Oklahoma’s new public schools superintendent is rescinding a mandate from his predecessor that forced schools to place Bibles in classrooms and incorporate the book into lesson plans for students.
The Associated Press reports that State Superintendent of Public Instruction Lindel Fields has isseud a statement that he has “no plans to distribute Bibles or a Biblical character education curriculum in classrooms.”
The directive on Bibles issued last year by then-Superintendent Ryan Walters drew immediate condemnation from civil rights groups and prompted a lawsuit from a group of parents, teachers and religious leaders that is pending before the Oklahoma Supreme Court.
Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt appointed Fields to the superintendent’s post after Walters resigned last month to take a job in the private sector.
Jacki Phelps, an attorney for the Oklahoma State Department of Education, said she intends to notify the court of the agency’s plan to rescind the mandate and seek a motion to dismiss the lawsuit.
Attorneys representing the plaintiffs in the lawsuit said they were encouraged by Fields’ decision.
“The attempts to promote religion in the classroom and the abuses of power that the Oklahoma State Department of Education engaged in under Walters’ tenure should never happen in Oklahoma or anywhere in the United States again,” the attorneys said in a statement.
Many schools districts across the state had decided not to comply with the Bible mandate.
A spokeswoman for the state education department, Tara Thompson, said Fields believes the decision on whether the Bible should be incorporated into classroom instruction is one best left up to individual districts and that spending money on Bibles is not the best use of taxpayer resources.
Earlier this year, Walters had announced plans to team up with country music singer Lee Greenwood and solicit donations to get Bibles into classrooms after a legislative panel rejected his $3 million request to pau for the effort.
Walters had made banning certain books from school libraries and getting rid of “radical leftists” a focal point of his administration. Since his election in 2020, he imposed a number of mandates on public schools and worked to develop new social studies standards for K-12 public school students that included teaching about conspiracy theories related to the 2020 presidential election.
Thompson said the agency plans to review all of Walters’ edicts, including a requirement that applicants from teacher jobs coming from California and New York take an ideology exam.