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RELIGION IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS:
A JOINT STATEMENT OF CURRENT LAW
APRIL 1995
Drafting Committee
American Jewish Congress, Chair
American Civil Liberties Union
American Jewish Committee
American Muslim Council
Anti-Defamation League
Baptist Joint Committee
Christian Legal Society
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists
National Association of Evangelicals
National Council of Churches
People for the American Way
Union of American Hebrew Congregations
Endorsing Organizations
American Ethical Union
American Humanist Association
Americans for Religious Liberty
Americans United for Separation of Church and State
B'nai B'rith, International
Christian Science Church
Church of the Brethren, Washington Office
Church of Scientology International
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, Lutheran Office for Governmental
Affairs
Federation of Reconstructionist Congregations and Havurot
Friends Committee on National Legislation
Guru Gobind Singh Foundation
Interfaith Alliance
Interfaith Impact for Justice and Peace
National Council of Jewish Women
National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council (NJCRAC)
National Ministries, American Baptist Churches, USA
National Sikh Center
North American Council for Muslim Women
Presbyterian Church (USA)
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations
United Church of Christ, Office for Church in Society
Table of Contents
Initial Statement (Initial Section)
Student Prayers - Section 1
Graduation Prayer and Baccalaureates - Sections 2,
3
Official Participation or Encouragement of Religious
Activity - Section 4
Teaching about Religion - Sections 5,6
Student Assignments and Religion - Sections 7, 8
Distribution of Religious Literature - Sections 9,
10
"See You at the Pole" - Section 11
Religious Persuasion Versus Religious Harassment -
Section 12
Equal Access Act - Section 13
Religious Holidays - Section 14
Excusal from Religiously Objectionable Lessons -
Section 15
Teaching Values - Section 16
Student Garb - Section 17
Released Time - Section 18
Appendix - Organizational Contacts (regarding this
Joint Statement)
(Final Section)
Religion In The Public Schools: A Joint Statement Of Current Law
The Constitution permits much private religious activity in and about the public
schools. Unfortunately, this aspect of constitutional law is not as well known as it
should be. Some say that the Supreme Court has declared the public schools "religion
free ones" or that the law is so murky that school officials cannot know what is
legally permissible. The former claim is simply wrong. And as to the latter, while there
are some difficult issues, much has been settled. It is also unfortunately true that
public school officials, due to their busy schedules, may not be as fully aware of this
body of law as they could be. As a result, in some school districts some of these rights
are not being observed.
The organizations whose names appear below span the ideological, religious and
political spectrum. They nevertheless share a
commitment both to the freedom of religious practice and to the separation of church
and state such freedom requires. In that spirit, we offer this statement of consensus on
current law as an aid to parents, educators and students.
Many of the organizations listed below are actively involved in litigation about
religion in the schools. On some of the issues discussed in this summary, some of the
organizations have urged the courts to reach positions different than they did. Though
there are signatories on both sides which have and will press for different constitutional
treatments of some of the topics discussed below, they all agree that the following is an
accurate statement of what the law currently is.
Student Prayers
1. Students have the right to pray individually or in groups or to discuss their
religious views with their peers so long as they are not disruptive. Because the
Establishment Clause does not apply to purely private speech, students enjoy the right to
read their Bibles or other scriptures, say grace before meals, pray before tests, and
discuss religion with other willing student listeners. In the classroom students have the
right to pray quietly except when required to be actively engaged in school activities
(e.g., students may not decide to pray just as a teacher calls on them). In informal
settings, such as the cafeteria or in the halls, students may pray either audibly or
ilently, subject to the same rules of order as apply to other speech in these locations.
However, the right to engage in voluntary prayer does not include, for example, the right
to have a captive audience listen or to compel other students to participate.
Graduation Prayer and Baccalaureates
2. School officials may not mandate or organize prayer at graduation, nor may they
organize a religious baccalaureate ceremony. If the school generally rents out its
facilities to private groups, it must rent them out on the same terms, and on a first-come
first-served basis, to organizers of privately sponsored religious baccalaureate services,
provided that the school does not extend preferential treatment to the baccalaureate
ceremony and the school disclaims official endorsement of the program.
3. The courts have reached conflicting conclusions under the federal Constitution on
student-initiated prayer at graduation. Until the issue is authoritatively resolved,
schools should ask their lawyers what rules apply in their area.
Official Participation or Encouragement of Religious Activity
4. Teachers and school administrators, when acting in those capacities, are
representatives of the state, and in those capacities, are themselves prohibited from
encouraging or soliciting student religious or anti-religious activity. Similarly, when
acting in their official capacities, teachers may not engage in religious activities with
their students. However, teachers may engage in private religious activity in faculty
lounges.
Teaching About Religion
5. Students may be taught about religion, but public schools may not teach religion. As
the U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly said, "[i]t might well be said that one's
education is not complete without a study of comparative religion, or the history of
religion and its relationship to the advancement of civilization." It would be
difficult to teach art, music, literature and most social studies without considering
religious influences. The history of religion, comparative religion, the Bible (or other
scripture) as literature (either as a separate course or within some other existing
course), are all permissible public school subjects. It is both permissible and desirable
to teach objectively about the role of religion in the history of the United States and
other countries. One can teach that the Pilgrims came to this country with a particular
religious vision, that Catholics and others have been subject to persecution or that many
of those participating in the abolitionist, women's suffrage and civil rights movements
had religious motivations.
