South Aussie Xtian chalkies upset when told they cannot teach fairy-tales as science.
But of course they are confused about what they have been told.
The South Australian Non-Government Schools Registration Board said it required ”teaching of science as an empirical discipline, focusing on inquiry, hypothesis, investigation, experimentation, observation and evidential analysis”.
Note to the ‘fundies’ who claim that this “effectively bans the teaching of creationism”: It only says that you cannot teach your infantile fairy-tales in Science classes.
GOT THAT you deaf dumb and blind retards??
You are still permitted to lie to pupils in lessons other than science.
I’ll spell it out for delusional Xtian ‘teachers’ out there:
* Bad man says you will be put on the naughty step every time you tell kiddies that all stuff was created by your magic friend, if you tell them that it is a thing called “Science”.
* You plainly do not know what Science is. It is a very hard subject. It is too hard for people with crippled minds to learn.
* Leave Science teaching to the people who understand it.
* You will get a gold star & a koala stamp once you stop lying about being told to not tell tales and make stuff up. Don’t worry, I have all year.
The chief executive of Christian Schools Australia, Stephen O’Doherty, said the board statement was too strident, removing the right to teach ”biblical perspectives” as part of science
Right Stephen, you plainly weren’t listening. On to the naughty step. “biblical perspectives” is NOT in any way a part of Science.
They are reducing the chance of students being taught bullshit masquerading as science.
But Mr O’Doherty said a close reading of the South Australian policy indicated it was going a step further and banning teaching of the subject altogether. It was the only such subject singled out, he said.
What ever shall we do with you? Any suggestions from the class? I suggest basic remedial reading & comprehension lessons.
A spokesman for the South Australian Non-Government Schools Registration Board said it was not banning teaching of creationism full-stop. ”It can be taught in religious studies.”
That’s better! You see Stephen? That shows that you were wrong.
| Print article | This entry was posted by Michael Kingsford Gray on March 4, 2010 at 8:20 am, and is filed under Activism, Politics, Society. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed. |











about 1 year ago
I would like Stephen to bring a talking snake to class, and also demonstrate immaculate conception with crash-test dummies.
There’s always hobe skoolink.
about 1 year ago
When requesting the religious to show their ‘talking snake’, remember that many Priests do exactly this in private to their juvenile catamite victims.