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Showing posts with label Texas LULAC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas LULAC. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

"LULAC Rebukes Senator Creighton’s Assault on Inclusive Education" by Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D. May 13, 2025

AI image by A. Valenzuela

The House Public Education Committee abruptly ended yesterday morning’s hearing on SB 12, silencing over 75 community members who came prepared to testify against the bill. This blatant disregard for public input highlights the anti-democratic nature of both the legislature and actual legislation—like Senate Bill 12—that seeks to erase discussions of race, gender, and identity from Texas classrooms. Here is my testimony on behalf of Texas LULAC, as well as K-12 public youth in the state of Texas.

Here is an image I created that reflects not only a vision for civil rights, but what is actually happening, my friends. 

As a longtime policy analyst and advocate at the Texas legislature, I can authoritatively say that our youth are mobilizing and making their voices heard in unprecedented numbers in the Texas State Legislature. Of course, an immense amount of work has gone into this over the years—and must more work lays ahead. 

It's still sad and tragic that so many youth from around the state arrived and were present in the hearing by 8AM, but whose voices were rejected by their state leaders. Trust me, our youth are not deterred....

I respectfully submit my testimony below.

-Angela Valenzuela

LULAC Rebukes Senator Creighton’s Assault on Inclusive Education

by

Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.

May 13, 2025


My name is Angela Valenzuela, and I am a faculty member at the University of Texas at Austin. However, I am speaking today as the Education Committee Chair for Texas LULAC, the largest and oldest Latina/o civil rights organization in the state of Texas.


Eying Section 3 of Senate Bill 12, Texas LULAC strongly condemns Senator Brandon Creighton’s continued crusade against Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) in Texas public education. 


Having already led the charge in 2023 to eliminate DEI offices layered over Senator Bryan Hughes’ campaign to eliminate Critical Race Theory, Sen. Creighton now sets his sights on dismantling curriculum rooted in Black, Latina/o, Women and Gender Studies. These are programs that equip our students with critical thinking, cultural competency, and a deeper understanding of our shared history.


Let’s be honest about what this bill really does. It doesn’t just target a bureaucratic framework and set of norms and values that have evolved over decades—it targets a vision. A vision of schools where students of all backgrounds feel seen, respected, and safe. A vision of public education that refuses to ignore history, deny identity, or reduce our children to data points. And a vision of a Texas that embraces—not erases—its cultural and racial diversity.


This bill tells our districts they cannot assign anyone to engage in DEI work—not even if their goal is to close achievement gaps or root out discrimination. It threatens educators with discipline or termination for even referencing race, gender identity, or sexual orientation in programs or trainings. It silences those who dare to say that equity matters and that representation is essential.


And yet, it hides behind exceptions—narrow, patronizing carveouts that allow districts to talk superficially about holidays or collect data, as if that alone constitutes equity. 


Let’s be clear: compliance is not justice. Neutrality is not inclusion. And silence is not safety.


This is not about educational quality or workforce preparedness; it is a thinly veiled effort to whitewash curricula and erase the lived experiences of marginalized communities. When students and recent graduates have testified passionately in this very chamber in defense of these courses, their message was clear: These courses are rigorous, empowering, and essential for an informed democracy.


Texas LULAC rejects the false narrative that DEI divides. On the contrary, it builds bridges, fosters understanding, and prepares our youth to lead with empathy and purpose. We call on all Texans to stand against this coordinated attack on knowledge, culture, and inclusion—an effort rooted in fear and distortion, turning education into a battleground and truth into a target. And why such animus, especially against our state's children and youth, as well as our schools? 


Ethnic and interdisciplinary studies are not a threat—they are vital to a just and informed future.


See Dr. Angela Valenzuela's testimony on Senate Bill 37 titled, "State-Sanctioned Censorship in Higher Education: Texas LULAC’s Rejection of SB 37," by Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

All in for Equality Rally on the Capitol Steps, March 24, 2025

Happy to say that both Texas LULAC and Equality Texas had their Day of Action yesterday, March 24, 2025, at the Texas Capitol advocating for an array of policies, including trans rights, Ethnic Studies (HB 178) and Bucy's SB 393 SB 17-repeal bill. Other areas of opposition are to school vouchers and higher education anti-tenure bill SB 37. 

