BLP Billboard and Press Release 11/15/2006
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Contact: Sheila Weber, VP, BLP,
sheila@bibleliteracy.org,
646-322-6853
2006 National Bible Week launched by collaborative
media campaign between
the Bible Literacy Project and the National Bible Association
Five thousand billboards present nationwide message:
“An educated
person knows the Bible”
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Our sign at Business Route 31 and Winn
Road in Niles, Michigan
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NEW YORK, NY. To kick off National Bible Week (November 19-26),
the Bible Literacy Project (www.bibleliteracy.org)
and the National Bible Association (www.nationalbible.org)
announce they are co-sponsoring a national campaign to produce 5000 billboards which will
read "An educated person knows the Bible." The
billboards also direct viewers to “read the research” conducted
by the Bible Literacy Project and funded by the John Templeton
Foundation (www.templeton.org)
published in two national reports in 2005 and 2006, which revealed that
98 % high school English teachers and 100% of university professors
surveyed agreed that students need to know the Bible to be well-educated.
On Thursday, November 16th, Dr. John Templeton, Jr., trustee of National
Bible Association, will speak at the annual National Bible Week Dinner
at the Essex House in New York City. He will highlight the following
findings of the two recent national reports, entitled Bible Literacy
Report I: What American teens know and need to know; and Bible
Literacy Report II: What university professors say incoming students
need to know:
- 100% of university professors surveyed--including Yale, Harvard,
Princeton, and Stanford—agreed that incoming students need to know
the Bible. In a survey, they listed more than 60 books taught in
college which require knowledge of the Bible.
- 98% of high school English teachers said Bible knowledge gives a
distinct academic advantage to students in studying English.
- 90% of high school English teachers said Bible knowledge was
critical for a good education but that today's students are
"clueless, stumped, and confused."
- Bible Literacy Report I included a Gallup poll of 1002
teens and revealed that students do not know enough about the Bible
to properly understand British and American literature or understand
the Bible's impact on art, music, history and culture.
The idea for the Bible Literacy Project began within the board of the
National Bible Association, and later spun off to become its own entity.
Among its first effort was to publish a consensus statement for how to
teach the Bible in public schools, entitled The Bible and Public
Schools: A First Amendment Guide, which has been endorsed by 21
educational, legal, and religious groups.
Chuck Stetson, chairman of the Bible Literacy Project, was former vice
chairman of the National Bible Association, but launched the Bible
Literacy Project separately as a new endeavor to facilitate academic
study of the Bible in public schools, since it was a larger project than
the scope of National Bible allowed. “We have a tremendous disconnect in
public school education. On the one hand, national surveys show
virtually 100 percent of educators recognize the importance of knowing
the Bible -- that it is key to understanding English literature, as well
as art, music, history and culture. On the other hand, only 8 percent of
public schools teach about the Bible. As The Chicago Tribune
affirmed in their endorsing editorial, ‘Not to teach about the Bible is
failing our students,’” Stetson said.
Peter Giersch, President of the National Bible Association, stated “We
are happy to partner in a media campaign this year with Bible Literacy
Project. Our goal is that everyone should read the Bible.”
The Bible Literacy Project is providing educators with a new tool for
increasing students’ knowledge of the Bible with last year’s release of
a new public high school textbook, The Bible and Its Influence,
which has gained the respect and admiration of educators and parents
across the country.
To read the national reports or learn about the new public school
textbook, go to
www.bibleliteracy.org.
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