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What Did You Learn in School Today? (Texas Version)


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 Post subject: What Did You Learn in School Today? (Texas Version)
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Where would you rate Estée Lauder in terms of historical importance to our country? If you think she is one of the 68 most important historical figures, you agree with the board. Yes, the board included her in the state curriculum, but not George Washington.


The fiercest battle during the board's hearings was fought over the 11th-grade history curriculum, which in Texas is "United States History since 1877." The exception to that timeline is the new state-mandated "Celebrate Freedom Week," during which students will learn about our founding fathers. That sounds simple enough, except that the only founding fathers included in the curriculum are Benjamin Rush, John Hancock, John Jay, John Witherspoon, John Peter Muhlenberg, Charles Carroll and Jonathan Trumbull Sr. What about George Washington, Thomas Jefferson or John Adams? They are nowhere to be found in the new high school TEKS.

The board eliminated mention of our government's use of propaganda during World War I, and instead of analyzing Truman's decision to use the atomic bomb at the end of World War II, students will now analyze the development of the bomb. Additionally, students will now "evaluate efforts by international organizations to undermine U.S. sovereignty.

Perhaps you have heard something about a labor movement in the 20th century? No longer will your children. The only reference to a 20th-century labor movement will come when learning about Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta. No mention of the Fair Labor Standards Act or the National Labor Relations Act. No mention of strikes or any labor dispute. The words "labor movement" were taken out of the TEKS.

more


https://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/08/25-5

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 Post subject: Re: What Did You Learn in School Today? (Texas Version)
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I noticed something right off, the article is not sourced, and I smelled a just little whiffy bit of weasel as I was reading it.

Since It's about the Texas State Board of Education, it's not that hard to look it up. I did, and the article was hiding a weasel in the disingenuous impression it was trying to portray.

A case of picking over a long document for snippets to combine to create an impression that one thing is happening, when a review of the whole would leave another completely different impression.

The article places almost all of it's focus on a single week, when school kids of every age in Texas take a break from the regularly scheduled program for their grade level, and do that US Constitution, proud of America, bit. That is in part and parcel is a part of the California curriculum as well, I think it was brought about as part of no child left behind.

The idea that the curriculum in Texas schools some how forgets, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, or John Adams is not supported, they usually are the only founding fathers who are actually studied in average HS studies, the others are mentioned for the special freedom week program to include these figures not exclude good old George.

The board may have eliminated mention of our government's use of propaganda during World War I, but they do study and analyze the function of the U.S. Office of War Information. That's about the same thing.

The board may have eliminated analyzing Truman's decision to use the atomic bomb at the end of World War II, but they evaluate the domestic and international leadership of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry Truman during World War II.

And students may now analyze the development of the bomb, but they do that so:

The student understands the impact of significant national and international decisions and conflicts in the Cold War on the United States. The student is expected to:

TEKS ch113c wrote:
(A) describe U.S. responses to Soviet aggression after World War II, including the Truman Doctrine, the Marshall Plan, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the Berlin airlift, and John F. Kennedy's role in the Cuban Missile Crisis;
(B) describe how Cold War tensions were intensified by the arms race, the space race, McCarthyism, and the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), the findings of which were confirmed by the Venona Papers;
(C) explain reasons and outcomes for U.S. involvement in the Korean War and its relationship to the containment policy;
(D) explain reasons and outcomes for U.S. involvement in foreign countries and their relationship to the Domino Theory, including the Vietnam War;
(E) analyze the major issues and events of the Vietnam War such as the Tet Offensive, the escalation of forces, Vietnamization, and the fall of Saigon; and
(F) describe the responses to the Vietnam War such as the draft, the 26th Amendment, the role of the media, the credibility gap, the silent majority, and the anti-war movement.
(Note the quoted is only a small part of ch113.41.)

It's curriculum, an inch deep and a mile wide, and breezing through it in just a year would mean that too little time would be spent at any given point, for a student to acquire any real understanding, but that was the essence of the federal, no child left behind.

This article was written to push, not to inform. Happens to be a message that many of us are ready and willing to accept, but what good is it if makes us sound ill informed when we speak.

