BibleLiteracy.org: An educated person is familiar with the Bible As seen in a TIME magazine cover story.
 
   
 

Background Resources

This page contains research and implementation guidelines for academic study of the Bible in public schools.

Standards for Bible Literacy Courses
 
National and state standards area available for Alabama, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas. Click here to view the state-by-state documents.

 
The Bible & Public Schools: A First Amendment Guide, co-published by the Bible Literacy Project and the First Amendment Center, provides consensus legal guidelines for teaching the Bible in public schools, and was endorsed by 21 national educational, religious, and civil liberties groups, including the National School Boards Association, the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, the National Association of Evangelicals, and the American Jewish Congress.

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The Bible And Its Influence
 
Textbook Sampler for The Bible and Its Influence

Sample chapters and information from the Bible Literacy Project's Textbook, The Bible and Its Influence - the first of its kind produced in nearly thirty years.

Download SampleChapters.pdf

This is a large file. It is better to right click and choose "Save Target As..." and save it your local hard drive before opening it.
 


 
Introduction to The Bible and Its Influence: Teacher’s Edition

The introduction to the Teacher's Edition provides a complete overview of the textbook, its philosophy of education, backgrounds, and teaching recommendations. You may read it here or download a full-color excerpt as a PDF file from the actual textbook. Use the link to the right.

View the introduction.

Download a PDF of the  Introduction
 


 
Bible Literacy Report: What do American teens need to know and what do they know? found that 90% of English teachers interviewed believe that Biblical knowledge is crucial for a good education. This landmark national study of high school English teachers revealed that American high school students are deficient in their academic knowledge of the Bible, and it is limiting their ability to study literature and understand art, music, history, and culture. The study, funded by the John Templeton Foundation, also contains a Gallup poll of teenagers which found that:
  • 17% thought "the road to Damascus" was where Jesus was crucified.
  • 68% couldn't identify who asked "am I my brother's keeper?" (Cain).
  • 53% couldn't name the Biblical event at Cana (turning water into wine).
  • 22% thought Moses was either one of Jesus' 12 apostles, an Egyptian pharaoh or an angel.

Read the Executive Summary

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Bible Literacy Report II: What University Professors Say Incoming Students Need to Know, revealed that English professors surveyed at leading universities--including Yale, Harvard, Princeton and Stanford--agreed that "regardless of a person's faith, an educated person needs to know about the Bible." Released June 1, 2006, the report surveyed 39 English professors at 34 top U.S. colleges and universities, who said that knowledge of the Bible is a deeply important part of a good education.

Read the Executive Summary

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