Posted on 03/19/2012 12:27:47 PM PDT by Mikey_1962
It took a lawsuit filed by the Alliance Defense Fund (ADF) to convince the Fairfax County (Virginia) school district to reinstate an honors student into good standing with the districts National Honor Society (NHS). The senior at Alexandrias Jefferson High School for Science and Technology had been threatened with removal from the prestigious national group after being denied community service credit for teaching and mentoring children at her church.
While NHS policy does not prohibit faith-based service to fulfill its 12-hour community service requirement, an advisor at the school determined that the 46 hours the student served playing games, singing songs, teaching lessons, and mentoring children in a Kids Quest program at her church would not be accepted, even though other students in the NHS program performed similar services in secular environments.
According to the ADF, when the students father pointed out the inequity of the schools policy, the advisor responded by placing the student on probation with the NHS program causing her to miss crucial opportunities for college scholarships. The advisor also required the student to perform an additional four hours of community service as a penalty.
Hours after the ADF filed a lawsuit on behalf of the student, the Fairfax school district overruled the advisor, reinstating the student in good standing with the local chapter of the NHS. Theres no honor in penalizing an honors students community service to children just because it happens to be faith-based, commented ADF staff counsel Matt Sharp. Positive community service and leadership like this should be encouraged by schools, not subjected to unconstitutional discrimination.
Sharp said that even though the district has relented on penalizing his client, the ADF would continue with the lawsuit until the school district revises its written policy to allow faith-based community service. They cant just stop there, Sharp said, referring to its allowing his clients service to stand. Theres this unconstitutional policy that underlies the whole case. The school district-wide policy prohibits any credit for community service work done ... if that community service work is done at a church.
According to the ADF, the national headquarters of the NHS has confirmed that students are not prohibited from serving with religious groups as part of their requirement for community service. An NHS policy document states that even teaching Sunday school may readily fall under the aspect of leadership experiences also required of members. Assuming the responsibility for preparing and presenting lessons and supervising a group of students for an hour would generally be seen as evidence of demonstrated responsibility and leadership skills for an individual student.
But the Fairfax County school boards policy states that, in order to be considered for community service credit, faith-based activities must have a secular purpose and may not include preparation or participation in the performance of religious services. ADF noted that the Thomas Jefferson National Honor Societys guidelines incorporate the district policy and emphasize that such services will not count.
Said Sharp: Service to children is honorable regardless of where it takes place. We will be happy to work with the district in forming a constitutional policy that does not discriminate on the basis of religion. The lawsuit will continue until that is rectified, the damage done to this students record is cleared up, and the opportunity she lost to apply for NHS scholarships is remedied.
Sharp noted that in addition to the ADFs client, two other students in the district had complained of the same inequity with regard to their community service for the NHS requirement. He said the incident is not just a one-time situation, but its a pervasive problem that the district has to remedy here by getting rid of this bad policy.
In a statement concerning the ADF case, school officials said that neither the school principal nor the School Board was aware of this students concerns until the lawsuit was filed. Upon being informed of this issue, Fairfax County Public Schools administrators determined that the student was mistakenly denied credit for the volunteer service hours needed to maintain membership in the National Honor Society.
But the ADFs Jeremy Tedesco said that the district must address the overall discrimination against religion fostered by its policy. If these types of activities count when performed in a nonreligious context, then they should count in a religious context, he said. Otherwise, the government is sending the message that religious children and students are somehow inferior to others and that a religious point of view is somehow less valid than a nonreligious one in our society.
"Just a tiny mistake; an oversight; a clerical error; a computer malfunction; gosh -- we just didn't know! We weren't aware! The check is in the mail!"
Let the backpedaling begin.
The really sad thing about this article is that it points out that until lawyers came in, and they were smacked with the legal stick, the district was totally unwilling to do right by a Christian student.
They have become far too used to Christians just taking abuse.
Let the check writing begin.
Now the system, its employees, and the district's taxpayers are going to learn the very high price of religious discrimination.
Works for me.
Same here. They might have to cancel some of their extracurricular programs to pay for it. Probably the only one to survive will be the Gay-Straight Alliance.
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