And that's not the only whopper students are
being taught as history in some Texas charter schools
By Jonny Scaramanga Friday, Oct 25, 2013 04:45 AM -0700
When Joshua Bass, an engineer, sent his son to iSchool High, a
Houston charter school, he was expecting a solid college preparation,
including the chance to study some college courses before leaving high
school. Instead, the Basses were shocked when their son came home from
the taxpayer-funded school with apparently religiously motivated
anti-science books.
One of these books blamed Darwin’s theory of evolution for the Holocaust:
[Hitler]
has written that the Aryan (German) race would be the leader in all
human progress. To accomplish that goal, all “lower races” should either
be enslaved or eliminated. Apparently the theory of evolution and its
“survival of the fittest” philosophy had taken root in Hitler’s warped
mind.
For Joshua, attacks on science in the classroom
were unacceptable. Joshua began to research ResponsiveEd, the
curriculum used at iSchool High. It emerged that ResponsiveEd was
founded by Donald R. Howard, former owner of ACE (Accelerated Christian
Education). ACE is a fundamentalist curriculum that teaches young-Earth
creationism as fact. Last year it
hit headlines because
one of its high school science books taught that the Loch Ness Monster
was real, and that this was evidence against evolution.
ResponsiveEd
is the latest in a long line of concerns raised over the religious
affiliations of charter schools. Civil libertarians have raised
concerns over Jewish schools converting to charter status. In 2010, more than 20 percent of Texas charter schools
reportedly had a religious affiliation. And ResponsiveEd aims to expand further.
After Howard left ACE in the 1990s, he founded Eagle Project charter schools, which
became
Responsive Education Solutions, or ResponsiveEd, in 2007. ACE’s selling
point was that it integrated Bible lessons into every academic subject.
ResponsiveEd planned to do the same, but without the explicitly
religious basis. Howard told the Wall Street Journal in 1998: “Take the
Ten Commandments – you can rework those as a success principle by
rewording them. We will call it truth, we will call it principles, we
will call it values. We will not call it religion.” But in Joshua Bass’
mind, at iSchool High, his son was taught religion in class.
Charter
schools receive public funding but operate privately. While promoting
creationist science is deemed unconstitutional in public schools,
ResponsiveEd charter schools appear able to challenge mainstream science
in the classroom.
ResponsiveEd
says it
has 60 schools in Texas, with an extended charter to open 20 more by
2014. It also has facilities in Arkansas, and plans to open in Indiana.
Amazingly, it isn’t the only charter school curriculum based on
Accelerated Christian Education’s format.
Paradigm Accelerated
Curriculum (PAC) was founded by former ACE vice president Ronald E.
Johnson. Where ACE is an “individualized, accelerated” curriculum based
on the “
five laws of learning,” PAC is an “
accelerated individualized”
curriculum based on the “six principles of learning.” Like ACE and
ResponsiveEd, it questions the theory of evolution and presents the “
catastrophist theory”
of Noah’s Ark as a credible rival explanation. Like ResponsiveEd, PAC
teaches that the theory of evolution influenced Hitler to create the
Third Reich. It also relies on the traditional creationist argument of
“gaps” in the fossil record:
Darwinism
claims that humans gradually and mysteriously evolved from non-living
materials. Some critics humorously claim that evolution proposes a
philosophy of “from goo to you by way of the zoo.” […]
Evolutionists
insist that their theory must be right and that missing fossil evidence
is merely the result of a flawed fossil record; the catastrophists
insist that evolutionists have not exercised the scientific method of
discovery and therefore have little real scientific evidence to prove
their theory.
In another chapter, the PAC science materials use examples in history where science has been wrong – geocentrism,
phlogiston,
an obsolete theory that attempted to explain burning processes, and
ancient Egyptian superstitions (such as using fly excreta to treat
tumors) – to undermine the authority of science in general:
Many
other historical blunders of science could be mentioned. What we need
to keep in mind is that scientists are human beings. The assumption that
they are completely objective, error-free, impartial, “cold machines”
dressed in white coats is, of course, absurd. Like everyone else,
scientists are influenced by prejudice and preconceived ideas. You
should also remember that just because most people believe a particular
thing does not necessarily make it true.
This passage
has a striking resemblance to John Hudson Tiner’s “When Science Fails,”
an Accelerated Christian Education literature book that uses just such
examples to undermine science and cast doubt on the theory of evolution.
ResponsiveEd’s teaching on evolution
promises that students will, among other things:
- Explain the difference between microevolution and macroevolution.
- Describe the theories concerning the origins of life.
- Discuss theories of human development.
- Express opinions regarding evolutionary theory in general and human evolution in particular.
- Describe controversies regarding evolution.
To
explain: Microevolution and macroevolution are frequently used as a
false dichotomy by creationists, who say they accept the former and
reject the latter. Biologists say that the two terms refer to identical
processes over different time scales, so there is fundamentally no
difference. The references to “theories” of origins of life and of human
development implies that rival theories will be discussed. Since
mainstream science has no rival to evolution, this is presumably a
reference to creationism or intelligent design.
The
connection to ACE gave Joshua Bass further cause for concern. Much of
the criticism of ACE over the years has been for its educational
techniques as much as for its doctrinal emphasis. Harry Brighouse,
professor of philosophy and affiliate professor of educational policy
studies at University of Wisconsin, Madison,
called it “a crude curriculum … very much based on rote learning,” and
described ACE’s
social studies as “a kind of Christian version of the Stalinist
approach to history but without the intellectual subtlety.”
David Prideaux and Cathy Speck of Flinders University, Australia,
said ACE
students were “in a situation of conceptual and cognitive
disadvantage.” The harshest criticism came from a 1987 article in the
Phi Delta Kappan that stated:
If parents want their
children to obtain a very limited and sometimes inaccurate view of the
world – one that ignores thinking above the level of rote recall – then
the ACE materials do the job very well. The world of the ACE materials
is quite a different one from that of scholarship and critical thinking.
The
criticism did not only come from secular sources. Educators at the
fundamentalist Bob Jones University also criticized ACE’s academics,
says historian
Adam Laats,
“According to BJU writers, the ACE and A Beka curricula failed to
adequately educate their students academically or spiritually by
neglecting … higher-order thinking skills.”
For Joshua Bass, the
decision was simple: he removed his son from iSchool High after just
four weeks. For citizens in Texas, however, the concern remains that
public funds are being channeled to schools that teach religiously
motivated lessons.
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