Links http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/rules/tac/chapter113/ch113c.pdf look for ch113.41 quite a ways down in the document, for the 11th grade curriculum.



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 Post subject: Re: What Did You Learn in School Today? (Texas Version)
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Well, here's an article that can be sourced to the New York Times (usually considered a paper of repute, but yes, I know, there was that Judith Miller and Jayson Blair stuff) ... discussing the proposed changes.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/13/educa ... texas.html

AUSTIN, Tex. — After three days of turbulent meetings, the Texas Board of Education on Friday approved a social studies curriculum that will put a conservative stamp on history and economics textbooks, stressing the superiority of American capitalism, questioning the Founding Fathers’ commitment to a purely secular government and presenting Republican political philosophies in a more positive light.

The vote was 10 to 5 along party lines, with all the Republicans on the board voting for it.

The board, whose members are elected, has influence beyond Texas because the state is one of the largest buyers of textbooks. In the digital age, however, that influence has diminished as technological advances have made it possible for publishers to tailor books to individual states.

In recent years, board members have been locked in an ideological battle between a bloc of conservatives who question Darwin’s theory of evolution and believe the Founding Fathers were guided by Christian principles, and a handful of Democrats and moderate Republicans who have fought to preserve the teaching of Darwinism and the separation of church and state.

Since January, Republicans on the board have passed more than 100 amendments to the 120-page curriculum standards affecting history, sociology and economics courses from elementary to high school. The standards were proposed by a panel of teachers.

“We are adding balance,” said Dr. Don McLeroy, the leader of the conservative faction on the board, after the vote. “History has already been skewed. Academia is skewed too far to the left.” (*)

Battles over what to put in science and history books have taken place for years in the 20 states where state boards must adopt textbooks, most notably in California and Texas. But rarely in recent history has a group of conservative board members left such a mark on a social studies curriculum.

Efforts by Hispanic board members to include more Latino figures as role models for the state’s large Hispanic population were consistently defeated, prompting one member, Mary Helen Berlanga, to storm out of a meeting late Thursday night, saying, “They can just pretend this is a white America and Hispanics don’t exist.”

“They are going overboard, they are not experts, they are not historians,” she said. “They are rewriting history, not only of Texas but of the United States and the world.”

The curriculum standards will now be published in a state register, opening them up for 30 days of public comment. A final vote will be taken in May, but given the Republican dominance of the board, it is unlikely that many changes will be made.

The standards, reviewed every decade, serve as a template for textbook publishers, who must come before the board next year with drafts of their books. The board’s makeup will have changed by then because Dr. McLeroy lost in a primary this month to a more moderate Republican, and two others — one Democrat and one conservative Republican — announced they were not seeking re-election.

There are seven members of the conservative bloc on the board, but they are often joined by one of the other three Republicans on crucial votes. There were no historians, sociologists or economists consulted at the meetings, though some members of the conservative bloc held themselves out as experts on certain topics.

The conservative members maintain that they are trying to correct what they see as a liberal bias among the teachers who proposed the curriculum. To that end, they made dozens of minor changes aimed at calling into question, among other things, concepts like the separation of church and state and the secular nature of the American Revolution.

“I reject the notion by the left of a constitutional separation of church and state,” said David Bradley, a conservative from Beaumont who works in real estate. “I have $1,000 for the charity of your choice if you can find it in the Constitution.”

They also included a plank to ensure that students learn about “the conservative resurgence of the 1980s and 1990s, including Phyllis Schlafly, the Contract With America, the Heritage Foundation, the Moral Majority and the National Rifle Association.”

Dr. McLeroy, a dentist by training, pushed through a change to the teaching of the civil rights movement to ensure that students study the violent philosophy of the Black Panthers in addition to the nonviolent approach of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. He also made sure that textbooks would mention the votes in Congress on civil rights legislation, which Republicans supported.

“Republicans need a little credit for that,” he said. “I think it’s going to surprise some students.”

Mr. Bradley won approval for an amendment saying students should study “the unintended consequences” of the Great Society legislation, affirmative action and Title IX legislation. He also won approval for an amendment stressing that Germans and Italians as well as Japanese were interned in the United States during World War II, to counter the idea that the internment of Japanese was motivated by racism.

