All depends on whether it is being taught as objective history or terrorist
quasi-religious propaganda.  This is clearly the latter.
 
B
 

http://www.lodinews.com/articles/2007/10/30/news/2_textbook_071030.txt
 

Too much time on teachings of Islam? 


Parents say seventh-grade textbook at Houston Elementary inappropriate

By  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Amanda Dyer
News-Sentinel Staff Writer 
Last updated: Tuesday, October 30, 2007 6:46 AM PDT

 

The parents of children at Houston Elementary School plan to complain to the
school board about concerns they have with a seventh-grade history textbook,
which they feel pays an undue amount of attention to the teachings of Islam.

When Jim Self asked his son last week what he was learning in school, he was
surprised to hear his 12-year-old boy say that he was learning about the
Prophet Muhammad.

That night Jim Self and his wife, Korina, flipped through their son's
textbook, "History Alive!: The Medieval World and Beyond," and found at
least three chapters dedicated to the Islamic faith, including an entire
chapter dedicated to the Prophet Muhammad.

Since then, the couple has started a campaign to remove the textbook from
their child's classroom. The book is used in classrooms throughout the
district.

"I don't think we would have an issue about it if (it wasn't so) in-depth,"
said Jim Self, who fought in Iraq as a Marine from 2003 to 2004.

Among the Selfs' concerns about the textbook is its definition of the word
"jihad," which is described in the book as "the human struggle to overcome
difficulties and do things that would be pleasing to God."




Korina Self talks about her feelings on the contents in a school history
book being used to teach their son's seventh-grade history class. (Jennifer
M. Howell/News-Sentinel)

Other concerns stem from a passage on page 86 of the textbook, which quotes
the angel Gabriel's words to the Prophet Muhammad.

The Selfs said the textbook mentioned Jesus only twice, and other major
religions were only given a paragraph of explanation.

One of the Selfs' biggest concerns, though, is that such detailed
explanation of Islam is a violation of the separation of church and state.

"If he was in college and he was studying world religions, fine," Jim Self
said.

The Selfs, who are Christians, worry that their reaction to the textbook
will cause people to label them as religious "wackos."

"We're just regular people," Jim Self said.

The Selfs don't have an issue with their son learning about other cultures,
but said that each culture should be represented equally.

"They want to take the Ten Commandments off the steps of the Supreme Court,
but you're going to teach my 12-year-old son how to pray?" Jim Self asked.

In fact, the Selfs' asked that their son not be named to avoid unwanted
repercussions.

But that didn't stop them from telling Houston Elementary's administration
that their son will not be participating in history class, a request with
which the school has complied.

"I was very clear that my son will not be studying these next few chapters,"
Korina Self said.

However, Anne Cecchetti, curriculum coordinator of instructional media
services at Lodi Unified School District, had a different take on the
textbook, which she said has been approved by the state board of education.

"We're just explaining something. That's education," Cecchetti said. "When
you start espousing a religion, that's when you have a problem with the
separation of church and state."



Cecchetti was surprised that the Selfs had not been informed of Lodi
Unified's school board policy that allows any resident or employee to
challenge a textbook if they feel the book is inappropriate. Forms for
requests for formal reconsideration are on hand at each school site,
according to board policy.

Korina and Jim Self have been encouraging other parents to look at the
textbook and make their own conclusions. Korina Self said she would be
collecting signatures of parents who disapproved of the textbook during the
next few days.

She also said she would bring the matter to the attention of the school
board during its next meeting on Nov. 6.

Parents in Arizona requested that the same textbook, which was being used on
a trial basis, be pulled from classrooms in Scottsdale Unified School
District because they felt the book contained Islamic propaganda, according
to an article in the East Valley Tribune newspaper.

TCI, the book's publisher, ended the trial period before the school district
could act, saying that the book did not match with new state standards.

Natasha Martin, spokesperson for TCI, said the book does comply with
California's state standards and it was thoroughly reviewed by the state
before being approved.

"It is common for parents in the state to raise concerns about the teaching
of Islam because they do not know that it is required by the state
standards, and they don't understand that all major religions are taught as
part of the sixthand seventhgrade world history courses," Martin wrote in an
e-mail.

Denice Shigematsu, principal at Houston Elementary, also said the book
complies with a California state standard requiring students to learn about
diverse religions.

Shigematsu said she has only received one complaint about the book this
year. Shigematsu said she had received two separate complaints about
textbooks in previous years, but the complaints were resolved once the
parents met with the teacher and discussed how the curriculum was being
taught.

However, that information isn't comforting to parent Jordi Domenech, who
said the text should cover all religions equally, or none at all.

That's something, Domenech said, that should be taught at home.


 



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