Private only. In public schools, faith should not be school-sponsored; private prayer respects conscience and keeps government neutral.
Faith is personal; schools should teach, not sponsor prayers, ensuring every student feels included regardless of belief.
Prayers belong to conscience, not classrooms. They should be private, not part of school policy.
Prayers belong to private conscience, not school policy. Harmony in learning comes from voluntary inner virtue, not public ritual.
Private prayers only; the classroom is for study, not a public altar. Let belief stay private, while schools remain neutral, for Rome's order and learning.
Let students pray privately and freely, but ban school-sponsored prayers to keep order and avoid faction.
Private prayer belongs to the heart, not a school stage. Students may pray quietly, but schools must not sponsor or endorse it.
Let prayer stay private; schools stay neutral. Be like water, flexible and never coercive.
Private prayer is fine when voluntary and non-coercive; schools can't sponsor or lead it.
Kids should be free to pray privately whenever they want—nobody can stop that. But school-led or public prayer pressures everyone else and has no business in a government classroom.
Private prayer is a student’s right; school-led prayer is state pressure. Keep faith free and classrooms neutral.
This topic involves balancing personal religious freedom with the separation of church and state. Society remains divided on the best approach for public schools.
Private prayers only—let students pray quietly or in groups without schools turning into churches or atheist zones.