Will LifeWise Academy Take Kentucky Students to the Ark and Creation Museum?

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LifeWise Academy van.
LifeWise Academy is a religious instruction program that started in 2019 and now enrolls 50,000 students across 29 states. Photo by Megan Henry, Ohio Capital Journal. Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.

Certain Christian Nationalists, part of an organization known as LifeWise Academy, have found a way to get their religion into public schools in Ohio and are attempting to do the same here in Kentucky (and many other states). In Kentucky this could result in public school students visiting the Ark Encounter and Creation Museum in lieu of public school instruction. Below, I document Ohio students being taken to these fundamentalist Christian attractions with the cooperation of public schools. Kentucky students may also end up learning creationist nonsense during public school instruction time.

Recently, LifeWise Academy has been attempting to get a foothold in Kentucky’s 171 public school districts. LifeWise Academy is an Ohio-based ministry that has found a possible loophole to get Bible-based instruction into public school classrooms during school hours via “release time.” Release time laws in many places allow students to leave public school instruction for an hour a day, or in some places an hour a week, to receive religious instruction off-campus. However, LifeWise Academy has made release time into a major event where students get to leave school to receive numerous perks, such as pizza parties, while being evangelized and instructed in other ways.

Students whose parents do not allow them to participate have to remain in school for classes or study hall. There have been many complaints in Ohio of students that do not participate being bullied and/or ostracized. Many of the LifeWise activities promote Christian Nationalism, fake history, and various right-wing political ideologies, which leads to more bullying of marginalized students who do not participate. This mistreatment of non-participants is well-documented in the Facebook Group (Secular Education Program, formerly Parents AGAINST LifeWise).

Rangifer tarandus

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Photograph by Malcolm Schongalla.

Photography Contest, Honorable Mention.

Caribou skull
Rangifer tarandus – caribou skull found near the Russell Glacier on the West Coast of Greenland, June, 2022. The photo was taken with a Pixel 4a.

Ginkgo biloba

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Photograph by Al Denelsbeck.

Photography Contest, Honorable Mention.

Ginkgo biloba showing water droplets
Ginkgo biloba – ginkgo leaf after a heavy rain. Mr. Denelsbeck notes, "The leaves are quite water-repellent (hydrophobic) and cause the water to form almost-spherical drops under their own surface tension, which allows them to become lenses by themselves – you can see them showing further drops behind themselves. Often called a "living fossil," ginkgos are the last of their 300 my order, Ginkgoales, and easily distinguished by the leaf 'veins' which do not branch, but all originate from the base of the stem in a fanlike manner. This trait, along with the water-repellence, helps funnel water down to the trunk and thus to roots that would otherwise be blocked or redirected by the leaves. Canon 7D, Canon 18-135 STM at 135 mm, ISO 250, F/13, 1/200 s with custom softbox flash unit."

Knowing you are right, even when you are not

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Book cover

This little book, On Being Certain: Believing You Are Right Even When You’re Not, is not exactly about epistemology, that is, how we know what we know; rather, it is about how we think we know, even when potentially we do not. Indeed, it seems to me that it explains why the philosopher Lee McIntyre was by his own account singularly unsuccessful in convincing virtually any science denier about anything (see my article here).

The author of the present book, Robert Alan Burton, is a neurologist, not a philosopher. The book was originally published in 2009 and recently rereleased. It is well out of my area, so I have no way of knowing how much is dated. To oversimplify, Burton argues, somewhat apologetically, that there may be evolutionary advantage to having a module that quickly tells you, you are right. As he notes in the Preface,

Archilestes grandis

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Photograph by Joel Eissenberg.

Photography Contest, Honorable Mention.

Damselfly
Archilestes grandis – great spreadwing damselfly spotted at the Denver zoo. Prof. Eissenberg notes that "the resemblance between the damselfly and the twig to which it is clinging shows mimicry."