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The Equal Access Act is designed to ensure
that, consistent with the First Amendment, student
religious activities are accorded the same access to
public school facilities as are student secular
activities. Based on decisions of the Federal courts, as
well as its interpretations of the Act, the Department of
Justice has advised that the Act should be interpreted as
providing, among other things, that: General provisions:
Student religious groups at public secondary schools have
the same right of access to school facilities as is
enjoyed by other comparable student groups. Under the
Equal Access Act, a school receiving Federal funds that
allows one or more student noncurriculum-related clubs to
meet on its premises during noninstructional time may not
refuse access to student religious groups.
Prayer services and worship exercises covered: A meeting,
as defined and protected by the Equal Access Act, may
include a prayer service, Bible reading, or other worship
exercise.
Equal access to means of publicizing meetings: A school
receiving Federal funds must allow student groups meeting
under the Act to use the school media -- including the
public address system, the school newspaper, and the
school bulletin board -- to announce their meetings on the
same terms as other noncurriculum-related student groups
are allowed to use the school media. Any policy concerning
the use of school media must be applied to all
noncurriculum-related student groups in a
nondiscriminatory matter. Schools, however, may inform
students that certain groups are not school sponsored.
Lunch-time and recess covered: A school creates a limited
open forum under the Equal Access Act, triggering equal
access rights for religious groups, when it allows
students to meet during their lunch periods or other
noninstructional time during the school day, as well as
when it allows students to meet before and after the
school day.
Revised May 1998
Reprinted from
www.ed.gov/Speeches/08-1995/religion.html |