Thursday, January 22, 2009

AC;I TP SIE TOZA

agrasen

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[prohindu] ACLU sues TIZA for promoting Islam

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EagleSM23 Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 8:37 AM
Reply-To: prohindu-owner@yahoogroups.com
To: eaglesm23@yahoo.com


ACLU to sue TIZA charter school in Twin Cities
http://www.twincities.com/ci_11513813
Magan Boldt

Tarek ibn Ziyad Academy, a tax-supported public charter school, is blurring the line between religion and public education by promoting Islam, according to a lawsuit filed today by the American Civil Liberties Union of Minnesota.

The suit argues that the school is violating the First Amendment and the U.S. Constitution by sharing space with the Muslim American Society, promoting prayer in school and endorsing Muslim clothing rules and dietary practices.

"This is not a sectarian school that focuses on Middle Eastern culture," said Chuck Samuelson, executive director of the ACLU's state chapter. "This is a pervasively Muslim school that teaches religion."

The Minnesota Department of Education, the school's sponsor and several school leaders also were named in the suit filed in U.S District Court.

Charters are publicly funded schools, approved by the state education department, that operate outside the traditional school district system.
TiZA, founded in 2003, teaches 430 students in kindergarten through eighth-grade at campuses in Inver Grove Height and Blaine.

The charter school is expected to receive about $3.8 million in per-pupil funding this year, according to ACLU estimates.

A state investigation last year found the school was mostly in compliance with state and federal law, but needed to modify its Friday communal prayer and busing practices.
TiZA officials pointed to those findings, claiming in a written statement released today that the lawsuit is without merit. And they chastised the ACLU for not visiting the school before filing the lawsuit.

"TiZA will continue to abide by all state and federal laws," the statement said.
The lawsuit contends TiZA endorses Muslim religious practices by:

Permitting prayer sessions during school hours and having teacher-sanctioned religious material posted on classroom bulletin boards.
Allowing students and teachers to gather for 30 minutes of communal prayer every Friday.
Giving preference to Muslim clothing rules. Girls, but not boys, are prohibited from wearing short sleeves. They also are required to wear skirts or trousers of a certain length, depending on their grade level. Female teachers have to be covered from neck to wrist and ankle.
The lawsuit also accuses the state education department of dispersing public funds to the charter school despite repeated violations of state law.
Chas Anderson, deputy commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Education, said in a written statement that state law requires charter schools to remain nonsectarian and state education officials take that requirement very seriously.
"The Department is in the process of carefully reviewing the ACLU lawsuit and will thoroughly respond through the legal process," Anderson said in the statement.
"We will continue to monitor the operations of TiZA Academy and, in response to issues raised about the school over the past year, we are in the process of drafting legislation to address these concerns."
This isn't the first time TiZA has attracted public scrutiny. Last year, a columnist for the Star Tribune of Minneapolis wrote that the school mixed the roles of religion and public education. Katherine Kersten's column aired a substitute teacher's allegations that school officials promoted Islam in the classroom.
That sparked the investigation by the state education department. In May, department officials recommended the charter school modify its communal prayers on Fridays and provide after-school busing at different times for students who aren't participating in religious activities.
School officials have said they have took corrective actions. They also said they received numerous threats and hate mail after the newspaper column ran.
TiZA students, many of them recent immigrants, have had better than average success on state-required exams.
At the Inver Grove Heights campus, 86 percent of students are low income and about 70 percent are English language learners, according to state data for the 2006-07 school year.
In 2008, 80 percent of the students were proficient in math, compared with the statewide average of 66 percent.
Joe Nathan, director of the Center for School Change at the University of Minnesota, said the ACLU should be praising the charter school, not suing it.
Nathan said he has spent many hours at TiZA doing research and saw nothing to suggest the school was promoting a single religion. In his 35 years as an educator, Nathan said, he would put TiZA in the top 5 percent of schools he has reviewed in terms of academic excellence and commitment to tolerance.
"As an American Jew who strongly believes in the separation of church and state, if I thought this was a school that was crossing the line and teaching religion, I wouldn't support it," he said. "This school is a model of results, diversity and tolerance."
But Samuelson said TiZA's practices are still violating constitutional law.
"However well-run and academically challenging a religious school may be, it is unconstitutional for public funds to be used for religious education," he said.
The lawsuit comes at a time when state lawmakers say scrutinizing and tightening rules for charter schools is at the top of their legislative agenda.
Proposed changes include requiring sponsors to better monitor their schools' financial and academic performance, reducing board members' conflicts of interest and clarifying how charters can spend money they receive for leasing space.
"It is critical that the Legislature ensure that charter schools are run in the most accountable, efficient and transparent way possible," said Sen. Kathy Saltzman, DFL-Woodbury, who is chairing a task force tackling charter school issues this session.
"Without better oversight, the public's confidence in our charter schools is in jeopardy," she said.
Maricella Miranda contributed to this report. Megan Boldt can be reached at 651-228-5495.
'COMPLEX RELATIONSHIPS'
The ACLU lawsuit claims TiZA and the Muslim American Society of Minnesota are linked by a "complex interconnecting set of personal, corporate and operational relationships." They include:
Officials from the society have served in prominent leadership roles at the school.
TiZA's Inver Grove Heights campus is located in the same building as the Muslim American Society's mosque and headquarters. And the society's Blaine chapter has used the telephone number at the charter's Blaine campus to conduct business.
The Muslim American Society has offered an after-school Muslim studies program at the Inver Grove Heights campus and has conducted prayer sessions at TiZA during school hours.


__._,_.___

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home