6. These same rules apply to the recurring controversy surrounding theories of
evolution. Schools may teach about explanations of life on earth, including religious ones
(such as "creationism"), in comparative religion or social studies classes. In
science class, however, they may present only genuinely scientific critiques of, or
evidence for, any explanation of life on earth, but not religious critiques (beliefs
unverifiable by scientific methodology). Schools may not refuse to teach evolutionary
theory in order to avoid giving offense to religion nor may they circumvent these rules by
labeling as science an article of religious faith. Public schools must not teach as
scientific fact or theory any religious doctrine, including "creationism",
although any genuinely scientific evidence for or against any explanation of life may be
taught. Just as they may either advance nor inhibit any religious doctrine, teachers
should not ridicule, for example, a student's religious explanation for life on earth.
Student Assignments and Religion
7. Students may express their religious beliefs in the form of reports, homework and
artwork, and such expressions are constitutionally protected. Teachers may not reject or
correct such submissions simply because they include a religious symbol or address
religious themes. Likewise, teachers may not require students to modify, include or excise
religious views in their assignments, if germane. These assignments should be judged by
ordinary academic standards of substance, relevance, appearance and grammar.
8. Somewhat more problematic from a legal point of view are other public expressions of
religious views in the classroom. Unfortunately for school officials, there are traps on
either side of this issue, and it is possible that litigation will result no matter what
course is taken. It is easier to describe the settled cases than to state lear rules of
law. Schools must carefully steer between the claims of student speakers who assert a
right to express themselves on religious subjects and the asserted rights of student
listeners to be free of unwelcome religious persuasion in a public school classroom.
a. Religious or anti-religious remarks made in the ordinary course of classroom
discussion or student presentations are permissible and constitute a protected right. If
in a sex education class a student emarks that abortion should be illegal because God has
prohibited it, a teacher should not silence the remark, ridicule it, rule it out of bounds
or endorse it, any more than a teacher may silence a student's religiously-based comment
in favor of choice.
b. If a class assignment calls for an oral presentation on a subject of the student's
choosing, and, for example, the student responds by conducting a religious service, the
school has the right--as well as the duty--to prevent itself from being used as a church.
Other students are not voluntarily in attendance and cannot be forced to become an
unwilling congregation.
c. Teachers may rule out-of-order religious remarks that are irrelevant to the subject
at hand. In a discussion of Hamlet's sanity, for example, a student may not interject
views on creationism.
Distribution of Religious Literature
9. Students have the right to distribute religious literature to their school mates,
subject to those reasonable time, place and manner or other constitutionally-acceptable
restrictions imposed on the distribution of all non-school literature. Thus, a school may
confine distribution of all literature to a particular table at particular times. It may
not single out religious literature for burdensome regulation.
10. Outsiders may not be given access to the classroom to istribute religious or
anti-religious literature. No court has yet considered whether, if all other community
groups are permitted to distribute literature on common areas of public schools, religious
groups must be allowed to do so on equal terms subject to reasonable time, place and
manner restrictions.
"See You at the Pole"
11. Student participation in before-or-after-school events, such as "see you at
the pole", is permissible. School officials, acting in an official capacity, may
neither discourage nor encourage participation in such an event.
Religious Persuasion Versus Religious Harassment
12. Students have the right to speak to, and attempt to persuade, their peers about
religious topics just as they do with regard to political topics. But school officials
should intercede to stop student religious speech if it turns into religious harassment
aimed at a student or a small group of students. While it is constitutionally permissible
for a student to approach another and issue an invitation to attend church, repeated
invitations in the face of a request to stop constitute harassment. Where this line is to
be drawn in particular cases will depend on the age of the students and other
circumstances.
Equal Access Act
13. Student religious clubs in secondary schools must be permitted to meet and to have
equal access to campus media to announce their meetings, if a school receives federal
funds and permits any student non-curricular club to meet during non-instructional time.
This is the command of the Equal Access Act. A non-curricular club is any club not related
directly to a subject taught or soon-to-be taught in the school. Although schools have the
right to ban all non-curriculum clubs, they may not dodge the law's requirement by the
expedient of declaring all clubs curriculum-related. On the other hand, teachers may not
actively participate in club activities and "non-school persons" may not control
or regularly attend club meetings. The Act's constitutionality has been upheld by the
Supreme Court, rejecting claims that the Act violates the Establishment Clause. The Act's
requirements are described in more detail in The Equal Access Act and the Public Schools:
Questions and Answers on the Equal Access Act *, a pamphlet published by a broad spectrum
of religious and civil liberties groups.
Religious Holidays
14. Generally, public schools may teach about religious holidays, and may celebrate the
secular aspects of the holiday and objectively teach about their religious aspects. They
may not observe the holidays as religious events. Schools should generally excuse students
who do not wish to participate in holiday events. Those interested in further details
should see Religious Holidays in the Public Schools: Questions and Answers*, a pamphlet
published by a broad spectrum of religious and civil liberties groups.
