Lake Local School District in Ohio Disregards Constitution

Makes Belief in God a Goal of Their School

LaRae Meadows
There are few things that can get under my skin like the education system in America. We do not do enough to teach our kids about the real wonders in the world through logical inspection and we fail miserably to teach them to respect or understand history. Schools that respect the secular requirements of our government fail to impart the importance of these subjects. What education are we denying children when they are educated by a school district that makes "belief in god" a goal in their mission statement?

Lake Local School District in Ohio dismissed the constitution, and the history it is based on, and wrote in their mission statement, "belief in god" as a goal for their students. Not only is this illegal, it is intellectual negligence on the part of the school district.

It's imperative that American students understand why the First Amendment was written and the continuous reinforcement of its wisdom that has happened since its ratification. It is impossible for a school district properly impart that knowledge when it thumbs its nose at the law it has the duty to teach.

I'm not the only one to notice the failure of the Ohio education system in the area of history. The 2006 report from Fordham Institute on education excellence gave Ohio a D for their Social Studies Content Standards which covers United States History.

I can only guess what the science curriculum of a school district which pushes belief in god looks like, but in order to meet their goal of "belief in god", there must be academic skimming taking place. Any conversation about the scientific method must be free of any god slant or it's not the scientific method. It is impossible to critically examine the world with the presupposition that god exists. When there is a conflict between god and science, which wins when belief in god is a stated value of the school district?

It's the responsibility of everyone who cares about the education of our children, as well as the future of our society, to take seriously these incursions into the academic system. Slipping the children of Ohio into a dark age is not just disastrous for them. It's disastrous for all of us.

Having pockets of populations that are less education than others in the same country can not only lead to government issues, but it can lead to exploitation of the people of lesser education. School districts that allow religion to influence their teachings have higher teen pregnancy, teen STD, and dropout rates. Due to the gaps in their education, they are more vulnerable to financial predators, religious exploitation, and exploitation in personal relationships. They also lack perspective to vote in their best interest and the best interest of the country.

A school district that disregards their duty to their pupils should not be met with simple silence. They need to have the consequences ring in their ear. We, as caring, involved citizens need to speak out for the health and well-being of these children. We must tell the Lake Local School District that their unethical, illegal, immoral behavior has not gone unnoticed and will be met with the resistance it deserves.

I already wrote the Lake Local School District, my letter is below. Please take the time to click the link at the end of this article and write a polite but passionate letter to the Lake Local School District. Together we can apply the pressure to stop the intellectual hemorrhaging in Lake Local School District.

Hello Lake Local School District,

It disappoints me whenever I hear about an elected body disregarding the constitution of our country, but it shocks my sensibilities when it is a public school district, like Lake Local School District. A school district should concern itself with teaching what is reasonable, provable, and factual. It is utterly unethical, not to mention illegal, for you force even the most sanitized version of religion on your students. It may go against your personal beliefs, but everyone in this country, including your students, has the right not to believe in god.

It seems that you should be aware, as a public education district, that this country was founded on the idea that government and religion should not mix. History has spoken with a bull horn about the consequences of blurring the line between religion and government. It horrifies me that children in your district may not be taught to respect their own rights and the rights of others because you taught them that it has no value.

How can you, with any sincerity, teach the true meaning of the constitution if you so willingly take no notice of it? How can you teach your students to be law abiding, constructive members of society, if you so willfully ignore the first law of this country?

I value the constitution and our free education system. Do not dismiss your duty to your pupils because you can't separate your personal convictions from your duty. If you were unable to do your duty as a government official, you should not have run for office. Once elected and put in office, you have a duty to all the citizens of this country to do the right thing. I trust, now that you have been made aware that you have violated the rights of your students, you will quickly abandon this effort and act in the manner they deserve.

I will leave you with the words of some of our founders that I hope you take their words to heart.

"As the Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion..." - Treaty of Tripoli signed by President Adams and ratified unanimously by Congress.

"Question with boldness even the existence of a god." - Thomas Jefferson (letter to Peter Carr, 10 August 1787)

I await your changed decision,
LaRae Meadows

http://lake.stark.k12.oh.us/home/contactus/contact-form/

Published by LaRae Meadows

Writing has always been a passion for me. I have written legislation, legislative opinion papers, comedy, movie reviews and editorials.  View profile

  • Not only is this illegal, it is intellectual negligence on the part of the school district.
  • I'm not the only one to notice the failure of the Ohio education system in the area of history.
  • A school district that disregards their duty to their pupils should not be met with simple silence.

4 Comments

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  • Troy1/25/2012

    No, I got to this School, I am a junior. It is not an intolerany school in any way at all. It pushes its kids to be free thinkers. And I would like to clarify that nowhere in its Mission Statement does it set a goal for students for a beleif in God. It simply says "we value a beleif in God." That is in NO way a violation of the constitution. The school does not merge religion and school, it simply says that a beleif in God is valued. It is not pushing views on students nor is it in any way promoting any religion. IT IS JUST A THING THAT THE COMMUNITY OF LAKE VALUES! Th eonly people that are offended by lake's mission statement are people who are not even a member of the Lake community. These people who attacked my school are truly the ones pushing views on people. And as for the person who claims to have graduated from Lake years ago, I don't know how many years ago they graduated but it is FAR different now. Sure there are still many Christians in Lake who are proud and show that they are Christian, BUT there are also a good number of Jewish people and Muslims. And just so you know, when our school was attacked by people who wanted to push their views on us... Christians, Jews, and Muslims all stood together to keep "We value a beleif in God" in our mission statement. So how bout we all stop putting our noses in each others' business, and if a whole community is fine with a beleif in God, just leave it be. To each their own.

  • Also Anonymous1/15/2010

    Now, you know that's not true. The school distract itself isn't intolerant. A few people are. The only "freethinkers" people harass are those whose "freethinking" harms others.

    I've told my friends that I'm basically agnostic and no one has faulted me for that.

    I'm sorry a few people treated you poorly but the school district is the place that helped you to get to a place where you could study history.

  • Anonymous12/24/2009

    Thank you for this essay. I actually graduated from this school system years ago. It was a very intolerant school and my friends and I were often harassed for being freethinkers, gay or anything outside of their "norm." Their norm being nothing but Christianity. The one thing this school did teach me was to get out and move to a big city, where I ended up studying history intensively (among other subjects).

  • Davida Chazan8/30/2009

    You know, there's a place for teaching children to believe in God. That place is in your houses of worship and private religious schools. It does NOT belong in the public school system. I wish you luck!

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