A bill endorsing a specific elective course on the Bible’s influence on the arts, history and literature has drawn criticism from some state school board members who say the bill would limit the authority of local school boards — an argument dismissed by the bill’s sponsor and other education officials.
House Majority Leader Ken Guin, D-Carbon Hill, has prepared a bill that would authorize public school systems to offer the elective in grades 9-12. The bill specifies the course, titled “The Bible and Its Influence,” will be based on a textbook of the same name published in September by the Bible Literacy Project, a Fairfax, Va.-based nonprofit.
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At least three members of the Alabama school board say they support an elective on Bible literacy, which is already offered in a handful of Alabama classrooms, but are against mandating the use of a single textbook. Another member says the board needs more information about the course and the board’s role in the issue.
“That’s not the way our education laws are written,” said Ethel Hall, a Democrat from Birmingham who has served on the State Board of Education for 19 years. “That’s not how it’s supposed to be done.”
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