According to Equality Texas, yesterday was their largest statewide rally in the organization's history. Congratulations!

It's wonderful when our coalitions partner in opposition to harmful bills, as well as in support of good ones. Compliments of Equality Texas, you can view the entire press conference below. 

I love how the rally began with an honoring of the four directions.

-Angela Valenzuela


Texas LULAC at the Capitol
March 24, 2025



Miriam Laeky w Equality Texas and me
               Advocates for trans rights with Equality Texas
                        "Love is love." So simple and true.


Friday, April 28, 2023

"Scholarship and Civil Rights: Claiming a Progressive Voice in Texas Politics and Policy Making," by Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.

I had forgotten about this piece published back in 2011 in the Journal of Curriculum & Pedagogy. By the way it reads, I almost could have published it yesterday. Thanks to LULAC for this organization's support over the years. We NEED our civil rights organizations still today.

Our work and the struggle continues. 

Thanks to Dr. Eliza Epstein for sending it my way.

-Angela Valenzuela


Scholarship and Civil Rights: Claiming a Progressive Voice in Texas Politics and Policy Making Angela Valenzuela 

ANGELA VALENZUELA University of Texas at Austin 


What is to be done to counter the current conservative political climate and how do we claim a progressive curriculum and pedagogy in our practices? I write from my perspective as a researcher, scholar, and legislative and community activist. Perhaps more through artistry and experience rather than through science or technical know-how, I further combine these roles in my current position as Education Commit-tee Chair of the Texas League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), the nation’s oldest and largest Latino civil rights organization (www.TxLULAC.org). 


Writing strictly as a scholar, it is tempting to answer this question with an analysis of larger political currents, not the least of which en-tails a serious consideration of minority and majority relations in our state and nation and their significant implications for curriculum, pedagogy, and policy development in these areas. I deploy these concepts of minority and majority not in a numerical sense but rather in the sociological sense of unequal power relations between Anglos and communities of color as reflected in uneven political representation—and thusly, civic participation—at all levels of government and decision-making. This imbalance institutionalizes a tragic divide between actors at the state level where conservative standardization policies originate and the communities and children who are targets or objects of such policies. 


As a researcher, I could similarly address the injurious divide between academic researchers and policymakers. To my university’s credit, this concern is echoed in a series of recent introspective and self-critical essays regarding the positive, bridge-building role that a “citizen-scholar” can play in response to pressing policy issues (Cherwitz, 2005). 


Stated simply, it matters enormously that university researchers are overwhelmingly ensconced in an ivory tower existence where their accountability is mainly to their profession along an open time frame in which to generate policy relevant results, if at all. In contrast, policy makers are accountable to their constituents and they operate within determinate time frames in which to develop solutions to pressing problems. As a consequence there exists a tragic gap between the academy and policymaking that is nonetheless being filled by mercenary, agendic researchers who work for a massive array of well-funded conservative think tanks that in the area of education seek to discredit and then privatize public schools under the guise of expanding choice to taxpayers (Valenzuela, 2004a; Shaker & Heilman, 2002). 


In an absence of both visionary leadership and effective grassroots mobilization, it will be difficult to leverage a significant challenge to this conservative turn in educational politics engendered by the in-creasing influence of both the religious and business right (Valenzuela, 2004a). However, since effective policy development demands a decades-long, committed, political response that civil rights organizations typically embody, I impart my work with Texas LULAC as a model for social action. This activity addresses these two fissures, namely, that between the state and a poor and minority polity whose children are increasingly concentrated in the public school system, as well as that between the academy and policymakers. 


