In 2023 we applied to start an Islamic charter school in Minnesota to meet the high demand for Islamic education amongst the large population of low socio-economic status families in the Minnesota Muslim community, especially those with a refugee background from East Africa. This demand had been established by surveying and community seminars held by the Islamic Association of North America, who reached out to Abraham Education in February of 2023 for assistance in strategizing to meet this demand in the community.
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Abraham Education has a reputation for always delivering quality, value, and benefit to attendees of all of its trainings via learning that is immediately applicable. If we did not do this we would not conduct and offer them to people. This is once again proven by the feedback we received from emails from attendees of our recent training on "How to Manage Kids..." available for teachers, parents, and youth mentors alike. See below...
Abraham Education recently partnered with local Muslim community parents and leaders in the Seattle area to bring Engaging Muslim Students in Public Schools to that area in person. The training was conducted at Chief Sealth High School and attended by over 150 local educators including district leaders and teachers from districts and charter schools around Washington. This program is very much one that has to be experienced to fully appreciate it, so the comments of attendees speak best to it. Below is a sampling of words from our respected attendees in Seattle of August 2023...
At Abraham Education we are commonly brushed off by schools under a presumption that they do not need to undertake the learning of Engaging Muslim Students in Public Schools because they are either already working with local Muslim organizations/religious centers or they have point people as cultural liaisons in their district.
Can Sighting the Crescent Moon (Hilal) be projected into the Future: Open Letter to moonsighting.com3/20/2023 More and more school districts are considering making Eid-al-Fitr an official holiday on their school calendar, as well as accommodations for Ramadan. The conundrum with this for many districts is that they typically want their school calendars mapped out by the day for three to five years in advance. This presents a challenge because the changing of the months in the Islamic calendar is dependent on the sighting of the young waxing crescent that first follows the new moon, in Arabic it is called the hilal.
What can further be a problem is the impression that the visibility of the hilal can be mathematically projected into the future with perfection, therefore making it possible to predict and forecast onto a calendar. I have already spoken with one school district that took this approach and is now at risk of not actually having Eid set as a day off when they are intending to depending on how the days play out. Abraham Education recently partnered with local Muslim community parents and leaders in the Columbus area to bring Engaging Muslim Students in Public Schools to that area in person. The training was conducted in Hilliard and attended by local educators including district leaders and teachers from eight different school districts. This program is very much one that has to be experienced to fully appreciate it, so the comments of attendees speak best to it. Below are the words of our respected attendees in Ohio of February 2023...
The following is an excerpt from the book ENGAGING MUSLIM STUDENTS IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS by Michael Abraham. Footnote numbers and citations are noted in the text but the actual notes and references are only accessible in the book which can be bought on Amazon.
It’s plainly obvious to most in education that religious diversity is neglected in preservice teacher training. It is standard that licensure programs offer at least one course that examine concepts of diversity, equity, inclusive practices, or multicultural education. However, courses that look specifically at religious diversity, or at a specific religious minority group, are exceedingly rare in teacher education. None exist that I have been able to locate (if you know of one please let me know about it ?).
A study done of preservice teachers at Ohio State University in 2006 that examined attitudes towards religious diversity of preservice teachers in Columbus, OH. Predictably, it found that it was a sensitive topic for the student-teachers to approach, and they were therefore hesitant to approach religious topics at all despite the fact that they actually had many questions about it they wanted to have answered. the study’s subjects to approach them, increased when religious issues intersected with race and gender topics (Subedi, 2006). That study only illustrates what teachers who work with Muslim students already know. Many people have questions that they need answers to, but due to the general sensitivity in society around religion, as well as the stigma that exists for Muslims and Islam in particular, knowing how and where to get answers is simply difficult and therefor bypassed. This is why Engaging Muslim Students in Public Schools has been so appreciated by those who have taken it. It bridges this gap for educators intentionally and effectively. There is a common metaphor in education that culture is like an iceberg. There is much that we see above the surface, but most of it exists below the surface. Engaging Muslim Students in Public Schools sets a new standard for giving teachers a view below the surface. Don’t wait to register or to ask your school to sign you up. |
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