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Thursday, January 11, 2024

What impact does studying diverse cultures, experiences have on Texas students?

This is music to my ears. So glad to see this collaborative among several universities named the "BlackStar Research Collaborative" taking a focused look at African American Studies getting taught in Texas schools. Their approach will consist of teacher and student focus groups, comparing lesson plans, and analyzing transcript data. How exciting! 

This study, of course, builds not solely on Ethnic Studies policy, but also on literally decades of research that shows how culturally relevant curriculum and teaching help students to feel safe, valued, and intellectually strong is positive. It simply makes a difference for students' identities and backgrounds to get viewed in an affirming way. This is NOT Critical Race Theory (CRT). 

Politically, the issue is that anti-CRT politicians and some parents don't want to say what they really think about not wanting to affirm the identities of youth of color. In contrast, what they really want is to affirm white identity. Why must this be either/or? Why can't this be both/and? What is white identity anyway?

In response to this question, I'm always reminded of the work of Foxfire that was squarely about this. Whites and all students, generally, would benefit from knowing about it. I encourage everyone to read this important piece on the matter authored by Dr. Carl Glickman titled, "Whatever happened to Foxfire? Still glowing?" 

We might think of Foxfire as Ethnic Studies for White people. I remember as a young scholar attending conferences where students, teachers, and researchers would present on their important work at Foxfire. Projects like these need to return. We would ALL benefit from learning about white identity from a multicultural lens.

Based on this piece on African American Studies getting taught in Dallas ISD, preliminary data are already positive and affirming in exactly the way our youth and their teachers would want. So heart-warming.💖

-Angela Valenzuela

What impact does studying diverse cultures, experiences have on Texas students?

Researchers will examine ethnic studies courses during a highly politicized climate over how to teach America’s history.


by Talia Richman, January 10, 2024

Tracy Smith sees her class as “adding back some fibers that were taken out of the cloth of American history.”

Smith teaches African American studies at Kathlyn Joy Gilliam Collegiate Academy — a Dallas ISD campus named for the first Black woman to serve on the school board. Her students analyze art from the Harlem Renaissance, study historically Black colleges and contemplate their roots.Ariah Barnes, 17, said the class opened her mind.

“You just get to understand history better, from not just the point of view of the struggle, but also the positive moments,” she said.


Student Ariah Barnes works on a laptop during an AP African American Studies class at Kathlyn Joy Gilliam Collegiate Academy on Friday, Dec. 15, 2023, in Dallas.(Smiley N. Pool / Staff Photographer)

Amid a highly politicized climate about the way public schools teach history, Texas is considering expanding course offerings that explore the history, culture and experience of diverse communities. State education officials have heard from students and families about the power of these ethnic studies courses — yet the specific and quantifiable effect of the lessons is unknown.Now a group of researchers and professors wants to explore that impact. The BlackStar Research Collaborative is conducting a long-term study expected to run through 2028 that will examine the ways ethnic studies courses influence students’ grades, attendance, discipline rates and college enrollment.

Researchers from Prairie View A&M University and Texas A&M University-San Antonio are leading the work, in collaboration with the Dallas ISD Racial Equity Office.

For those involved in the research, ethnic studies already have proved to be transformative.

Marlon James was a C student when he graduated high school. He thought college was his pathway toward playing football, his contribution to the world would be in running plays like the Detroit Lions’ Barry Sanders.

As a freshman at Western Illinois University, he enrolled in an ethnic studies course. The lessons reshaped his life, motivating him to double down on his education, join the military, become a professor and now, launch a major study into the type of course that inspired him.

“We need research that can answer the question, ‘Does ethnic studies make a difference in the lives of young people?’” said James, a professor and assistant dean for the Brailsford College of Arts and Sciences at Prairie View A&M University. “And if it does make a difference, exactly what difference does it make?”

While the definitive answer to that question is years away, it could carry big implications for Texas schools.

The researchers’ work will unfold alongside fights over what students learn about America’s complex past and present. Conservative parents and politicians have accused public schools of promoting a “woke” agenda, pressuring teachers to constrict lessons about race and racism. Some have argued the lessons are teaching children to hate their country.

Texas approves social studies tweaks to comply with anti-critical race theory law

James pushed back on that idea.

“I joined the military after a year of ethnic studies courses because it actually made me say, ‘America is worth the full investment of my talent, my energy, my commitment to this social experiment,’” he said. The study will focus on what can be measured in the classroom.

“While it is taking place within this political context, our research has to remain objective,” James said.

They will hold teacher and student focus groups, compare lesson plans and analyze transcript data.

‘A dream come true’: African American studies course gets final approval to be offered across Texas

“We saw students of all races talking about, ‘Now I understand why these disparities and inequities exist, and I have more empathy for my brother from another race, my sister of another race,’ ” he said.

Texas’ history of ethnic studies

Advocates say the state’s diversity is not always reflected in schools’ history lessons. Children need to see themselves reflected in the story of their country, James said.

The Texas State Board of Education adopted Mexican-American studies standards in 2018, after years of advocacy. The African-American studies class — largely modeled after Dallas ISD’s innovative course — gained approval two years later. Both are elective courses.

