April 2022 Church & State Magazine

AU Expresses Concern Over Pa. School District’s Links To Baptist Church Tutoring

  AU Expresses Concern Over Pa. School District’s Links To Baptist Church Tutoring

A public school district in Pennsylvania is under scrutiny for its ties to a Baptist church that is offering free tutoring to students.

A parent at the Pennridge School District in Bucks County became suspicious of a tutoring program run by the First Baptist Church of Perkasie after she contacted the program about tutoring for her daughter.

Laura Foster told WHYY radio that her daughter Camille needed some help with the evolution unit on the AP Biology exam. The free tutoring program, Re:vivals, was listed on the schools district’s website as a resource, so Foster got in touch to ask if they could be of assistance.

The reply Foster received surprised her. Re:vivals’ Donna Tindall told her they could help, but she made it clear the program would teach biology through a “biblical worldview … meaning that we believe that God created the world in six literal days.”

Tindall added, “Although we accept this through faith, there is evidence pointing in that direction. I think our tutor would welcome the opportunity to help [Camille] understand what is being presented and perhaps to examine the presuppositions as well as the supporting facts for both conclusions.”

Foster saw the problem right away, telling WHYY, “This is not an appropriate source for my child. It should not be listed as a tutoring service for any children for the district. Regardless if your kid’s going to college or not, we want to make sure that we’re providing them with the best foundation to succeed in life.”

Re:vivals is one among many different kinds of programs listed on the district’s website as community resources. But it is the only tutoring program listed there. And while Superintendent David Bolton said that the district offers other tutoring options, WHYY reported that Re:vivals is the only free tutoring service and the only one that supports Spanish-speaking students that is recommended by the district, which might make it a more attractive option for some parents.

Bolton also said he had “spoken directly with Re:Vivals about the tutoring program before it began and [had] personally visited multiple times and [had] received feedback from multiple families who have used the service.”

But AU says that level of school-district involvement with the program is deeply troubling. As Alex J. Luchenitser, associate vice president and associate legal director of Am­ericans United, pointed out, “If the superintendent or other school officials are taking actions that communicate to parents or students that the school district does endorse or promote or approve the content of this particular religious program, then there would … be a violation of the U.S. Constitution and the separation of church and state.”

Luchenitser also noted, “If a program is presented as a tutoring program, but what it really turns into is a prayer program or spiritual counseling program or something that focuses on trying to get the children into the religious groups, then that presents serious concerns.”

Re:vivals’ flyer makes it intentions clear. The group exists, it says, “to bring hope and healing to the community through the gospel of Jesus Christ.”

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