Alabama Picks a Bible Textbook

Alabama has became the first state in the union to approve a textbook for a course about the Bible in its public schools, and its surprisingly uncontroversial decision may prove to be a model for others.

According to Dr. Anita Buckley Commander, the Alabama Director of Classroom Improvement, there was no opposition to the October 11 vote by the state Board of Education to include The Bible and Its Influence on the state’s list of accepted textbooks. The Board held a hearing on the issue and no-one showed up; the book was approved by a vote of 8-0.

The textbook is a product of the Bible Literacy Project, founded and run by Chuck Stetson, a conservative Christian New York-based equity fund executive. Assessing scripture and its subsequent influence on literature, art, philosophy and political culture, it was specifically designed to avoid the Constitution’s church-state barriers. Although the text, which has been on the market for two years, is now taught in 163 schools in 35 states, no state had previously endorsed it.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, Education, Religion & Culture

3 comments on “Alabama Picks a Bible Textbook

  1. TomRightmyer says:

    Student edition used about $50, teacher’s edition $135. Pricey!

  2. Diezba says:

    Apparently you haven’t purchased textbooks recently. Most full-color, typical classroom texts go for about $150-200. I should know just graduated from college in 2005; in law school now.

  3. justinmartyr says:

    Thank goodness all those atheist taxpayers will be paying for it…