As Education Committee Chair of Texas LULAC, I have had the pleasure of organizing several legislative events that have brought university researchers together with legislative staff, teacher associations, and civil rights organizations to discuss issues related to high-stakes testing and student retention. Through our research, presentations, and publications (Valenzuela, 2002, 2004b), we have made the case that when the test is the sole or primary arbiter in decisions with such long-lasting consequences for children, they have a right to be assessed in a complete and fair manner. This has translated into a legislative remedy that calls for the use of as many criteria as may reasonably indicate children’s cognitive abilities and potential whenever making high-stakes decisions like graduation/non-graduation or promotion/retention in grades 3, 5 and 8 (the state’s new retention policy went into effect in 2003). 


Although for the past two legislative sessions our proposed legislation has been quite specific, it addresses the linchpin of the accountability system—student testing. It should be noted that despite support for the legislation in the Texas House of Representatives, we have encountered political roadblocks with the current and previous chairs of the House Committee on Public Education. As scholars, we nevertheless remain resolute that children are entitled to fairness and validity in assessment. Indeed, this position flows directly from our review of the evidence, including that provided by the state itself. 


As observers of the inner-workings of the accountability system, we further contend that the testing system is performing two incompatible functions in one (McNeil and Valenzuela, 2001). That is, it doubles as both an “assessment” (testing) and “monitoring” system. Particularly in poor and minority schools that are subject to the “gaze” of central office, numbers-based accountability manages the behavior of the adults in the system by pressuring them to perform. The rhetoric gives the impression that all children are finally being taught; however, the reality is that this edict often translates into dumbed-down routinized pedagogy with disastrous implications for student learning and growth. This conflation of functions logically corrupts the assessment since official test results do not control the extent of coaching, cheating, or the marginalizing of those youth who become liabilities under the cur-rent design. By utilizing a more robust evaluation process, our pro-posed multiple criteria legislation addresses this built-in problem of test validity while promising fairness in testing children when so much is at stake to them personally.


Politically, LULAC has been engaged in a protracted effort to educate its base about the harmful effects of high-stakes testing. Our success is evident in the fact that assessment is at the top of our 2005 legislative agenda. Just as importantly, LULAC also spearheads a multi-ethnic, statewide coalition of university faculty, graduate students, and grassroots advocates for fairness and validity in assessment (www.texas-testing.org). Accordingly, we prepare for and plan press conferences, lobby days, television and radio spots, opinion-editorial pieces, and public forums at the grassroots level. 


To conclude, there is much that we as citizen-scholars can do to address the deep and deleterious divides that impact both public life and the development of policy. However formidable the opposition may be, I consider it an extraordinary privilege to both chronicle and par-take in the moment. Indeed, the very act of standing up to injustice is to savor the seeds of triumph. 


References 


Cherwitz, R. (January/February 2005). Citizen-scholars. The Alcalde, 50–60. 


McNeil, L. & Valenzuela, A. (2001). The harmful impact of the TAAS system of testing in Texas: Beneath the accountability rhetoric. In M. Kornhaber & G. Orfield (Eds.), Raising standards or raising barriers? Inequality and high stakes testing in public education (pp. 127–150). New York: Century Foundation. 


Shaker, P. & Heilman, E. E. (2002, January). Advocacy versus authority: Silencing the education professoriate. Policy Perspectives, 3 (1), 1–6. 


Valenzuela, A. (2004a). Accountability and the privatization agenda. In A. Valenzuela (Ed.), Leaving children behind: Why ‘Texas-style’ accountability fails Latino youth. New York: State University of New York Press. 


Valenzuela, A. (2004b). The accountability debate in Texas: Continuing the conversation. In A. Valenzuela (Ed.), Leaving children behind: Why ‘Texas-style’ accountability fails Latino youth. New York: State University of New York Press. 


Valenzuela, A. (2002). High-stakes testing and U.S.-Mexican youth in Texas: The case for multiple compensatory criteria in assessment. Harvard Journal of Hispanic Policy, 14, 97–116. 