Excusal from Religiously Objectionable Lessons
15. Schools enjoy substantial discretion to excuse individual students from lessons
which are objectionable to that student or to his or her parent on the basis of religion.
Schools can exercise that authority in ways which would defuse many conflicts over
curriculum content. If it is proved that particular lessons substantially burden a
student's free exercise of religion and if the school cannot prove a compelling interest
in requiring attendance, the school would be legally required to excuse the student.
Teaching Values
16. Schools may teach civic virtues, including honesty, good citizenship,
sportsmanship, courage, respect for the rights and freedoms of others, respect for persons
and their property, civility, the dual virtues of moral conviction and tolerance and hard
work. Subject to whatever rights of excusal exist (see 15 above) under the federal
Constitution and state law, schools may teach sexual abstinence and contraception; whether
and how schools teach these sensitive subjects is a matter of educational policy. However,
these may not be taught as religious tenets. The mere fact that most, if not all,
religions also teach these values does not make it unlawful to teach them.
Student Garb
17. Religious messages on T-shirts and the like may not be singled out for suppression.
Students may wear religious attire, such as yarmulkes and head scarves, and they may not
be forced to wear gym clothes that they regard, on religious grounds, as immodest.
Released Time
18. Schools have the discretion to dismiss students to off-premises religious
instruction, provided that schools do not encourage or discourage participation or
penalize those who do not attend. Schools may not allow religious instruction by outsiders
on premises during the school day.
________________________
* Copies may be obtained from any of the undersigned organizations.
Appendix
Organizational contacts for "Religion in the Public Schools: A Joint Statement
of Current Law"
American Civil Liberties Union, Beth Orsoff, William J. Brennan Fellow,
202-544-1681 (x306)
American Ethical Union, Herbert Blinder, Director, Washington Ethical
Action Office, 301-229-3759
American Humanist Association, Frederick Edwords, Executive Director,
800-743-6646
American Jewish Committee, Richard Foltin, Legislative Director/Counsel,
202-785-4200
American Jewish Congress, Marc D. Stern, Co-Director, Commission on Law and
Social Action, 212-360-1845
American Muslim Council, Abduragman M. Alamoudi, Executive Director,
202-789-2262
Americans for Religious Liberty, Edd Doerr, Executive Director,
301-598-2447
Americans United for Separation of Church and State, Steve Green, Legal
Director, 202-466-3234
Anti-Defamation League, Michael Lieberman, Associate Director/Counsel,
Washington Office, 202-452-8320
Baptist Joint Committee, J. Brent Walker, General Counsel, 202-544-4226
B'nai B'rith, Reva Price, Director, Political Action Network, 202-857-6645
Christian Legal Society, Steven T. McFarland, Director, Center for
Law and Religious Freedom, 703-642-1070
Christian Science Church, Philip G. Davis, Federal Representative,
202-857-0427
Church of the Brethren, Washington Office, Timothy A McElwee, Director,
202-546-3202
Church of Scientology International, Susan L. Taylor, Public Affairs
Director, Washington Office, 202-667-6404
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, Lutheran Office for Governmental
Affairs, Kay S. Dowhower, Director, 202-783-7507
Federation of Reconstructionist Congregations and Havurot, Rabbi Mordechai
Liebling, Executive Director, 215-887-1988
Friends Committee on National Legislation, Ruth Flower, Legislative
Secretary/Legislative Education Secretary, 202-547-6000
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, Gary M. Ross, Congressional
Liaison, 301-680-6688
Guru Gobind Singh Foundation, Rajwant Singh, Secretary, 301-294-7886
Interfaith Alliance, Jill Hanauer, Executive Director, 202-639-6370
Interfaith Impact for Justice and Peace, James M. Bell, executive Director,
202-543-2800
National Association of Evangelicals, Forest Montgomery, Counsel, Office of
Public Affairs, 202-789-1011
National Council of Churches, Oliver S. Thomas, Special Counsel for
Religious and Civil Liberties, 615-977-9046
National Council of Jewish Women, Deena Margolis, Legislative Assistant,
202-296-2588
National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council (NJCRAC), Jerome
Chanes, Director, Domestic Concerns, 212-684-6950
National Ministries, American Baptist Churches, USA, Renee' Ladue, Program
Assistant, Office of Government Relations, 202-544-3400
National Sikh Center, Chatter Saini, President, 703-734-1760
North American Council for Muslim Women, Sharifa Aikhateeh, Vice-President,
703-759-7339
People for the American Way, Elliot Mincberg, Legal Director, 202-467-4999
Presbyterian Church (USA), Eleonora Giddings Ivory, Director, Washington
Office, 202-543-1126
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, W. Grant McMurray,
First Presidency, 816-521-3002
Union of American Hebrew Congregations, Rabbi David Saperstein, Director,
Religious Action Center, 202-387-2800
Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations, Robert Alpern,
Director, Washington Office, 202-547-0254
United Church of Christ, Office for Church in Society, Patrick Conover,
Acting Head of Office, Washington Office, 202-543-1517
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