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There is a great deal of misunderstanding about how schools in
America function and what goes on in the typical classroom.
Parents, even relatively young parents, perceive that public
schools are just like when they attended. This faulty perception is
held by a large portion of the general public. In addition a number
of aspects of schooling have come under close scrutiny by critics
of the public schools, resulting in a heated debate throughout the
nation. It is the purpose of this book to provide parents and
others who are interested in the operation of public schools an
alternative way of looking at publically supported education and
the issues surrounding better educational practice. The framework
for this volume is the published articles of the author over the
past 20 years in his weekly newspaper column, A Different
Perspective. While no attempt is made to be comprehensive, the 13
chapters cover a broad range of issues facing the schools. The
reader is treated to a fascinating look at the viewpoint of an
experienced observer of these public institutions. The author has
changed his perspective over the two decades on only a few issues.
The book was written with the average reader in mind. It does not
contain a large amount of educational jargon, although the issues
areapproached with enough depth to be useful to the professional
educator. Throughout the entire volume the author maintains strong
support for public schools.
This new series, Research on Religion and Education, will examine
the important role that religion continues to play in education at
all levels, elementary, secondary and tertiary and in all venues,
public, private, and parochial schools. A central focus of the
series will identify the place of religious schools in maintaining
the identity of sponsoring faith communities and the impact these
communities have on the school. Other topics will examine differing
educational philosophies of religious schools including the
non-Christian schools, the appropriate role of religion in public
schools, and the impact of religion on the lives of students in
higher education. This series will study the impact that religion
has on education and education has on religion.
American Evangelicals and Religious Diversity is a qualitative
study of how religion and education intersect at one conservative
Christian school. The school is Evangelical and American. The
school's curriculum is bible-based and fulfills its state's
educational requirements for high school graduation. While the
school has an environment that is Evangelical, the students live in
a religiously-diverse world. This book documents how three students
and their teacher struggle to understand a world that challenges
their faith. The context for this understanding is how the teacher
presents and the three students come to understand Catholicism,
Islam, and the indigenous religions of the Americas. Americans
continue to debate whether religious schools are too parochial and
do not prepare students to live a diverse society. It is the
opinion of the editors that this book should put to rest some of
this fear. We read the manuscript with a critical editorial eye but
found the story a compelling one which challenged us to review the
tenets of our own faith. The author's style of presentation is
consistent with good scientific discourse yet impels the reader to
a view inside the experience of the subjects of the study. Reading
the manuscript was not only an informative experience but a faith
affirming one too. We are very pleased to present Kevin Taylor's
book, American Evangelicals and Religious Diversity as an important
part of our series on research on religion and education.
There is a great deal of misunderstanding about how schools in
America function and what goes on in the typical classroom.
Parents, even relatively young parents, perceive that public
schools are just like when they attended. This faulty perception is
held by a large portion of the general public. In addition a number
of aspects of schooling have come under close scrutiny by critics
of the public schools, resulting in a heated debate throughout the
nation. It is the purpose of this book to provide parents and
others who are interested in the operation of public schools an
alternative way of looking at publically supported education and
the issues surrounding better educational practice. The framework
for this volume is the published articles of the author over the
past 20 years in his weekly newspaper column, A Different
Perspective. While no attempt is made to be comprehensive, the 13
chapters cover a broad range of issues facing the schools. The
reader is treated to a fascinating look at the viewpoint of an
experienced observer of these public institutions. The author has
changed his perspective over the two decades on only a few issues.
The book was written with the average reader in mind. It does not
contain a large amount of educational jargon, although the issues
areapproached with enough depth to be useful to the professional
educator. Throughout the entire volume the author maintains strong
support for public schools.
A volume in Research on Religion and EducationSeries Editors
Stephen J. Denig, Niagara Universityand Lyndon G. Furst, Andrews
UniversityCatholic Higher Education in the 1960s is a series of
cases that describes and analyzesthe transitions made by
representative Catholic institutions in their attempts to
updatetheir governance structures and maintain their Catholic
identity in the midst of the post-Vatican II era. This book will be
of interest to historians of education and Catholiceducation; to
administrators and faculty in Catholic schools and in other
religious-basedinstitutions that seek to understand the dynamic of
balancing their religious identitywith their attempts at "reading
the signs of the times."
American Evangelicals and Religious Diversity is a qualitative
study of how religion and education intersect at one conservative
Christian school. The school is Evangelical and American. The
school's curriculum is bible-based and fulfills its state's
educational requirements for high school graduation. While the
school has an environment that is Evangelical, the students live in
a religiously-diverse world. This book documents how three students
and their teacher struggle to understand a world that challenges
their faith. The context for this understanding is how the teacher
presents and the three students come to understand Catholicism,
Islam, and the indigenous religions of the Americas. Americans
continue to debate whether religious schools are too parochial and
do not prepare students to live a diverse society. It is the
opinion of the editors that this book should put to rest some of
this fear. We read the manuscript with a critical editorial eye but
found the story a compelling one which challenged us to review the
tenets of our own faith. The author's style of presentation is
consistent with good scientific discourse yet impels the reader to
a view inside the experience of the subjects of the study. Reading
the manuscript was not only an informative experience but a faith
affirming one too. We are very pleased to present Kevin Taylor's
book, American Evangelicals and Religious Diversity as an important
part of our series on research on religion and education.
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