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  1. >Oklahoma’s new head of education, Lindel Fields, is dropping an unconstitutional requirement for schools to teach Bible-based social studies lessons. The requirement — issued by the state’s former head of education, Ryan Walters — resulted in lawsuits, alleging that it violated state policy-making rules and First Amendment protections against the establishment of a religion by the government.

    >Last month, [the state Supreme Court ruled](https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2025/09/state-supreme-court-says-christian-education-head-cant-force-schools-to-teach-the-bible/) that Walters couldn’t force schools to accept his requirement. In June 2024, Walters and the Oklahoma State Board of Education (OSBE) issued a guidance saying that K-12 school lessons should focus on the Bible’s influence on history, literature, music, and other arts and culture. Walters’ guidance mandated that every classroom contain a physical copy of the Bible, as well as copies of the Ten Commandments, the U.S. Constitution, and the Declaration of Independence.

    >After Walters released his guidance, about 33 Oklahoma parents, children, public school teachers, and faith leaders filed a lawsuit, alleging that the requirement violated the separation of church and state and state rule-making laws requiring the OSBE to provide proper public notice before voting on implementing any new curriculum standards.

    >“Superintendent Fields has no plans to distribute Bibles or a biblical education curriculum,” said interim Communications Director for Oklahoma State’s Department of Education Tara Thompson.

    I’m an Oklahoma teacher of social studies. We had to basically this year go and self-generate social studies standards to make social studies, in light of the derillction of duty from Walters. This is such a breath of fresh air. We had been under such duress as a state 50th in education. We need this change at every level, purging out Walters destructive mess.

  2. Actually? Really good, PragerU is fascist racist garbage and the Bible/10 commandments have no business in federally funded schools

    I’d prefer if they were more open and accepting of shit like LGBTQ but frankly in a state as red as Oklahoma I’ll take every win we can get this genuinely makes me happy to hear if they fully follow through

  3. Right up until Donny threatens to pull some ambiguous funding, then it’s back in line for them.

  4. Schools are not churches. I can’t believe we are still having this conversation. If you want to indoctrinate your children do it on your own time on Sundays and Wednesday nights.

  5. Choice-of-SteinsGate on

    When it was first announced that Oklahoma schools would be violating the first amendment, conservatives declared that “the nation is healing.”

    Well, now it appears that the “nation” has just stitched up a wound.

  6. CharlieKinbote on

    This shift & the public statements around it are a wildly welcome admission — insofar as there will be *any* admission — by one of the nation’s staunchest MAGA govs that his creepy friend was maybe not the dude who should have been making the kinds of basic decisions that determine educational norms for a whole state.

    *Of course* the weirdo would misappropriate educational funds to pay PR firms! *Of course* he would institute policies designed to attract national attention! Etc., etc., etc.

    Replacing him with a public-minded functionary (whose beliefs I presume are wildly different from mine, but which do not impact the *basic work of governing the public school system*) is such a hopeful sign in dark times. Here’s hoping for kids in Oklahoma

  7. ChanceryTheRapper on

    It’s a bare minimum thing, but good for them if they take a step back from the brink of this propaganda bullshit.

  8. Ryan Walters is such a human shit-stain. He comes into the job wreaking havoc and subjecting Oklahoma school districts to a bunch of lawsuits and then flits off to run some anti-teachers union grift before the consequences of his malicious leadership start to hit.

  9. If conservatives were serious about teaching the Bible in school, they would advocate for a comparative religion class. That way students could benefit from the academic understanding of religion.

    This kind of thing is what religious zealots have always run up against when they try to mix church and state.

    If Oklahoma can have Bible’s mandated in the schools, and mandatory Bible classes, then that means Dearborn Michigan could put Quran in the classroom, and teach Islamic jurisprudence. No Christian fundamentalist wants that to happen, so it’s in their interest to withdraw the request for special treatment for their religion.

    I find it insane in this current MAGA incarnation of reactionary conservatism that we are literally having to relitigate all the issues of the last 80 years, and people are dead set against learning the lessons that were learned, and purchased with blood sweat and tears over the past 80 to 100 years.

    We shouldn’t need to be forcing prayer or Bible’s in classrooms

    We shouldn’t need to be mandating bans on abortion

    We shouldn’t need to be repealing key elements of civil rights legislation

    This is all stuff that previous generations learned from, and we are just relitigating.

    It’s absolutely bat shit insane that we’re even dealing with this stuff in the year 2025 .

  10. Hmm… Odd. I refuse to believe a GOP person would do the “decent” or “legal” thing of their own free thinking. Something, someone, somewhere is making them lose money for this.

    I wonder if it has anything to do with Governor Newsom threatening to pull the funding plug on the NGA?

  11. When Mississippi is laughing at you for your shitty education system, even morons take notice.

  12. I have an unpaid speeding ticket in Oklahoma from 1998. It’s a convenient reason to never go back to that shithole state, not that you need one.

  13. rainshowers_5_peace on

    They probably realized that if kids read and understood the Bible they’d know inaccurate the Republicans Supply Side Jesus is.

  14. Missed opportunity for malicious compliance by the teachers to objectively teach the murder, rape, abuse, and destruction that has been done in the name of Christianity throughout history. You could even just look at US history and Christianity and have a whole semester worth of curriculum.

  15. auricularisposterior on

    Ahh man. I was planning on becoming a substitute teacher in Oklahoma to teach the [Documentary Hypothesis](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Documentary_hypothesis) to high schoolers by showing them how Genesis 1 – Genesis 2:3 and Genesis 2:4 – Genesis 4 are two separate independent creation myths (from differing factions within proto-Judaism) that were sandwiched together, likely during the Babylonian exile. Oh well, I guess they will just have to find this out the old fashioned way, through social media. It’s not like their parents or pastors are ever going to tell them this.

  16. Oklahama’s gain is now everyone’s pain. Mr. watches porn in his office wants to take his agenda nationally now.

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