Christian Post
 
 
Ga. School Forces Christian Student to Alter Beliefs to Graduate
An Augusta State University student filed suit  Wednesday after she was 
told to change her Christian beliefs or otherwise be  expelled from the 
school's graduate counseling program. 
Thu, July 22, 2010 Posted: 07:28 PM EDT  
____________________________________
  
 
An Augusta State University student filed suit Wednesday after she was told 
 to change her Christian beliefs or otherwise be expelled from the school's 
 graduate counseling program. 
"A public university student shouldn’t be threatened with expulsion for 
being  a Christian and refusing to publicly renounce her faith, but that’s 
exactly  what’s happening here," said David French, senior counsel with the 
Alliance  Defense Fund. "Simply put, the university is imposing thought 
reform." 
Jennifer Keeton, 24, has been enrolled in the College of Education's School 
 Counselor masters degree program since fall 2009. She has expressed her  
Christian beliefs in class discussions and written assignments, but it was 
her  views regarding gender and sexuality that irked faculty. 
According to the filed complaint, "She has stated that she believes sexual  
behavior is the result of accountable personal choice rather than an  
inevitability deriving from deterministic forces. She also has affirmed binary  
male-female gender, with one or the other being fixed in each person at their 
 creation, and not a social construct or individual choice subject to 
alteration  by the person so created. Further, she has expressed her view that 
homosexuality  is a 'lifestyle,' not a 'state of being.'" 
In May, Keeton was notified that she would be asked to participate in a  
remediation plan. Mary Jane Anderson-Wiley, an associate professor who also  
oversees student education and discipline, explained that the faculty wanted 
to  see Keeton's writing skills improve and that they are concerned with 
some of her  beliefs and views pertaining to GLBT (Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and 
Transgender)  issues. 
Several faculty members later met with the student and told her that they  
considered her to be failing to conform to certain professional standards. 
In a  written Remediation Plan, the faculty said her speech on GLBT matters 
violated  the codes of ethics that counselors and those in training are 
required to adhere  to. 
Keeton's views "depart from what 'the psychological research about GLBTQ  
(gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and queer/questioning) populations  
asserts' that that 'sexual orientation is not a lifestyle or choice, but a 
state  of being,'" faculty members said. 
The Remediation Plan required that Keeton attend workshops on diversity  
sensitivity training toward working with GLBTQ populations, work to increase  
exposure and interaction with gay populations by attending such events as 
the  Gay Pride Parade in Augusta, and read more on the topic to improve 
counseling  effectiveness with GLBTQ populations. 
Failure to complete all elements of the remediation plan will result in  
dismissal from the Counselor Education Program, according to the plan. 
Keeton told faculty members, "I can’t alter my biblical beliefs, and I will 
 not affirm the morality of those behaviors in a counseling situation." 
But she stressed, "I understand the need to reflect clients’ goals and to  
allow them to work toward their own solutions, and I know I can do that." 
When Keeton asked why her biblical ethical views would disqualify her  
competence as a counselor, Anderson-Wiley at one point responded, "Christians  
see this population as sinners." Though Keeton stated that all people are  
sinners, including herself, Anderson-Wiley told her that she had a choice of  
standing by the Bible or by the American Counseling Association Code of 
Ethics.  Keeton chose the Bible. 
"Abandoning one’s own religious beliefs should not be a precondition at a  
public university for obtaining a degree," ADF's David French contended. 
"This  type of leftist zero-tolerance policy is in place at far too many 
universities,  and it must stop. Jennifer’s only crime was to have the beliefs 
that she  does."
Nathan Black
Christian Post Reporter 

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