Anonymous wrote:who cares. the big bang theory is only a best guess. never can be proven.
secondly, there's no evidence humans came from monkeys or any other animal. or dogs came from toads. nobody has ever found EVER a sort of changling skeleton or fossil that's half this half that. and we've found human skeletons supposedly millions of years old, granted different variants of human/homo. but never half animal half human.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Why?
I thought DD might benefit from a smaller school, they have a better math curriculum, it's inexpensive, close to where we live, they have decent ACT scores.
Anonymous wrote:
Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, how long do you expect your DD to attend this school? Only for 1st grade?
I don't know. I was considering it long term. But I won't send her there if they won't teach real science.
I'm just curious about the religions schools... if they teach from the religious point of view (which they should, if they're truly religious), then how to they students pass SAT and ACT tests?
My boss's son got into MIT, majoring in biomedical engineering, after attending a Catholic school. How on Earth did he study sciences there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, how long do you expect your DD to attend this school? Only for 1st grade?
I don't know. I was considering it long term. But I won't send her there if they won't teach real science.
I'm just curious about the religions schools... if they teach from the religious point of view (which they should, if they're truly religious), then how to they students pass SAT and ACT tests?
My boss's son got into MIT, majoring in biomedical engineering, after attending a Catholic school. How on Earth did he study sciences there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, how long do you expect your DD to attend this school? Only for 1st grade?
I don't know. I was considering it long term. But I won't send her there if they won't teach real science.
I'm just curious about the religions schools... if they teach from the religious point of view (which they should, if they're truly religious), then how to they students pass SAT and ACT tests?
My boss's son got into MIT, majoring in biomedical engineering, after attending a Catholic school. How on Earth did he study sciences there?
Anonymous wrote:OP, how long do you expect your DD to attend this school? Only for 1st grade?
Anonymous wrote:I'm considering a private Christian school for DD's first grade.
I like the fact that they follow Saxon math.
But their about the Social Studies and Science it says the following:
"Our Social Studies curriculum focuses on understanding issues within a society and a culture from a Biblical perspective. Students are taught good citizenship through the development of our Christian and American heritage as defined by God’s law. Additionally, history topics are taught from a providential prospective. Our curriculum resources include Macmillan’s Communities Near and Far, Yellow Hammer’s The Alabama Journey, Glencoe McGraw-Hill’s The American Journey, Weekly Reader’s Map Skills for Today, and Scholastic News.
Our Science curriculum is taught from a Creationist viewpoint. The science curriculum resource is by Purposeful Design Publications. The curriculum helps students gain a deeper appreciation of God’s creation through scientific observation, experimentation, analysis, and age-appropriate scientific inquiry. "
What do you think it meas? What would you expect? That they wont' be teaching evolution or biology?