Other changes seem aimed at tamping down criticism of the right. Conservatives passed one amendment, for instance, requiring that the history of McCarthyism include “how the later release of the Venona papers confirmed suspicions of communist infiltration in U.S. government.” The Venona papers were transcripts of some 3,000 communications between the Soviet Union and its agents in the United States.

Mavis B. Knight, a Democrat from Dallas, introduced an amendment requiring that students study the reasons “the founding fathers protected religious freedom in America by barring the government from promoting or disfavoring any particular religion above all others.”

It was defeated on a party-line vote.

After the vote, Ms. Knight said, “The social conservatives have perverted accurate history to fulfill their own agenda.”

In economics, the revisions add Milton Friedman and Friedrich von Hayek, two champions of free-market economic theory, among the usual list of economists to be studied, like Adam Smith, Karl Marx and John Maynard Keynes. They also replaced the word “capitalism” throughout their texts with the “free-enterprise system.”

“Let’s face it, capitalism does have a negative connotation,” said one conservative member, Terri Leo. “You know, ‘capitalist pig!’ ”

In the field of sociology, another conservative member, Barbara Cargill, won passage of an amendment requiring the teaching of “the importance of personal responsibility for life choices” in a section on teenage suicide, dating violence, sexuality, drug use and eating disorders.

The topic of sociology tends to blame society for everything,” Ms. Cargill said. (**)

Even the course on world history did not escape the board’s scalpel.

Cynthia Dunbar, a lawyer from Richmond who is a strict constitutionalist and thinks the nation was founded on Christian beliefs, managed to cut Thomas Jefferson from a list of figures whose writings inspired revolutions in the late 18th century and 19th century, replacing him with St. Thomas Aquinas, John Calvin and William Blackstone. (Jefferson is not well liked among conservatives on the board because he coined the term “separation between church and state.”)

“The Enlightenment was not the only philosophy on which these revolutions were based,” Ms. Dunbar said.

[snip][end]

(*) Ever stopped to wonder why, Mr. Leroy?
(**) Because they tend to pay attention to the things people like you ignore, like how social conditions, influences, and constraints shape and influence personal choices.

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 Post subject: Re: What Did You Learn in School Today? (Texas Version)
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Seeker1 wrote:
(**) Because they tend to pay attention to the things people like you ignore, like how social conditions, influences, and constraints shape and influence personal choices.


I'm certainly aware of the problems of the Texas school board, my criticism of that OP article was that among all of the problems that could have addressed by simply using sound reporting. It was written instead to impact a reader emotionally, and left an impression whereby a reader might go out into public and make foolish misstatements like, "the Texas school board has cut George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and John Adams out of US history."

I saw the article you posted when it came out, and it's based on sound reporting, with a bit of the authors bias showing but not so much that it rise above the usual noise, and probably cleaner on the bias point than I could have accomplished had I written it.

(**) I also notice Ms.Cargill and was thinking at the time about looking her up. Since I didn't get around to it then, I think I'll do that now...


I thought so, "Strengths and weaknesses of evolution"--Barbara Cargill

I tracked her husbands, Terry Cargill's holdings, and name, deep into the Cargill family web of privately held corporations.

Cargill, Incorporated is a privately held, multinational corporation, based in Minnetonka, Minnesota. Founded in 1865, it is now the largest privately held corporation in the United States in terms of revenue.--wiki/cargill

I've seen freight trains a mile long where every grain car has the Cargill name on it, seen three of them traveling together one after another like a convoy.

She's tied through marriage to a bigger family fortune than the Koch brothers.

In 2008, Forbes called Koch Industries the second largest privately held company in the United States (after Cargill)--wiki/koch industries



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 Post subject: Re: What Did You Learn in School Today? (Texas Version)
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Texas Schools Slowly, Begrudgingly Admit Abstinence-Only Education Isn’t Working



Most schools in Texas are still just telling kids they shouldn't have sex until they get married, but a growing number are getting more realistic. According to the Texas Tribune, the state's health department chose not to apply for federal money that supports comprehensive sex-ed, but it's still the largest recipient of federal grants for abstinence-only programs. President Bush set aside funding for abstinence-only education, but much of that money is gone. Grants created under the Obama administration emphasize "evidence-based" programs that discuss both abstinence and contraception.

