers to report violations of their right to participate in protected religious expression. It requires each state to notify the Department of any complaint against schools alleging violations even if the state deems them to be without merit.

Related Links

ReligiousFreedomDay.com

Religious Freedom Day Guidebook

The National Free to Speak Campaign

Free to Speak pamphlets

Presidential Proclamations (ReligiousFreedomDay.com - scroll down on main page)




Teacher Blessed by Gateways Seminar

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I've never been more confident in how and what I teach. I have a Bible on my desk, in my classroom library, and freely speak of the reason we broke away from England; that Christianity was brought with those who broke away from England. I tackle the "other" side of evolution and answer students' questions when they see me reading my Bible during Silent Reading time. 

My students know the meaning of the American flag, what our flag stands for and why it is important. 

The workshop was an amazing release of anxiety and apprhension. I'm ready to defend my rights as teacher whenever someone wants to challenge me. I'd love to take your class again. What an inspiration. I've told my Christian teacher friends, my pastor, and our church members about the wonderful things you are doing. I even loaned my class materials and workbook to a group of teachers from another district. The message is getting out there. 

Thank you for all you do, 
Janice

It's A Book, Isn't It?

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Fourth-grader Brooke Marshall couldn't understand why the Bible was not an option in her school's reading program. So she, a classmate and their teacher set out to investigate. Their efforts led to over 40 Bibles being placed on their school's library shelves, and you can see the same thing happen in your child's school.


By Suzanne T. Eller

Brooke Marshall approached her parents with this question: "Why doesn't the Bible count for points in the Accelerated Reading Program? It's a book, isn't it?"

For several years, Brooke had been participating in the Accelerated Reading Program (ARP), a voluntary program where students select literature based on their interests and reading level, at Ft. Gibson Intermediate Elementary in Ft. Gibson, Oklahoma. But she had recently discovered that the Bible was not among the choices in the program, and she wanted to know why. Though Brooke's parents were Christians and educators, they didn't have an answer.

What is the ARP?

In order to understand Brooke's request, you need to understand what the ARP is. It works something like this.

If a school is involved in the program, a student can select a book from over 25,000 of the ARP's pre-screened titles. The only guideline is that the student's choice must be independent of her basic reading instruction.

Once the student finishes her book, she takes a multiple-choice comprehension test, from a computer program provided by the ARP. The program then awards "points" based on the book's length, reading level, and the number of correct test answers. The higher the book's reading level, the more points it is worth. For example, Cat in the Hat has a 3.0 reading level with a 5-point value, while a more challenging book like The Secret Garden has a 7.5 level and is worth 14 points. The program then keeps a running record of the student's total points earned.

According to ARP literature, the program has four goals: 1) Help kids get excited about books by allowing them to read what interests them; 2) provide teachers with reliable, objective reading level information; 3) make classroom management easier; and 4) help keep each student challenged.

Ft. Gibson Intermediate, like many schools, created a reward system for the ARP program, including an "ARP store" where individual students could "spend" their points on prizes ranging from suckers to boom boxes, and pizza parties for classes who read the most books.

Brooke eventually accumulated more points than she could even spend. But she kept reading. For Brooke, the mission of the program had been fulfilled -- she had developed a love for reading.

But even 25,000 titles can have their limits. After exhausting all of the books at her own grade level, Brooke began reading books at higher grade levels. And that's when the trouble began.

Why Not the Bible?

Leslie, Brooke's mom, remembers the first time she saw a problem. Brooke had brought home a ninth-grade level book. But, very uncharacteristically, Brooke returned the book to the library unfinished and refused to take the comprehension test. When Leslie questioned Brooke about the incident, Brooke replied, "There were things in there I didn't want to read," and left it at that.

Leslie began to check the books her daughter brought home. She found that many were wholesome, but others contained very inappropriate material. "Some had sexual scenes or cursing. One series, Goosebumps, contained whole story lines about voodoo or psychics," Leslie says. "That's when we began to think about her question."

At the next parent-teacher conference, Brooke's parents asked about the possibility of including the Bible in the ARP. They learned that although the ARP's list did not include the Bible, the school did have ARP software that was designed to accept additional books. However, the Bible had 66 separate books -- each of which would need multiple tests. It was just too big a task.