Angela Valenzuela is a professor at the University of Texas at Austin and the Education Committee Chair of the Texas League of United Latin American Citizens 

Thursday, May 13, 2021

The Joy in Great Policy: Rep. Christina Morales' House Bill 1504's Call for "Texas-Sized History"

Left to right: Dr. Christopher Carmona, Eliza Epstein, Dr. Liliana Saldaña, Tony Díaz (a.k.a. "El Librotraficante"), Rep. Christina Morales (D-Houston), Dr. Angela Valenzuela, Rep. Alex Dominguez (D-Cameron County), Dr. Valerie Martinez, and Alexzandra Roman.


The joy in great policy really does exist. For that reason, as bad as things sometimes are, I really have so much hope for the future.

Hats off to Texas State Rep. Christina Morales for championing House Bill 1504 that would allow the state's already-approved Ethnic Studies courses to count as a pathway toward high school graduation. As Tony Díaz appropriately framed this, we are calling for "Texas-Sized History" to include Mexican American, African American, Native American, and Asian American Studies.

With significant bipartisan support, HB 1504 cleared out of the Texas House of Representatives yesterday. This reflects not only the ongoing struggle for Ethnic Studies in Texas, but also the very hard work of Rep. Morales who has championed a very-well conceived and written bill since day one. This is what it takes, my friends.

House Bill 1504

It was so very special witnessing yesterday support for Rep. Morales' HB 1504 by a bipartisan, diverse group of fellow legislators. What makes this historic is that this is the first Ethnic Studies bill to ever clear out of the Texas House. (I know, it sounds schizophrenic with anti-CRT bill HB 3979 also clearing the House floor, but this is Texas...)

I myself spoke at yesterday's press conference on behalf of Texas LULAC as a member of the state's Education Committee. Thanks to State Director Rudy Rosales, Chair René Martinez, and fellow member Velma Ybarra for supporting this from the beginning.

Many thanks, as well, to UTRGV Professor Dr. Christopher Carmona, Chair, of the NACCS Tejas Foco to which I also belong for his leadership. Happy to share, as well, Dr. Carmona's press release below that lays out next steps.

-Angela Valenzuela

Historic Ethnic Studies Bill HB 1504 Passes the House of the Texas Legislature: Now to Go All The Way


Texas State Representative Christina Morales (D) filed House Bill 1504, along with joint authors, Representatives Alma Allen (D) and Gene Wu (D), which would make Ethnic Studies count towards high school graduation.


Tuesday, May 11, 2021, it was approved by the Texas House of Representatives. This is the first Ethnic Studies bill in Texas to reach this point. It has also received bipartisan support.


The courses referred to in the bill were approved by both Republican and Democratic Texas State Board of Education Representatives unanimously. The bill also received unanimous support from the House Public Education Committee. State Rep. Dan Huberty, a Republican, has also joined as a co-sponsor of the bill.


TX HB1504 now advances to the Texas Senate Education Committee.


Texas State Representative Morales said, "Research proves that students who study culturally relevant courses are more successful in school and are more likely to graduate. I have been empowered by knowing my history and my family's story. We are uniting to bring this knowledge to more and more of our students in Texas. It is time to unite for Texas-Sized History to give a full picture with more voices."


Please call your state senator or any of the senators on this list to advance this bill through the Senate and make history by having the first Ethnic Studies bill in the State of Texas ever.


Please call the Republicans on the

Senate Committee on Education

Chair


The Honorable Larry Taylor

(512) 463-0111


The Honorable Paul Bettencourt

(512) 463-0107


The Honorable Bob Hall

(512) 463-0102


The Honorable Bryan Hughes

Austin, TX 78711

(512) 463-0101


The Honorable Angela Paxton

(512) 463-0108


The Honorable Eddie Lucio, Jr.

(512) 463-0127

Copyright (C) 2021 NACCS Tejas Foco Committee on MAS in PreK-12 Education. All rights reserved.
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Monday, April 26, 2021

Time Sensitive: Next Action Step on Texas' Ethnic Studies Bill: House Bill 1504

Thanks to the Texas LULAC Education Committee—of which I am a member— along with Velma Ybarra, René Martinez, and State Director Rudy Rosales, Jr., for getting the word out on House Bill 1504—together with the NACCS Tejas Foco—in support of Mexican American and African American Studies, and Ethnic Studies, generally. Really, all of us in education should consider supporting this bill. 

