On October 8, the executive
director of curriculum and instruction for the Carroll Independent School
District in Southlake, Texas, told a teacher to make sure to follow Texas’s new
law requiring teachers to present opposing views on controversial subjects. The
Carroll school board had recently reprimanded a fourth-grade teacher who had
kept an anti-racism book in her classroom, and teachers wanted to know what
books they could keep in their own classrooms.
“Just
try to remember the concepts of [House Bill] 3979,” the curriculum director
said. “And make sure that if you have a book on the Holocaust,” the director
continued, “that you have one that has an opposing, that has other
perspectives.”
The
Holocaust was Nazi Germany’s systematic murder of about two thirds of Europe’s
Jewish population—about six million people—during World War II.
“How
do you oppose the Holocaust?” one teacher said.
“Believe
me,” the director said. “That’s come up.”
The
Texas legislature passed another law that is going into effect in December.
S.B. 3, known as the Critical Race Theory bill. It specifies what, exactly,
social studies courses should teach to students. Those guidelines present a
vision of how American citizens should perceive their nation.
They
should have “an understanding of the fundamental moral, political, and
intellectual foundations of the American experiment in self-government; the
history, qualities, traditions, and features of civic engagement in the United
States; the structure, function, and processes of government institutions at
the federal, state, and local levels.”
But
they should get that information in a specific way: through the Declaration of
Independence; the United States Constitution; the Federalist Papers, including
Essays 10 and 51; excerpts from Alexis de Tocqueville’s Democracy in
America; the transcript of the first Lincoln-Douglas debate; and
the writings of the founding fathers of the United States; the history and
importance of the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964; and the Thirteenth,
Fourteenth, and Nineteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
While
they managed to add in de Tocqueville’s Democracy in America—and I would be shocked if more
than a handful of people have ever read that account of early America—there are
some pointed omissions from this list. The Fifteenth Amendment to the
Constitution, which guarantees Black voting, didn’t make it, although the
Nineteenth Amendment, which grants women the right to vote, did. Also missing
is the Voting Rights Act of 1965, although the Civil Rights Act of the previous
year is there.
Topics
explicitly eliminated from the teaching standard are also instructive. Those
things cut from the standards include: “the history of Native Americans,” and
“[founding] mothers and other founding persons.”
Under
“commitment to free speech and civil discourse,” topics struck from the
standards include “the writings of…George Washington; Ona Judge (a woman
Washington enslaved and who ran away); Thomas Jefferson, Sally Hemings (the
enslaved woman Jefferson took as a sexual companion after the death of his
wife, her half-sister),” and “any other founding persons of the United
States.”
The
standards lost Frederick Douglass’s writings, the Fugitive Slave Acts of 1793
and 1850, the Indian Removal Act of 1830 that forced Indigenous Americans off
their southeastern lands, and Thomas Jefferson’s letter to the Danbury Baptists
defending the separation of church and state. The standards lost “historical
documents related to the civic accomplishments of marginalized populations”
including documents related to the Chicano movement, women’s suffrage and equal
rights, the civil rights movement, Indigenous rights, and the American labor
movement.
The
standards also lost “the history of white supremacy, including but not limited
to the institution of slavery, the eugenics movement, and the Ku Klux Klan, and
the ways in which it is morally wrong” and “the history and importance of the
civil rights movement.” The legislature took three pages to outline all the
things that teachers may not teach, including all the systemic biases the right
associates with Critical Race Theory (although that legal theory is not taught
in K–12 schools), and anything having to do with the 1619 Project.
Teachers
cannot be forced to teach current events or controversial issues, but if they
choose to do so, they must “strive to explore that topic from diverse and
contending perspectives without giving deference to any one perspective.”
Supporters of the measure said that teachers should teach facts and not “choose
sides.”
The
lawmakers who wrote the new standards said they had been crafted to eliminate
redundancy. In 2019, the state wrote standards to teach character
traits—courage, integrity and honesty—and instructions to include particular
people or events could simply duplicate those concepts. “If you want to talk
about courage, talk about George Washington crossing the Delaware, or William
Barret Travis defending the Alamo,” a member of the state board of education
said.
Editing
from our history Dolores Huerta, who co-founded the National Farmworkers’
Association—she was eliminated by name—as well as Abigail Adams and Frederick
Douglass and the 1924 Snyder Act (by which the nation recognized Indigenous
citizenship) does more than whitewash our history. That editing warps what it
means to be an American.
Our
history is not about individual feats of courage or honesty in a vacuum. It is
about the efforts of people in this country to determine their own fate and to
elect a government that will enable them to do that.
A
curriculum that talks about individual courage and integrity while erasing the
majority of us, as well as the rules that enable us to have a say in our
government by voting, is deliberately untethered from national democratic
principles.
It
gives us a school that does not dare take a position on the Holocaust.
-Heather
Cox Richardson
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