School survey shocks parent-religious profiling
Posted: Sun Aug 24, 2008 4:25 pm
FLIPPIN — Lisa Lee of Bull Shoals was shocked Thursday evening when she saw a survey containing religious questions her son was asked to complete during his career-orientation class at Flippin Middle School.
Lee, who has a meeting set Monday with school officials to discuss the issue, says she will ask them to shred the completed surveys that were taken this week by eighth-graders in career orientation class.
"No one needs to see this information," Lee said. "It's religious profiling."
After being informed about the survey Friday, a professor who teaches career orientation at Arkansas State University says the survey has "credibility issues" and he will recommend the survey be taken down from a Web site.
The survey, titled "Attitude Inventory," asks students to rate themselves on questions such as "I daydream about making a lot of money" and "I have a regular dental checkup once a year." Also included are questions about whether the student prays to God about his or her problems, or whether the student believes that tithing 1/10 of earnings is one's duty to God.
The survey asks students to rate themselves from 1 to 5 on the questions, with 5 meaning "positively yes." Once the 100-question survey is complete, the student adds up the scores, with 500 being a perfect score.
The survey tells students that scores greater than 400 mean students have a very positive outlook and could be very successful with everything they do. The survey states scores below 200 mean students don't have a good perspective of the world around them and need attitude adjustments. ......
Flippin Superintendent Dale Query told The Bulletin on Friday he plans to talk to Lee on Monday and still is gathering information about the survey.
Query said the survey was taken from the Arkansas Career Orientation Teachers Association (ACOTA) Web site, which is affiliated with the Arkansas Department of Workforce Education.
The Web site makes available material created by teachers to be used by other teachers at their discretion, said Sharla Hartzell, president-elect for the Arkansas Career Guidance Association, a professional organization for teachers and counselors.
Baxter Bulletin August 23, 2008
The survey is linked here.
I don't expect it to be up much longer. Reveals too much left over Huckabee.
(Having helped raise a teen just two years ago I can say that had they waited two years, until the kids were in the tenth grade, the students would play the survey)
Lee, who has a meeting set Monday with school officials to discuss the issue, says she will ask them to shred the completed surveys that were taken this week by eighth-graders in career orientation class.
"No one needs to see this information," Lee said. "It's religious profiling."
After being informed about the survey Friday, a professor who teaches career orientation at Arkansas State University says the survey has "credibility issues" and he will recommend the survey be taken down from a Web site.
The survey, titled "Attitude Inventory," asks students to rate themselves on questions such as "I daydream about making a lot of money" and "I have a regular dental checkup once a year." Also included are questions about whether the student prays to God about his or her problems, or whether the student believes that tithing 1/10 of earnings is one's duty to God.
The survey asks students to rate themselves from 1 to 5 on the questions, with 5 meaning "positively yes." Once the 100-question survey is complete, the student adds up the scores, with 500 being a perfect score.
The survey tells students that scores greater than 400 mean students have a very positive outlook and could be very successful with everything they do. The survey states scores below 200 mean students don't have a good perspective of the world around them and need attitude adjustments. ......
Flippin Superintendent Dale Query told The Bulletin on Friday he plans to talk to Lee on Monday and still is gathering information about the survey.
Query said the survey was taken from the Arkansas Career Orientation Teachers Association (ACOTA) Web site, which is affiliated with the Arkansas Department of Workforce Education.
The Web site makes available material created by teachers to be used by other teachers at their discretion, said Sharla Hartzell, president-elect for the Arkansas Career Guidance Association, a professional organization for teachers and counselors.
Baxter Bulletin August 23, 2008
The survey is linked here.
I don't expect it to be up much longer. Reveals too much left over Huckabee.
(Having helped raise a teen just two years ago I can say that had they waited two years, until the kids were in the tenth grade, the students would play the survey)