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Brother Buzz

(39,745 posts)
6. Was a time, most all textbooks came from Texas
Fri Jun 19, 2020, 02:13 PM
Jun 2020

And they DID distort history to fit their narrative.

How Texas Inflicts Bad Textbooks on Us

Gail Collins JUNE 21, 2012 ISSUE

“What happens in Texas doesn’t stay in Texas when it comes to textbooks”

No matter where you live, if your children go to public schools, the textbooks they use were very possibly written under Texas influence. If they graduated with a reflexive suspicion of the concept of separation of church and state and an unexpected interest in the contributions of the National Rifle Association to American history, you know who to blame.

When it comes to meddling with school textbooks, Texas is both similar to other states and totally different. It’s hardly the only one that likes to fiddle around with the material its kids study in class. The difference is due to size—4.8 million textbook-reading schoolchildren as of 2011—and the peculiarities of its system of government, in which the State Board of Education is selected in elections that are practically devoid of voters, and wealthy donors can chip in unlimited amounts of money to help their favorites win.

Those favorites are not shrinking violets. In 2009, the nation watched in awe as the state board worked on approving a new science curriculum under the leadership of a chair who believed that “evolution is hooey.” In 2010, the subject was social studies and the teachers tasked with drawing up course guidelines were supposed to work in consultation with “experts” added on by the board, one of whom believed that the income tax was contrary to the word of God in the scriptures.

Ever since the 1960s, the selection of schoolbooks in Texas has been a target for the religious right, which worried that schoolchildren were being indoctrinated in godless secularism, and political conservatives who felt that their kids were being given way too much propaganda about the positive aspects of the federal government. Mel Gabler, an oil company clerk, and his wife, Norma, who began their textbook crusade at their kitchen table, were the leaders of the first wave. They brought their supporters to State Board of Education meetings, unrolling their “scroll of shame,” which listed objections they had to the content of the current reading material. At times, the scroll was fifty-four feet long. Products of the Texas school system have the Gablers to thank for the fact that at one point the New Deal was axed from the timeline of significant events in American history.

<more>

https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2012/06/21/how-texas-inflicts-bad-textbooks-on-us/

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The propaganda surrounding the myth of the "happy slave" isn't a new one Docreed2003 Jun 2020 #1
The "happy slave" mythology is even older than that. thucythucy Jun 2020 #4
I've read that Gone With The Wind was one of those novels, jb5150 Jun 2020 #8
It's gawd awful wryter2000 Jun 2020 #16
"Gone With the Wind" (the novel) is 1920s or 30s. thucythucy Jun 2020 #29
At least one of the characters in GWTW Retrograde Jun 2020 #30
+1, uponit7771 Jun 2020 #7
It isn't just the Texas Board of Education. Lonestarblue Jun 2020 #12
when the school textbook board of kansas chooses textbooks , so goes the rest of AllaN01Bear Jun 2020 #22
Let's use just one course as an example for publishers. Lonestarblue Jun 2020 #25
+1 For a while at historic sites and plantations appalachiablue Jun 2020 #34
You could say some of the slaves were literally family Frances Jun 2020 #2
Sally Hemings wryter2000 Jun 2020 #19
Yup, and by all accounts they looked very much alike obamanut2012 Jun 2020 #26
Growing up i never heard of Juneteenth in school k-12th grade even in college ace3csusm Jun 2020 #3
I only learned of it as an adult wryter2000 Jun 2020 #18
I was never taught it in class... Alacritous Crier Jun 2020 #5
Was a time, most all textbooks came from Texas Brother Buzz Jun 2020 #6
I learned about it because the community celebration was in the park across the street caraher Jun 2020 #9
I had no idea what Juneteenth meant lillypaddle Jun 2020 #10
It's a highly important subject and teaching should be more accurate and reality based bucolic_frolic Jun 2020 #11
I learned about it in 1971 or 1972. murielm99 Jun 2020 #13
Our textbooks and education kept other secrets, too. JeaneRaye Jun 2020 #14
Tulsa was told to me by a cowork it seem surreal had to do own research ace3csusm Jun 2020 #21
"Roots" needs to be on tv again, IMO, for starters. Ilsa Jun 2020 #15
Good idea ashredux Jun 2020 #17
I remember watching it on TV when i was a kid ace3csusm Jun 2020 #20
I always thought it was Aeshululian comedy that........ jaxexpat Jun 2020 #23
Many years ago my wife spent a weekend in Charleston, SC. bluescribbler Jun 2020 #24
All kids should read The Autobiography of Frederick Douglass MH1 Jun 2020 #27
July 4th Exercise - let's see if anyone at M$Greedia reads this in full malaise Jun 2020 #28
The more things change ... Hermit-The-Prog Jun 2020 #31
K + R Raastan Jun 2020 #33
This is proof that Social Studies in this country often whitewashes history JonLP24 Jun 2020 #32
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Whitewashed and erased': ...»Reply #6