This is a consideration for educators in the state, but officials at several schools say they decided to start teaching kids about safe sex because their hallways are beginning to look like a neverending episode of 16 & Pregnant. Salon recently reported that Texas has the fifth highest teen pregnancy rate in the country (plus it ranks third in young people with AIDS and fourth for teens with syphilis). Last year in Midland, President Bush's childhood home, there were 172 pregnant girls in the school district. This year in addition to abstinence, administrators have decided to start teaching seventh and eighth graders about condoms and other birth control methods.

Previously, many school officials in Texas had come to the irrational conclusion that not knowing how to use a condom would make kids less likely to have sex. Susan Tortolero, director of the University of Texas' Prevention Research Center, says that recently there's been more interest in their abstinence-plus program. Tortolero says, "It's like we're beyond this argument of abstinence, abstinence plus. Districts want something that works."


more



http://jezebel.com/5840948/texas-school ... nt-working

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 Post subject: Re: What Did You Learn in School Today? (Texas Version)
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With the Texas State Board of Education set to adopt science textbooks for public schools in 2013, this year’s state board elections are especially important. On Tuesday one state board candidate, Republican Marty Rowley of Amarillo, made it pretty clear that he would be part of the board’s anti-science faction if elected.



http://tfninsider.org/2010/03/11/bloggi ... debate-iv/



Background............


Widely regarded as one of the most important of all the founding fathers of the United States, Thomas Jefferson received a demotion of sorts Friday thanks to the Texas Board of Education.

The board voted to enact new teaching standards for history and social studies that will alter which material gets included in school textbooks. It decided to drop Jefferson from a world history section devoted to great political thinkers.


http://www.aolnews.com/2010/03/12/texas ... -standard/




Texas State Board of Education: 2012 Elections


Because of redistricting, all 15 seats on the Texas State Board of Education will be up for grabs in the November 2012 elections. The results of these elections will determine whether the religious right’s corrosive influence over public education will weaken or grow as the board considers what the next generation of public school students in Texas will learn about evolution, social studies, sex education and other subjects.



http://tfninsider.org/2012/02/15/tx-ed- ... on-agenda/

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 Post subject: Re: What Did You Learn in School Today? (Texas Version)
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Leonard Pitts Jr.: Texas GOP wants no child left able to think


Quote:
Some recent headlines from the alternate universe of modern conservatism:

Rush Limbaugh claims the bad guy in the new Batman movie was named Bane to remind voters of Mitt Romney's controversial tenure at Bain Capital.

Michelle Bachmann, citing zero credible evidence, accuses a Muslim-American aide to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton of conspiring with the Muslim Brotherhood.

Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio's crack investigators announce that President Barack Obama's long-form birth certificate is a fake.

In other words, it's just an average week down there in Crazy Town.

And that lends a certain context to a tidbit brought to national attention last week by Stephen Colbert of Comedy Central's "The Colbert Report." Meaning a plank from the 2012 platform of the Republican Party of Texas which, astonishingly enough, reads as follows: "We oppose the teaching of Higher Order Thinking Skills (HOTS) (values clarification), critical thinking skills and similar programs that are simply a relabeling of Outcome-Based Education (OBE) (mastery learning) which focus on behavior modification and have the purpose of challenging the student's fixed beliefs and undermining parental authority."

Holy wow. That is, without a doubt, the most frightening sentence this side of a Stephen King novel.

The Texas GOP has set itself explicitly against teaching children to be critical thinkers.

Never mind the creeping stupidization of this country, the growing dumbification of our children, our mounting rejection of, even contempt for, objective fact. Never mind educators who lament the inability of American children to think, to weigh conflicting paradigms, analyze competing arguments, to reason, ruminate, question and reach a thoughtful conclusion. Never mind that this promises the loss of our ability to compete in an ever more complex and technology-driven world..................

more at link

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