More than half of Texas’ 5.5 million public school students are Hispanic. White students make up about a quarter of enrollment, while Black students constitute about 13% of those attending Texas schools. About 5% of public school students are Asian.

North Texas course on Native American history, culture aims to combat stereotypes

“If you want people to find their purpose in helping to perfect America, they actually have to see the role that their ancestors played in the country,” James said.

Over the past year, several students and parents have asked the State Board of Education to expand its ethnic studies offerings.

Education officials are preparing a proposal for a statewide American Indian/Native Studies elective, which was piloted in Grand Prairie. Many people urge the creation of an Asian-American studies course. A Round Rock ISD high school is piloting a class now.

Too often, advocates say, diverse communities are mentioned in history books only because of atrocities inflicted on them. These ethnic studies courses take a different approach.

Texas schools need course highlighting Asian Americans, advocates say

African-American studies in action

It’s easy to get students hooked, DISD’s Smith said. Her classes do immersive projects, such as creating a “museum” of Texas’ historically Black colleges and universities to display in the school’s library.

Texas’ new African-American class expands after a summer of Black Lives Matters demonstrations

On a recent Friday, her students began a lesson about the Harlem Renaissance. Smith guided them through Langston Hughes’ poetry, played them Bessie Smith’s music and showed them Jacob Lawrence’s paintings.

“The writers, the artists and the musicians are going to focus inward. They’re going to focus on themselves — the African-American community,” she told her students. “They’re not asking themselves, ‘Will every single group enjoy it?’ They’re simply making it for themselves. And then, of course, everyone else can enjoy it.”

Roughly 1,920 DISD students take African-American studies. About 2,360 are in Mexican-American studies.

For 16-year-old Madison Jackson, Smith’s lessons take her much deeper than other history courses.

“Whenever I was younger, it was more surface level. You just go through the timeline of what happened: slavery, civil rights movement,” she said. In Smith’s classroom, “We go through the other events that actually happened.”


Teacher Tracy Smith led a discussion of the Harlem Renaissance during an AP African American Studies class at Kathlyn Joy Gilliam Collegiate Academy on Dec. 15, 2023, in Dallas. (Smiley N. Pool / Staff Photographer)

Political pressure

The findings that stem from the researchers’ study could help shape the debate over the future of ethnic studies in Texas.

Statewide, nearly 10,800 students enrolled in Mexican-American studies last year, while about 8,400 took African-American studies.

There appears to be a hunger for more. During a State Board of Education meeting last year, students and advocates asked for lessons that break down stereotypes and show role models within the Asian community.

State Board of Education member Aicha Davis, a Dallas Democrat, is a staunch advocate for these classes.

Still, Davis is cognizant of the politicization of history lessons, with conservatives across Texas tapping into anti-critical race theory rhetoric.

What is critical race theory? Behind the concept that is impacting Texas school elections

Critical race theory is an academic framework that probes the way policies and laws uphold systemic racism. Conservative pundits in recent years have decried it, conflating it with diversity and inclusion efforts, anti-racism training and multicultural lessons.

Texas passed an “anti-CRT” law in 2021. Rep. Steve Toth, R-The Woodlands, told his House colleagues his legislation was necessary “at a time when racial tensions are at a boiling point” and that “we don’t need to burden our kids with guilt for racial crimes they had nothing to do with.”

Students worry Texas will ban AP African American studies course, following Florida

Some Black history classes were in the political crosshairs. Last year, for example, Florida barred a new Advanced Placement course on African-American studies. Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis said the lessons were pushing a political agenda.

“Ethnic studies have nothing to worry about as long as they teach history,” Toth said in an emailed statement this week. “There is no place for revisionist history in Texas classrooms. Let’s give the brutal facts. Let’s not blame people for things they had no control over — like the color of their skin or what their great, great, great, great, grandparents did.”

Sherry Sylvester, with the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation, noted Texas laws do not ban the teaching of Black history. The anti-CRT law, she said, ensures social studies classes don’t teach the 1619 Project and “the premise that every American institution is rooted in racism that hopelessly persists throughout our society today.”

The 1619 Project is an award-winning initiative of The New York Times that reframed American history around slavery’s consequences and the contributions of Black people.

Davis said she hears positive feedback from students enrolled in the various courses delving into diverse experiences and cultures.

“Overwhelmingly, I hear the same things: The course helps the students to open their mind and be more respectful to all of those around them,” she said.

The DMN Education Lab deepens the coverage and conversation about urgent education issues critical to the future of North Texas.

The DMN Education Lab is a community-funded journalism initiative, with support from Bobby and Lottye Lyle, Communities Foundation of Texas, The Dallas Foundation, Dallas Regional Chamber, Deedie Rose, Garrett and Cecilia Boone, The Meadows Foundation, The Murrell Foundation, Solutions Journalism Network, Southern Methodist University, Sydney Smith Hicks and the University of Texas at Dallas. The Dallas Morning News retains full editorial control of the Education Lab’s journalism.


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