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Eight Unique Features of the Bible Literacy Project’s Textbook

The first of its kind for the academic study of the Bible in public high schools

1. It was created to fulfill the standards of The Bible & Public Schools: A First Amendment Guide, co-published by the Bible Literacy Project and the First Amendment Center. The Guide provides a consensus statement about how the Bible can be taught in public schools, and was endorsed by 20 national educational and religious organizations, including the National Education Association, the National School Boards Association, the National Association of Evangelicals, the American Jewish Congress, and the Baptist Joint Committee for Legislative and Public Affairs, among many others.

2. It has been examined by 40 reviewers, with their feedback incorporated into the editing of the text. The reviewers include prominent literature academics as well as high school teachers and scholars from the Roman Catholic, Protestant Evangelical, Mainline Protestant, Eastern Orthodox and Jewish traditions. (Reviewers are listed in the press room at www.bibleliteracy.org).

3. It is a student textbook. While some curricula offer only a teacher’s guide, the Bible Literacy Project textbook will be the only student textbook produced in the last 30 years. It presents a straightforward explanation of the narratives, themes, and characters of the Hebrew Scriptures and the New Testament. The course includes direct reading from the Bible. Students will use the translation of the Bible with which they are most comfortable.

4. It broadly covers the cultural contexts and influences of the Bible with examples of art, literature, rhetoric and music. The textbook contains engaging features entitled Historical Connections, The Bible in Literature, Cultural Connections (music, art, rhetoric), and Into Everyday Language. Special one or two-page features include “Abraham Lincoln and the Bible,” “Handel’s Messiah,” “The Bible and Emancipation,” Shakespeare and the Bible,” among many others. (There are more than 1300 Biblical references in the works of Shakespeare alone, and more than 60% of allusions to learn for one AP literature exam prep course are Biblical phrases. Citations provided at www.bibleliteracy.org.)

5. It preserves the ability of parents to teach their view of the Bible’s religious significance. The text presents a fair and academic presentation of the Bible, without prejudice to a particular view of canon and doctrine.

6. It has been pilot tested both in public high schools and in a university training course for English teachers. After only one year on the market, this course is being taught in school districts in 29 states.

7. The first national, university-based training for teachers in how to teach Bible literature in the public schools is available online at www.bibleliteracy.org/training through our partnership with the Concordia University (Portland) School of Education.

8. A teachers' edition of the textbook, which assists teachers in creating a course that is legal, fair and enriching to students, is now available. It is included at no charge with each orders of 25 student textbooks.

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