scientology education
 
Articles
> Janesville Gazette
School to use Hubbard theories

> Quincy Herald Whig
Quincy to be Literacy Center's main office

> WBRZ News 2 Louisiana - The Advocate
Study skills class linked to Scientology

> Saint Petersburg Times
Scientology makes it in classroom door

> Saint Petersburg Times
Church tutors embrace methods

> Wichita Eagle
Quality of tutors goes unchecked

> Boston Globe
A new word in literacy -- Scientology

> The Observer (UK)
German police told to target Scientologists

> Riverfront Times
Applied Pressure: Should St. Louis County grant tax breaks to Scientology-linked tutoring programs?

> St. Pete Times
A Curious Alliance

> Chicago Daily Herald
Hubbard-inspired school opens

> Saint Petersburg Times
Spiritual symbiosis: A surprising one

> Riverfront Times
L Is for L. Ron

> WOAI.com San Antonio
SA School Used Scientology-Based Curriculum

> Saint Louis Post Dispatch
Hazelwood schools reject firm with ties to Scientology founder

> The Saint Louis Argus - STLArgus Blog
Censorship at the Argus

> Saint Louis Schools Watch
Union Leader Praises Williams

> Saint Louis Schools Watch
Hazelwood Public Schools Rejects Applied Scholastics

> Studytech.org
Hazelwood (Missouri) School Superintendent Rejects Applied Scholastics

> Saint Louis Schools Watch
Scientology and the Schools

> St. Louis Post Dispatch
St. Louis schools end training at center with Scientology ties

> The Boston Globe
Curiously, an outpost of Scientology

> Travolta promoting Study Technology on Tavis Smiley show
Studytech.org

> The Houston Press
Between the Lines: A Scientology-backed tutoring program looks to expand in the Houston area

> UW Fond Du Lac
Letter to parents

> Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Class yields a surprise subject
>
The Houston Press
Between the Lines: A Scientology-backed tutoring program looks to expand in the Houston area

> Larry King Show on CNN
Tom Cruise Denies He's Dyslexic

> The Star Online: Malaysia News
Mongolia adopts new method of learning

> The Lovelock Review-Miner
Board makes it official: Applied Scholastics study dropped

> Lovelock Review-Miner
Board orders staff to discontinue use of purported Scientology-connected books

> alt.religion.scientology
Scientology official admits ASI program a "generation plant"

> National Enquirer
Enquirer blasts Tom Cruise over dyslexia claim

> Associated Press
New headquarters for L. Ron Hubbard educational methods opens in St. Louis

> St. Louis Post Dispatch
L. Ron Hubbard-inspired teacher training center opens in county

> IMDB Presswire
Cruise slammed for dyslexia revelations

> Bedford McIntosh
Educational Wisdom from the People Who Brought You Battlefield Earth

> Fox News
People lets Tom Cruise promote Scienotology

> People Magazine
Tom Cruise claims Study Tech cured his illiteracy

> Magill
The company, the course, the church and the controversy

> St. Louis Post Dispatch
Villa Gesu Will House Teachers Of Group With Scientology Link

> CNN
Tom Cruise interview with Larry King

> Register.Co.UK
Cisco Exec backs Hubbardist Courses

> The Oregonian
Xenu and the evil yawns are nowhere in sight

> Boston Herald
Mayor, council star in urban comedy

> New York Post
Tom, Nicole split a question of faith

> Boston Herald
Scientology-linked project to get scrutiny

> Boston Herald
Scientology-linked project gets city grant

> NOW Magazine
Scientology wants city's kids

> St. Petersburg Times
New school to use ideas of Scientology's founder

October 13, 2005
Saint Louis Schools Watch
Hazelwood Public Schools Rejects Applied Scholastics


[Editor's note: The following article was set to run in the St. Louis Argus on October 13, 2005. While at the printer, the publisher pulled the article and replaced it with a press release from Applied Scholastics. A senior vice president of Applied Scholastics, Mary Adams, invited the publisher, Eddie Hasan, to visit their headquarters with his daughter to meet Isaac Hayes.]

Hazelwood Public Schools Rejects Applied Scholastics
by Peter Downs

October 11, 2005 -- Chris Wright, the superintendent of Hazelwood Public Schools, has written a sharply-worded letter to the chief executive office of Applied Scholastics rejecting her claim that the company is working with Hazelwood Public Schools to tutor students from low performing schools.

In the letter, dated October 4, 2005, Wright characterizes the claim by Bennetta Slaughter of Applied Scholastics as "patently false."

Wright continued: "We have repeatedly indicated that we are not interested in your services, not willing to participate in your training programs, do not want your materials, and will not enter into any association with Applied Scholastics."

Adding that Hazelwood Public Schools intends to provide any tutoring required by federal law itself, Wright concluded her letter to Slaughter stating: "We do not need or want an association with Applied Scholastics."

In a separate letter to Kent King, commissioner of the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, Wright explained her rejection of Applied Scholastics. She said that the company, which has its world headquarters in the Hazelwood school district, has approached the district many times during the last three years about working together. "We investigated them thoroughly . . . and found that they were closely connected to the Church of Scientology. We made the decision that this connection was not in the interests of our children and refused all efforts to "partner" with the District."

Ellen Mahler-Forney, a spokesperson for the Church of Scientology in University City, said Wright's attitude reflects a misunderstanding of the church. "We are a new religion," she said, and "any new religion has a lot of misunderstanding to overcome."

While taken aback by the tone of Wright's letter, the officers of Applied Scholastics said it does not affect their plans to tutor students from Hazelwood Public Schools. "It is not [Wright's] decision," said Mary Adams, senior vice president for external affairs at Applied Scholastics. "The senior vice president for external affairs at Applied Scholastics. "The choice is the parents. If they chose us to tutor their children, the school district has to pay for, because we are an approved provider in Missouri."

Wright, however, is urging King to reevaluate the approval of Applied Scholastics. "As the Department reviews renewal applications from potential providers for Supplemental Education Services this year," she wrote, "I hope that you will evaluate those programs which have already been approved and establish some criteria for their approval."

Wright's was not the only letter King received last week urging him to reevaluate Applied Scholastics. David Touretzky, research professor in the Computer Science Department at Carnegie Mellon University, also sent a letter detailing his claims that: "What Applied Scholastics calls secular "study technology" is actually covert instruction in the Scientology religion."

Adams and other representatives of Applied Scholastics and its parent company, Association for Better Living and Education International, denied that Applied Scholastics covertly instructs students in the Scientology religion. They said the Church of Scientology does use "study technology," but only as a way to help church members study their religious texts, not as part of the religion itself.