All of this will get finalized at the November 13-16, 2018 meeting of the board.
Folks outside of the state often smirk and scoff at Texas' infamous SBOE politics. For us who have to live these regimes of truth in Texas, it's all so consequential that we have no choice but to deal—as the June 18, 2018 victory involving Mexican American Studies reveals.
Angela Valenzuela
The Texas Board of Education’s vote to revise its curriculum is raising eyebrows.
Teachers in July 2018. |
Hillary Clinton was the first woman
to become the nominee of a major United States political party for president.
She served as first lady, secretary of state, and US senator. The Texas State
Board of Education thinks she should be dropped from their history classes.
The
Texas education board has raised eyebrows recently after the Dallas Morning News reported a vote it
took on Friday to “streamline” social studies curriculum in public schools. The
board took a preliminary vote to make a number of changes, including scrapping
mentions of Clinton and Hellen Keller from sections on citizenship and removing
a phrase referring to the “optimism of the many immigrants who sought a better
life in America.” They also voted to reinsert references to “Judeo-Christian”
law, Moses’s influence on the writing of the US’s founding documents, and a
reference to the “heroism” of the Alamo’s defenders.
Teachers
won’t be barred from discussing the figures scrapped, they just won’t be part
of the required curriculum. A final vote on the changes will take place in
November. The decision will affect Texas’s 5.4 million public
school students, though it won’t change the state’s textbooks at this time.
Two
teachers from the group of board-nominated volunteers who recommended the
changes told the Dallas Morning News that the state required students to learn
about so many historical figures “it resulted in rote memorization of dates and
names instead of real learning.” To decide whom to eliminate, they ranked
“essential” figures by asking questions such as whether the person “triggered a
watershed change,” was from an “underrepresented group,” or had an impact that
would “stand the test of time.”
They
were ranked on a 20-point scale: Clinton got a 5. Keller, a deaf-blind woman
who was a political activist and author and graduated from college, got a 7.
The group who recommended dropping the activist from the third-grade
curriculum, saying she “does not best represent the concept of citizenship,”
and instead military and first responders do.
Scrapping
Keller will save teachers 40 minutes and Clinton 30 minutes, according to the
Dallas Morning News.
You’ll probably keep hearing about Texas education policy
There’s
long been a spotlight on Texas education policy. It’s a populous state and a
large market, meaning decisions made there affect a lot of children’s learning.
It’s also not new to controversy. Per the Dallas Morning News:
Five years ago, members clashed over whether science books should have to
teach an alternative to evolution. In 2014, math standards were revised, drawing criticism from
parents and teachers. And earlier this year, a new Mexican-American studies course was the subject of
the latest culture war.
Its
textbooks have been a specific point of focus. As CBS News notes, in 2013, Christian
groups fiercely opposed the approval of
textbooks that included evolution and not creationism. Thanks to the size of
Texas’s schoolbook market, publishers often sell books prepared for publication
there in other states as well.
But, as
mentioned, Friday’s decision won’t affect textbooks or educational materials,
the Dallas Morning News reports. So if the changes are confirmed come November,
they wouldn’t have the same nationwide ripple effects as a change to students’
history books. It’s not clear whether the decision might affect what textbook
publishers decide to include down the road.
The
Texas State Education Board didn’t accept all of the recommendations — for
example, the working groups had also recommended getting rid of
multiple references to “Judeo-Christian,” including in a section on influences
of America’s founding, and the board rejected that. The board also disregarded
the recommendation Moses be dropped as a figure who influenced the country’s
foundations. Instead, it dropped English philosopher Thomas Hobbes.
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