Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Texas approves textbooks with Moses as Founding Father [View all]haikugal
(6,476 posts)35. California is taking action, I hope others do as well.
Controversial changes may be in store for your textbooks, courtesy of the Texas state school board.
by Tim Walker
History, Winston Churchill famously said, is written by the victors. Don McLeroy no doubt agrees.
McLeroy is a dentist from Bryan, Texas, a self-described Christian fundamentalist, and an outgoing member of state school board of education (SBOE). Over the past year, McLeroy and his allies formed a powerful bloc on the 15-member elected board and pushed through controversial revisions to the statewide social studies curriculum.
Sometimes it boggles my mind the kind of power we have, McLeroy recently boasted.
To many Texans, however, whats more mind-boggling are some of the revisions. Critics charge that they promote Christian fundamentalism, boost conservative political figures, and force-feed American exceptionalism, while downplaying the historical contributions of minorities. (See slideshow below for examples of the changes.)
Rita Haecker, president of the Texas State Teachers Association, believes the year-long review process deteriorated into a political and divisive spectacle.
The circus-like efforts of right-wing board members, Haecker said, to impose their own religious and political beliefs on the public school curriculum have been and still are a national embarrassment.
Don McLeroy
The standards will guide textbook purchases and classroom instruction over the next decade and maybe not just in Texas. National publishers usually cater to its demands because the school board is probably the most influential in the country. Texas buys 48 million textbooks every year. No other state, except California, wields that sort of market clout.
But Jay Diskey, executive director of the Association of American Publishers School Division, says fears of a Texas-style national social studies curriculum are overblown because publishers are more accustomed nowadays to producing customized textbooks for different states.
But California isnt taking any chances. A bill recently introduced in the state legislature seeks to prevent Texas-approved changes from seeping into textbooks in the Golden State.
Even if their reach is limited to Texas, will the new standards capsize social studies classrooms across the Lone Star state? Probably not, says Kirk White, a middle school social studies teacher in Austin.
by Tim Walker
History, Winston Churchill famously said, is written by the victors. Don McLeroy no doubt agrees.
McLeroy is a dentist from Bryan, Texas, a self-described Christian fundamentalist, and an outgoing member of state school board of education (SBOE). Over the past year, McLeroy and his allies formed a powerful bloc on the 15-member elected board and pushed through controversial revisions to the statewide social studies curriculum.
Sometimes it boggles my mind the kind of power we have, McLeroy recently boasted.
To many Texans, however, whats more mind-boggling are some of the revisions. Critics charge that they promote Christian fundamentalism, boost conservative political figures, and force-feed American exceptionalism, while downplaying the historical contributions of minorities. (See slideshow below for examples of the changes.)
Rita Haecker, president of the Texas State Teachers Association, believes the year-long review process deteriorated into a political and divisive spectacle.
The circus-like efforts of right-wing board members, Haecker said, to impose their own religious and political beliefs on the public school curriculum have been and still are a national embarrassment.
Don McLeroy
The standards will guide textbook purchases and classroom instruction over the next decade and maybe not just in Texas. National publishers usually cater to its demands because the school board is probably the most influential in the country. Texas buys 48 million textbooks every year. No other state, except California, wields that sort of market clout.
But Jay Diskey, executive director of the Association of American Publishers School Division, says fears of a Texas-style national social studies curriculum are overblown because publishers are more accustomed nowadays to producing customized textbooks for different states.
But California isnt taking any chances. A bill recently introduced in the state legislature seeks to prevent Texas-approved changes from seeping into textbooks in the Golden State.
Even if their reach is limited to Texas, will the new standards capsize social studies classrooms across the Lone Star state? Probably not, says Kirk White, a middle school social studies teacher in Austin.
http://www.nea.org/home/39060.htm
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):
56 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
It is a nightmare to be transferred to Texas and other Southern states for this very reason
betterdemsonly
Jun 2015
#5
Texas is operating on the fact that school books are ordered in bulk and whatever Texas uses the
haikugal
Jun 2015
#25
Well, it's not like the size of the Texas schoolbook market causes it to have any undue influence
Warren DeMontague
Jun 2015
#21
Apparently preparing for the Christian Taliban version of ISIS. This is so stupid and dangerous.
RKP5637
Jun 2015
#41
And I'm teaching my grandchildren to think for themselves and question everything...
AuntPatsy
Jun 2015
#47