Posted on 04/14/2008 7:56:23 AM PDT by no dems
A community college in New York has been presented with a demand letter from the American Center for Law and Justice to halt a professor's classroom practices that allegedly have damaged at least one student so far.
The letter from the ACLJ targets Suffolk County Community College and will be the prelude to a federal lawsuit if the issue isn't resolved, the organization said.
At issue is a professor's demand that students "change their own personal viewpoints or state that they are unsure of whether their own personal beliefs are correct" on religious issues, according to the letter.
That is an expression of hostility to religion, the letter explains.
The ACLJ said it is representing Gina DeLuca, a student who has been punished with lower grades and has been labeled "closed-minded" by a professor, who remained unidentified in the letter, because he demands that students acknowledge the possibility that God does not exist in order to participate in his philosophy class, which is required for graduation.
"The ACLJ has sent a letter demanding that the school end its discriminatory actions against DeLuca or face a federal lawsuit," the organization's announcement said.
The school now has a deadline of April 14 to meet the requirements of the letter, the ACLJ said.
(Excerpt) Read more at worldnetdaily.com ...
Asking someone to accept a premise for the sake of argument is one thing, telling them they must change their internal beliefs to participate in your class is another.
The professor could have handled it differently and chose not to. He has no right to make them change their worldview just to pass his class.
A study of Metaphysic can be reasonably approached in several ways
Genuinely searching for Truth (a seeker)
Genuinely honoring the possibility of multiple viewpoints
Curiosity of other viewpoints when one has a well defined “belief”
None of these statements can be made of this “Teacher”
Bump!
THX THX.
BTTT
Excellent points.
Great points.
Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. (Heb. 11:1)
If we have something already, then there is no place for hoping to get it. If we believe what we see with our own eyes, there is no need for faith in things unseen.
Revelation, prayer, and personal experience can give us some assurance of salvation, but they cannot give us absolute certainty. To face that is not to admit that our faith is wrong, but humbly acknowledging the possibility that we may be wrong (while hoping and believing that we are not).
imho,
he has no ‘right’ to expose youth to his idiocies.
Alas, his crew will be in charge for a time . . . thankfully a very limited time.
But the horror of it will more than make up for the shortness of it.
The trouble with humanities as well as social sciences is that the grades are subjective. Even if this professor is made to alter his approach, he can assign whatever (lower) grade he chooses and invent the necessary justifications. He can also subjectively grade homework and exams to generate whatever grade he wants to inflict. had this happen to me once in a cultural anthropology course.
Explains why I went into natrual science. 1+1 will always equal 2 (except in binary, where it woll equal 10).
Note English is a humanity (sorry for mis-types)
Actually, my grading in my Intro to Psych class is rather objective. Not strictly so but overwhelmingly so.
And, I give grade sheets with constantly updated grades on an Xcel sheet every class session.
And, I make it mostly easy to succeed and a bit difficult to fail. Students have no complaint with my grading.
You better re-check the definition of faith.
That's what I thought. I can see the necessity of following a line of thinking like "Suppose God does not exist, suppose your religion is false, then..." Just following a line of thinking doesn't mean actually changing your beliefs.
As much as I dislike the ALCU, this is probably a case they would actually take. Being a Chrsitian. I assume the student would probably prefer to work with the ACLJ.
I guess that’s where I have such a problem with this instructor.
When one goes into a course like philosophy, You are there to examine the line of thinking. Whether it is Thales to Aristotle or logic or some other metaphysical thought. You are asked to examine it for completeness, where there are faults, and if a deeper meaning, if any, can be assigned to it.
They were never presented as an alternative to any religion...just as something to think about. Whatever esoteric meanings of any philosophy be it Aristotle, or Descartes’ were the point of the class based on the knowledge of the thinker, their time, and how well their thought has stood up to scrutiny and time.
.
This will probably be settled out of court and the student can probably retire if she wishes.
But let him ask in faith, with no doubting, for the one who doubts is like a wave of the sea that is driven and tossed by the wind.
Jesus immediately reached out his hand and took hold of him, saying to him, "O you of little faith, why did you doubt?"
And Jesus answered them, "Truly, I say to you, if you have faith and do not doubt, you will not only do what has been done to the fig tree, but even if you say to this mountain, 'Be taken up and thrown into the sea,' it will happen.
Your life shall hang in doubt before you. Night and day you shall be in dread and have no assurance of your life.
I may be wrong and you may be right about faith. I think that what the Gospel was talking about was the strength of faith, meaning that if we really rely on our beliefs mountains could move. But the power to transform that faith has is one thing and it’s being impossible that the thing believed in be false is another. I may believe strongly that when I go to the bank I will be able to get my money. That belief may even be true. But, if challenged, I must admit that there is some chance that the bank will not be there for me. There is even a slight chance that there never was a bank or any money and that I imagined the whole thing. Such doubts are unreasonable, but they remain logical possibilities. Similarly, I don’t think it detracts from the real power of faith, the ability to to be transformed by fully relying on it, to acknowledge that you are taking a chance on something that might not be true, or that might not be exactly as you believe it is. In fact, that leap of faith into a potential abyss with no net is what gives faith much its power. If it were fully guaranteed, it wouldn’t be a leap at all.
The only other thing I can say is that basically the teacher is just out of line. I've been taught at a place (trying to keep somewhat anonymous at this point) that an educator's role is not to fundamentally change what people believe. The example that was cited was a case where one person is a racist or sexist. Our job is to evaluate the arguments in papers and class, not to dismiss them as flat out wrong and say they have to change. We even need to challenge ideas that we may fully agree with. This teacher failed when he was incapable of challenging her ideas and having her give a defense of them.
Well, I've got to run off again, but it's been a pleasure chatting with you!
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