Given the point at which we are in the legislative session when everything is either getting rushed or on hold, here is what you can urge everyone in your networks to do immediately

I. UTRGV Professor and NACCS Tejas Foco Chair, Dr. Christopher Carmona, is asking for letters of support for House Bill 1504 from organizations, individuals, and/or all stakeholders to be emailed to him by Friday, April 30th at midnight at christophercarmona@icloud.com


--When writing your letters, please include these four talking points in your letters.

  1. Discuss the impact and success of Ethnic Studies Programs around the country.
  2. This bill will not require any funding if it passes.
  3. This bill only offers a substitution of Ethnic Studies courses for World Geography or World History when such a course, or courses, are available. This bill does not make Ethnic Studies a requirement for high school graduation. It’s optional. 
  4. These courses will count toward graduation and help with college preparedness and success.

 

For ease, feel free to utilize the template that Tony Diaz and Texas Sized History created where it reads “Click here for a link to a template. The link allows you to download a letter of support where you can sign the document, noting the particulars of your organization, after which you can email to Dr. Carmona.

 

II. Please contact school districts and organizations to lend a hand in support of HB 1504 and sharing with them this blog. Everyone should also be reaching out to whoever represent them in the legislature throughout.  If you don't know who represents you, go to this "Who Represents Me" link to find out. It only takes a minute!

Check out this opinion-editorial by Rep. Christina Morales (D-Houston) to learn about the incredible champion for this bill that we are so fortunate to have in the legislature.

Time is of the essence. Our goal is for HB 1504 is to get a hearing on the House Floor. You can read the actual bill here


Thank you so much for your attention to this matter.


Sí se puede! Yes we can!


Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.

    Texas LULAC Education Committee Member

    NACCS Tejas Foco Member

    Convener, Nuestro Grupo / Academia Cuauhtli


#EthnicStudiesNow




Wednesday, May 20, 2020

LULAC Declares Victory In Texas Vote By Mail Lawsuit

Today's bulletin is music to my ears!  I am so proud to be a longtime member of LULAC.  LULAC's advocacy is for all!

Fighting for all of our rights!  

Please consider joining and supporting LULAC. 

-Angela Valenzuela

LULAC Declares Victory In Texas Vote By Mail Lawsuit

Nation’s Oldest & Largest Latino Civil Rights Organization Applauds Court Order Allowing All Texas Voters to Vote by Mail During COVID-19 Pandemic

Washington, DC - The League of United Latin American (LULAC) and the Campaign Legal Center filed a lawsuit in the US District Court for the Western District of Texas last week, challenging the state’s restrictions on mail-in ballots. The case was argued by Chad Dunn, who filed suit against Texas on behalf of the Texas Democratic Party. The current law restricts access to mail-in voting to a specific group of voters, including those over the age of 65, imposing unconstitutional and illegal burdens on most voters in the midst of a global pandemic.
LULAC National President Domingo Garcia issued the following statement:
“It is in times of national crisis where our constitution is tested, and the coronavirus pandemic is no exception. Today’s ruling means no American in Texas will have to decide between their health or civic duty to vote. Today’s ruling proves that only allowing specific groups of voters to vote by mail in a deadly pandemic is a clear violation of the 26th Amendment’s protections against voting discrimination based on age.”
LULAC CEO Sindy Benavides issued the following statement:
“Today LULAC upheld its mission to protect the civil rights of Hispanics. No state has a right to choose which demographic groups can vote by mail, safely and out of harm’s way, and which citizens must sacrifice their health to cast a ballot. LULAC looks forward to having this case heard in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. We know constitutional law is on our side.”
About LULAC
The League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) is the nation’s largest and oldest civil rights volunteer-based organization that empowers Hispanic Americans and builds strong Latino communities. Headquartered in Washington, DC, with 1,000 councils around the United States and Puerto Rico, LULAC’s programs, services and advocacy address the most important issues for Latinos, meeting critical needs of today and the future. For more information, visit https://lulac.org/