News U.S. Summary of Clinton guidelines Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By J. Correspondent | July 21, 1995 Sign up for Weekday J and get the latest on what's happening in the Jewish Bay Area. *Public school administrators and teachers may neither encourage nor discourage student participation in religious activities. Nor may they participate in such events with students. They may participate in private religious activities in faculty lounges. *Public schools may not provide religious instruction, but they may teach about religion, including the Bible or other Scripture. Schools may highlight secular aspects of religious holidays, but they may not observe them as religious events. They may also excuse students from classes they or their parents find religiously or otherwise objectionable. *Schools may dismiss students for religious instruction, as long as the classes are off school grounds. *Although schools must remain neutral on religion, they can teach basic moral values. *Although outsiders are not allowed to circulate religious literature, students may distribute such information, which must adhere to the time, place and manner restrictions schools impose on handing out non-school literature. *Students may wear religious attire, such as yarmulkes, and clothes with religious slogans. Such slogans are subject to the same rules the schools apply to comparable messages. *Students may express religious beliefs in assignments, and make religious or anti-religious remarks in a classroom discussion or presentation as long as they are relevant to the topic at hand. Such work should be judged by ordinary academic standards. *The Equal Access Act allows secondary student religious clubs to meet at their schools, as long as the school permits noncurriculum activities during nonschool hours. Such meetings may include a prayer service, Bible reading or other worship exercise. *A public school must allow those student groups to use the school media, such as the newspaper, bulletin board or public address system to publicize their meetings. J. Correspondent Also On J. Philanthropy In ’90s, S.F. b’nai mitzvah kids began turning gift cash into grants Politics Newsom signs four state bills protecting Jewish interests Recipe Squash stuffed with spiced lentil and rice is perfect for Sukkot Education Kehillah high school drops ‘Jewish’ from name, sparking backlash Subscribe to our Newsletter I would like to receive the following newsletters: Weekday J From Our Sponsors (helps fund our journalism) Your Sunday J Holiday Bytes