Students Re-enact "Scopes Monkey Trial" |
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Homeschoolers use transcripts from famous evolution caseby Hamilton Richardson Printed in The Montgomery Advertiser ![]() About 30 students from Autauga and Elmore county homeschool organizations participated in the U.S. history exercise, which included the students dressing in garb from the early 1900s and using much more difficult language than they might normally use in everyday conversation. "We were looking for activities we could use as living history events," said homeschool mom and teacher Lori Herring. "Our goal in teaching history is to encourage and allow the students to not only understand the time period they are studying, but to give them the framework to connect history to the world events of today." Herring said that the students, in re-creating the trial of teacher John Thomas Scopes, read from the actual transcripts of the event. ![]() Scopes, a teacher in Dayton, Tenn., was charged on May 5, 1925, with violating Tennessee's Butler Act, which prohibited the teaching of evolution in schools. He was tried in a case known as the Scopes Monkey Trial. "The issues involved in the Scopes Monkey Trial are still issues in our culture today," Herring continued as she explained the importance of the issues presented at the trial. "We are still fighting this battle in our society and in the educational institutions. Darwinism is taught as fact instead of theory in many schools under the guise of academic freedom." Jenny Dunn, who also homeschools her kids, said that the group has been studying the early 1900s and the beginning roots of progressivism. ![]() Dunn said through this exercise, the students have learned how important it is to know how to defend their religion and also to understand the background of contrary points of view. To read the rest of the article, go to: http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=20103240302 |