Could Texas' Gingrich-Based High School History
Curriculum Go National?
Justin Elliott
Talking Points Memo
September 4, 2009
http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2009/09/could_texas_gingrich_based_curriculum_go_national.php?ref=fpa


While Republicans are busy gnashing their teeth over
President Obama's imminent indoctrination of the
nation's schoolchildren, there's an education story
bubbling up in Texas that could have considerably more
far-reaching consequences.

The GOP-controlled State Board of Education is working
on a new set of statewide textbook standards for, among
other subjects, U.S. History Studies Since
Reconstruction. And it turns out what the board decides
may end up having implications far beyond the Lone Star
State.

The first draft of the standards, released at the end of
July, is a doozy. It lays out a kind of Human Events
version of U.S. history.

Approved textbooks, the standards say, must teach the
Texan student to "identify significant conservative
advocacy organizations and individuals, such as Newt
Gingrich, Phyllis Schlafly, and the Moral Majority." No
analogous liberal figures or groups are required,
prompting protests from some legislators and committee
members. (Read an excerpt here.)

The standards on Nixon: "describe Richard M. Nixon's
role in the normalization of relations with China and
the policy of detente."

On Reagan: "describe Ronald Reagan's role in restoring
national confidence, such as Reaganomics and Peace with
Strength." (That's it.)

The Cold War section is rendered as "U.S. responses to
Soviet aggression after World War II ... "

The state board of education, made up of 10 Republicans
and five Democrats, has to vote on the standards twice
in the coming months before they would go into effect.

Comments in the margin of the draft explain the proposed
changes. And a persistent, tendentious conservative
voice comes through throughout. Next to the section
listing key names and groups from the civil rights
movement and 60s activism, including Martin Luther King,
Betty Friedan, and the American Indian Movement, it's
noted that a committee member demanded parity ... for
late 20th century conservative groups:

MV[Multiple Views]: One person: inclusion of 7 names and
organizations disproportionate compared to only 3 in
conservative section.

Next to a noncontroversial seeming item requiring
students to "describe how McCarthyism, the arms race,
and the space race increased Cold War tensions" is the
note:

"MV[Multiple Views]: One member thinks that if
McCarthyism is noted, then the Venona papers need to be
explained that exonerates him."

A bullet point on "women and minority employment" as an
economic effect of World II caused "one member" to gripe
"there is too much emphasis on multiculturalism."

And "one member" deemed a section on "effective
leadership" a perfect place to bring to students'
attention Charlton Heston's celebrated (among right-
wingers) culture war speech.

Here's what makes this a national story: what happens in
Texas doesn't stay in Texas, says Diane Ravitch,
professor of education at NYU.

That's because Texas is one of the two states with the
largest student enrollments, along with California. "The
publishers vie to get their books adopted for them, and
the changes that are inserted to please Texas and
California are then part of the textbooks made available
to every other state," says Ravitch, who wrote a book
about the politics of textbooks.

Rick Hess of the American Enterprise Institute explains
it as a simple economic calculation by the big textbook
publishers. "Publishers are generally reticent to run
two different versions of a textbook," he says. "You can
imagine the headache the expense the logistics, the
storage, all of it."

But don't start saving for private school tuition just
yet. A spokeswoman for the Texas State Board of
Education tells TPMmuckraker the board will have to pass
the standards first in January, in a "first reading and
filing authorization vote," and then in March in a final
vote, before they would go into effect. In an article on
the controversy in the Houston Chronicle, one of the
conservative leaders on the board actually predicted the
standards will pass at least the first vote.

This one bears close watching.
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