Not Taking "No"

A year passed and Brooke continued to excel in the ARP, but the field of appropriate literature was continuing to narrow. In order to continue to earn points, she would have to read books she had previously rejected because of inappropriate content, or settle for reading lower-level books that earned as little as .05 points.

One day at lunch, Brooke discussed the problem with her friend, Emily Cook, who had been facing similar circumstances. The discussion turned into an informal survey among their peers and the results were surprising: Many students said they, too, would like to read the Bible for points.

The two girls decided to try again. They approached Ft. Gibson fifth-grade teacher, Teresa Minor, who was the sponsor of the school's Christian club, Kidz-4-Christ (www.kidz4christ.com), and an avid supporter of the ARP. The girls' compelling presentation intrigued Teresa.

"I was so excited!" Teresa said. "The idea had never crossed my mind. I told the girls I would do whatever was possible to help them achieve their goal."

Teresa's first stop was the principal. Was adding the Bible even an option? The principal, in turn, called the school attorney. The attorney assured them that adding the Bible to the program was perfectly legal because the ARP was voluntary, teachers did not teach from ARP books, and the Bible was a choice among many books in the library.

With the legal hurdles cleared, the next order of business was to create the comprehension tests and buy the books for the library.

Teresa asked several teachers and two local writers to create tests at no cost, and they quickly agreed. The writers based the tests on comprehension and were careful to avoid questions based on theory or theology. For example, a test question from the book of Matthew might read: The baby was born in the manger because there was no room in the: 1) hay stack; 2) inn; 3) temple. The writers created five different sets of questions for short books such as Ephesians, and ten sets for longer books such as John.

Within a short time, the tests for the New Testament were completed, put on disk and adopted into the reading program, with plans to add the Old Testament the next school year.

Now, for the Bibles. The library needed at least 10 NIV New Adventure Study Bibles for Kids to start the program. Teresa turned to her Sunday school class at First Assembly in Muskogee. She explained the dilemma -- and walked out that morning with funds for all 10 Bibles.

The ball continued to roll when Larry Norman received the news from his son, Quade, that students were now allowed to read the Bible in the ARP program at school. Larry was skeptical at first, but Quade assured him that it was true and requested his dad buy him his own personal NIV Adventure Bible.

Larry approached Teresa at a baseball game and asked her what he could do to help. Her answer was "Sure -- more Bibles." So Larry went to the men at his church, Ft. Gibson Free Will Baptist, and presented the need. The men quickly gave him all the necessary funds -- over $300. The news spread, and Larry's in-laws and some friends also bought Bibles for the program.

"I'm a highway patrolman," Larry says. "I see the extremes. I'm excited because I feel like this gives the children a choice that we allowed to be taken away."

Thanks to Larry's efforts, the library now had a whopping 48 Bibles in its collection.

Flying Off the Shelves

The Bible was an immediate hit with the children. In fact, four dozen were not enough and children began to buy their own. Jolene Kirkes, the librarian at Ft. Gibson, has seen the popularity of the program firsthand. "All 48 books are usually checked out. If a Bible comes in, it doesn't even make it to the shelf because there are children who want to check it out immediately."

Teresa is amazed to see the desire students have to read the Bible. "It's not unusual to see Bibles at recess or in the cafeteria," she says. "Also, because children bring the Bible home, they discuss it with their parents. This involves parents in a very positive way."

With the rash of lawsuits challenging everything from graduation prayer to Bible clubs, it might be natural to assume that the Bible's entrance into the ARP caused waves. But Teresa reports that the only concerns raised had to do with how many points were awarded to certain books. The librarian simply re-reviewed the books in question and adjusted their point level. 

For more information about ARP, visit http://www.renlearn.com/default.aspx.


Suzanne Eller is a freelance writer and has been featured in magazines such as GuidepostsWoman's WorldParenting Today's Teen and numerous others. She is a monthly columnist with Novel AdviceReady Writer and the Muskogee Phoenixnewspaper. This article first appeared in Teachers In Focus (Dec/January 2000).