USA Today ran a lengthy piece today about one of the stranger culture-war lawsuits in the country. To quickly summarize, a Christian high school and the Association of Christian Schools International (ACSI) are suing the University of California system, because it won’t accept credits from private high school courses that don’t “adequately teach the subject matter.”
I find it fascinating, if for no other reason, because I can’t imagine what the plaintiffs are thinking.
The Calvary Chapel Christian School of Murrieta, Calif., with 1,300 students, is suing UC for not giving credits for some courses with a “Christian viewpoint” when students apply for university admission. The lawsuit is about theological content in “every major area in high school except for mathematics,” says Wendell Bird, a lawyer for Calvary Chapel.
Courses in dispute include history, English, social studies and science. In federal court here, U.S. District Judge S. James Otero could rule soon on the university system’s motion to dismiss the high school’s claims that its First Amendment rights to free speech and religion were infringed.
The school has also sued on other grounds, such as that UC has unconstitutionally treated Calvary students unequally compared to other students.
I can appreciate that “discrimination” can take on meanings with subtle differences, but this lawsuit is misguided. The University of California wants incoming students to have a certain base of education and knowledge. Students who received an inadequate education are therefore unprepared for the rigors of the university curriculum and aren’t welcome. For this, the Assn. of Christian Schools International is claiming “discrimination.” Apparently, they’re not kidding.
I think the phrase to keep in mind here is “academic standards.”
UC, like nearly every other state university system in the nation, welcomes students who learned a lot in high school, did well on entrance exams, have demonstrated an understanding of a broad series of subjects, shown a willingness to take on intellectual challenges, etc. The Calvary Chapel school not only wants to teach young people poorly, it also wants UC not to mind.
The civil rights lawsuit filed by Calvary Chapel alleges that the 10-campus University of California is trampling the freedom of “a religious school to be religious.”
Nonsense. We’re talking about a school that not only allows religion to permeate every aspect of a student’s education, but does so in a way that leads to incomplete curriculum. Calvary Chapel uses its classes to shape a young person’s religious upbringing, not to convey the academic and objective information students need to succeed at the university level.
If the high school wants to teach young people poorly, it can do that. If it wants to charge their parents lots of money to give their kids an inadequate education, they can do that too. But to argue that state universities have to accept unprepared students is just silly.