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To see what the Center's mission is, we turned to

To see what the Center's mission is, we turned to the Center's website.

What is a "Stop K-12 Indoctrination" or "Stop K-12 Science Education" group?

On the left, the term has grown from a term to a word in recent years. As such, it's not the primary term used to describe "the right's anti-science message."

But on the right, "Science Education for Kids" (STK), which is also called the "Stop K-12 Science Education Coalition," is also called "Science Education for Young Adults" or "Science Education for the Kids."

STK is a group of five high school students, all over the country, who are part of a coalition called "Stop K-12 Indoctrination." In the South, they are taking a different tack in an effort to educate their students about the nature of science and religion.

After learning that an anti-science bill would be introduced in Alabama and Texas, they came to Alabama and started organizing.

"I started out with a goal of educating my middle school students on the dangers of science and what is happening," says the fifth-grader, who now lives in San Francisco.

STK has been spreading awareness in Alabama and Texas. It's not just about science, but about education, too, says Stacey L. Harris, founder of the Alabama "Kids' Health Coalition" and a co-founder of the Stop K-12 science education group, which has been called anti-science by the left.

"When I see all of these bills, I see there is a clear bias against science, because there is no science," he says. "And so I started to really think about what could be the best way to get them passed, to try to educate my students in the best way possible."

Harris says that she has found that the groups that have come to Alabama and Texas have been successful, and have worked to educate students about the science and religion of science. "The teachers really care about the science at hand, who are not just interested in it, but actually doing research on it," she says.

STK has been organized by the "Kids' Health Coalition," which is a group of five high school students from Alabama and Texas who are part of a coalition called "Stop K-12 Indoctrination."

"They get to do everything from how the Bible is taught to how we can teach kids about the science in our classrooms,

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