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Everything about this high school test question on Down syndrome is disturbing
liveactionnews.org ^ | June 6, 2016 | Cassy Fiano

Posted on 06/07/2016 5:20:02 PM PDT by Morgana

Preborn babies with Down syndrome are still aborted at alarming rates. Abortion advocates often use birth defects like Down syndrome as an excuse for late-term abortions, and the majority of women who receive a prenatal Down syndrome diagnosis still report that doctors deliver the news in an overwhelmingly negative manner. Many say that they felt pressured to have an abortion. Societally, it’s still expected that abortion will follow a Down syndrome diagnosis.

Salt Lake City’s Utah Electronic High School apparently not only feels that preborn babies with Down syndrome should be aborted, but also that high schoolers should be indoctrinated with that mindset as well.

A student from a biology class revealed that a test contained this disturbing question:

John and his sister Brittany are high school students in a small town. Their mother Jill is 40 years old and has just learned that she is pregnant with a child. Genetic testing has indicated that the child has Down’s syndrome. Their family doctor has recommended that Jill have an abortion. John and Brittany’s mother and father have called the family together to discuss their options. Which of the following statements describes how the family should make their decision?

* The parents should wait until the baby is ready to be born, then re-do the genetic tests to see if the results have changed.

* The parents should consider many aspects of this decision, including religious beliefs, financial burden, the effect on other family members, the mother’s health, the doctor’s recommendation and the life of the unborn child and then make the best decision for everyone.

* The doctor has more scientific knowledge. The parents should follow the advice of the doctor and have the abortion.

* The parents should consider the wishes of the mother, since she will carry the greatest responsibility for the child and do whatever she wants.

There is so much wrong with this question, but the first and foremost issue is that it has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with biology. A student acted as the whistleblower in this case, snapping a picture of the test with his cell phone. He posted on his private Facebook page about it, pointing out that not only is the question inappropriate, but it’s been asked on multiple tests in the same class. He wrote:

I was taking my biology final today when I came across this question and I want to know what does this question have to do with biology? It came up a second time later on in the final and I saw it earlier in the year when I was taking a different test. The fist (sic) time I saw it they told me the answer was the parents should consider many aspects in the decision so I tried to answer differently on the final for both times it came up but I didn’t get to see the answer. So I ask again what does this have to do with biology??

The question was asked a total of three times, first in a quiz, and then twice during the final exam. Principal Kathleen Webb acknowledged that the question was inappropriate, and said that neither she nor the teacher knew how the test had found its way into the biology exams. It has now allegedly been removed. And the question might not just be inappropriate — it might be illegal. Utah law forbids schools from testing students on their religious or political beliefs without receiving parental consent first.

Aside from the inappropriate and possibly illegal nature of the question, everything in it is deeply disturbing. The preborn child with Down syndrome is made to seem like he or she will be a burden on the family, financially and on the family members themselves. And most notably, nowhere does it give students the option to choose life for the preborn baby. The only option is apparently abortion.

The sad thing is, in addition to the horrific pro-abortion agenda being pushed onto high school students, it furthers damaging stereotypes of people with Down syndrome. They’re not burdens on their family, financially or otherwise. People with Down syndrome are able to go to school, get an education, and work just like any other person. Multiple studies have also found that people with Down syndrome aren’t emotional burdens on their families, either. To the contrary, parents of people with Down syndrome overwhelmingly say they are happier and more fulfilled because of their children with Down syndrome; siblings say that their brothers or sisters with Down syndrome have made them better people. And almost all people with Down syndrome say that they are happy with themselves and with their lives. Aborting a baby with Down syndrome is not best for anyone, and especially not for the baby, which makes the test option of “do what’s best for everyone” even more laughable.

It’s good that this question has been removed from the school’s test banks, but there should be an investigation into how this was placed into any test to begin with. They also need to issue a public apology and maybe should consider getting involved with a Down syndrome advocacy group, because this little stunt of theirs has done irreparable harm to the Down syndrome community. It’s bad enough to advocate for the abortion of preborn babies with Down syndrome, but what they did is even worse than that: it was recommended to young people, impressionable teenagers, who were in essence being told that people with Down syndrome are burdens who don’t deserve to live. That goes far beyond inappropriate testing material, and deserves a much more in-depth response.


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Education
KEYWORDS: abortion; arth; prolife; trisomy21
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To: Lera

That’s happening even without nukes.


21 posted on 06/07/2016 7:06:05 PM PDT by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: DuncanWaring

[[That’s happening even without nukes.]]

We still have not recovered from a plane crash into the towers because WE propped up Europe’s banking system .
Imagine what it would be like if something disrupts trade there again .


22 posted on 06/07/2016 7:08:14 PM PDT by Lera ( 1 Corinthians 15:1-4)
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To: knarf

Spent most of last Friday and Saturday with my wife’s cousins son Chance who is a Downs child. Him and me were instant buddies. He is 8. I had so much fun with him!! He wanted to look at whale pictures on my phone. He would take my hand and make the motion of a whale jumping out of the water sound effects and all.
I look forward to seeing him again in a month.

My own child is handicap due to his biological mothers drug use. We adopted him when he was a baby.


23 posted on 06/07/2016 7:19:33 PM PDT by Romans Nine
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To: Morgana
There is so much wrong with this question, but the first and foremost issue is that it has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with biology. A student acted as the whistleblower in this case, snapping a picture of the test with his cell phone.

True - but that would have been an excellent question for a test in an Ethics class...

Regarding the Biology test, however - How did the teacher plan to score the answers to that multiple-choice question? And what if some pupil had penciled in "none of the above - the baby is a human being and should not be murdered?" How would that have been graded?

Regards,

24 posted on 06/07/2016 8:55:02 PM PDT by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: Romans Nine
I can't wait for Bryson to become communicative ... I love communicating with special children

We have an autistic kid in church that we have a lot of fun together ... which makes me question the whole autism thing

25 posted on 06/08/2016 3:30:32 AM PDT by knarf (I say things that are true ... I have no proof ... but they're true)
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To: Blood of Tyrants
A Downs person is too much of a burden on society to be allowed to live but a 4th generation welfare queen whose main function is to squeeze out future welfare leeches isn’t?

Post of they day. Kudos!

26 posted on 06/08/2016 10:28:56 AM PDT by JimRed (Is it 1776 yet? TERM LIMITS, now and forever! Build the Wall, NOW!)
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To: Morgana

The people who encourage abortion of those with Down Syndrome are bigots and should not be allowed to teach in public schools. I wonder what the abortionist response would be if someone developed a test that could predict if a baby would become homosexual. Would they support abortion of such babies?


27 posted on 06/09/2016 9:16:27 PM PDT by kathsua (A woman can do anything a man can do and have babies besides;)
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