Scientology school gets close study
- http://news.bostonherald.com/
- [Texte intégral]
A Boston city councilor is raising concerns
about a pilot school’s proposed curriculum and its ties to an arm of
Scientology, while a prestigious Hub charitable foundation is taking a second
look at its grant to help launch the controversial school.
“We’re reviewing the grant proposal in light of new materials,” Boston
Foundation spokesman David Trueblood said of the organization’s $20,000 gift to
the proposed “Cornerstone for Success Academy.”
The Herald reported yesterday that the proposed taxpayer-funded high school
would base its curriculum on a model created by Applied Scholastics
International - the educational arm of the Church of Scientology. Applied
Scholastics officials, however, say the program is not religious and is run
separately from the church.
The grant will be used as seed money by a group of Hub teachers pushing for
the new pilot school, which needs approval of Boston school and union officials.
Trueblood said the Boston Foundation did “no evaluation” and didn’t know of the
Scientology link - despite references to Applied Scholastics in the group’s
application.
Scientology is a federally recognized religion but has been widely
criticized as a destructive, mind-controlling cult. A national anti-Scientology
campaign was recently launched by Anonymous, a group of computer hackers and
protesters who have blasted the church’s teachings.
Boston Teachers Union spokesman Richard Stutman criticized the Boston
Foundation grant as “irresponsible,” in light of financial woes facing existing
city schools.
“The $20,000 could be far better used in any of the 144 other schools,”
Stutman said. “To them (the foundation), $20,000 is not a lot of money. Tell
that to a school suffering hardships.”
City Councilor Sam Yoon has called a hearing on the plan, citing concerns
about a taxpayer-funded school with a “hidden agenda.”
“It’s about full disclosure,” Yoon said. “I would want to know if a school
I’m considering is basing its entire curriculum on something that comes out of
the Church of Scientology and what that connection is.”
In a statement, Boston Church of Scientology spokesman Gerard Renna said
the teaching methods pioneered by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard are
“tremendously effective.” He added that the curriculum “is entirely secular and
recognized throughout the world.”
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