School and religion

School and religion

Debates

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w

Joined
02 Jan 06
Moves
12857
21 Dec 13

Whatever Progressives think is OK with me. They seem to have all the answers so lets just roll with it. 😵

R
Acts 13:48

California

Joined
21 May 03
Moves
227331
21 Dec 13
1 edit

Originally posted by stellspalfie
im happy for them to sing about jesus as long as they sing about other gods at significant holidays and!!! as long as children can opt out without the school being judgmental about the parents (or childs) beliefs. either we celebrate all religious holidays or none.
To bad schools usually out during the 4th of July. They could sing about the govt. growing up I didn't know of the Muslim region until they had some followers attack the US on Sept. 11th. Then I was already out of High School.

R
Acts 13:48

California

Joined
21 May 03
Moves
227331
21 Dec 13

Originally posted by dryhump
Are the kids forced to join the choir, or is membership optional?
I think it is optional. There were a lot of Hmong's in the choir, I would assume that they might not be christians.

k

Joined
24 Jun 04
Moves
9995
24 Dec 13

Originally posted by dryhump
Considering the state of many public school systems, I'm not sure they'd be faring any worse if there weren't public education.
Funding cuts (mostly by Republicans) are responsible for many of the problems with public schools.

K

Germany

Joined
27 Oct 08
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3118
24 Dec 13

Originally posted by karnachz
Funding cuts (mostly by Republicans) are responsible for many of the problems with public schools.
US public schools are not that poorly funded. They are funded in the wrong way, largely through local (mostly property) taxes. This leads to schools needing the most funding receiving the least. In addition, the decision to maintain high levels of poverty significantly reduces educational performance.

d

Joined
14 Dec 07
Moves
3763
24 Dec 13

Originally posted by KazetNagorra
US public schools are not that poorly funded. They are funded in the wrong way, largely through local (mostly property) taxes. This leads to schools needing the most funding receiving the least. In addition, the decision to maintain high levels of poverty significantly reduces educational performance.
You don't think the erosion of the family unit in poverty stricken areas has something to do with it?

K

Germany

Joined
27 Oct 08
Moves
3118
24 Dec 13

Originally posted by dryhump
You don't think the erosion of the family unit in poverty stricken areas has something to do with it?
A stable home situation is important for educational achievement, but that does not necessarily require a traditional "family unit." And like I said, a conscious decision was made to create and/or maintain those "poverty stricken areas", so by simply eliminating poverty you would already solve much of the problem.

c

Joined
02 Mar 08
Moves
46775
24 Dec 13

it should be banned