FYI, as there are several Philly residents on this list.

IMHO, this is a good start. A lot of other ethnic/racial groups 
built this country and the history programme needs to include that, 
too.

I wonder if this history curriculum will include mentions of *both* 
underground railroads. Everyone knows about the "northbound" 
underground railroad. The "southbound" one was based largely in 
Philly.

George
Captain
USS Ronald E. McNair
- - - - - - - -
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/25/education/25philly.html
June 25, 2005
Philadelphia Mandates Black History for Graduation
By MICHAEL JANOFSKY 
PHILADELPHIA, June 22 - Angry that public schools here have always 
taught American history through a Eurocentric prism, parents of 
black children began pleading with local school officials to offer a 
course in African-American history.

That was nearly 40 years ago.

This year, their pleas were finally - and emphatically - answered. 
Starting in September, students entering city high schools as ninth 
graders will be required to take a course in African-American 
history, making Philadelphia the first major city to require such a 
course for high school graduation.

School officials here say the course carries huge benefits for all 
students and offers a perspective on American history that has been 
largely absent from most contemporary teaching guides. 

"You cannot understand American history without understanding the 
African-American experience; I don't care what anybody says," said 
Paul G. Vallas, the school system's chief executive, who is 
white. "It benefits African-American children who need a more 
comprehensive understanding of their own culture, and it also 
benefits non-African-Americans to understand the full totality of 
the American experience."

Critics of the policy shift say it will further polarize the city by 
focusing attention on just one race and not dealing with other 
racial and ethnic groups like Mexicans, Chinese or Poles. 

According to a course outline developed by district officials, the 
course will focus on how Africans became Americans through the 
colonial period, efforts of slaves to achieve freedom, the Civil War 
and its aftermath, economic development for blacks through the last 
century, the civil rights movement and the growth of modern black 
nationalist movements in the United States and Africa.

Supporters say the course will place a new emphasis on historical 
African-American figures like Frederick Douglass, Ida B. Wells and 
Dr. Charles Drew, whose contributions to American life and culture 
seldom get more than a brief mention, if that, in the current 
textbooks that many schools use.

The Philadelphia School District includes 185,000 students, two-
thirds of whom are African-American, and only two in seven are white 
or Hispanic. The School Reform Commission, a panel that sets policy 
and is now composed of three whites and two blacks, voted 5 to 0 in 
February to make the course mandatory in all 53 high schools after 
some in recent years had offered African-American history as an 
elective. 

The vote garnered little notice at the time, but in recent weeks as 
the school board began mailing out letters to parents informing them 
of next year's curriculum, pockets of local resistance began 
emerging. 

The speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, John M. 
Perzel, an otherwise strong supporter of the city's schools for 
recent improvements in test scores, asked the commission to 
reconsider making the course mandatory.

Mr. Perzel, a Republican who represents a district in northeast 
Philadelphia that is largely white, said in a letter to the 
commission chairman, James E. Nevels, that he was concerned that the 
mandate "will divide, rather than unite" the city "and thereby erode 
the positive learning environment."

Mr. Nevels, calling himself "respectful of the points" Mr. Perzel 
raised, said he was certain that district officials would not 
reverse their decision. "There's no question about the commitment to 
African-American history by the Philadelphia School District," he 
said. 

An aide to Mr. Perzel said the letter was prompted, in part, by 
complaints from constituents. Mr. Perzel declined a request for an 
interview, but his sentiments appear to reflect discomfort among 
some whites elsewhere in the city.

Standing outside a recreation center in Fishtown, a largely white 
working-class neighborhood, Mike Budnick, 16, called the 
requirement "a bad idea" and said he was not especially interested 
in learning about black culture or heritage.

"I'm more interested in our history," he said.

A friend of Mr. Budnick, Arbi Ferko, also 16, said, "It's not our 
history to learn," and pointed out, as other critics have, that the 
school had not sought to create courses on the history of other 
groups.

Supporters of the course are dismayed by such views, insisting that 
in large measure, African-Americans, like no other ethnic group, 
have been cheated by contemporary textbooks and social studies 
curriculums that introduce students to blacks in this country as 
slaves from Africa with no prior language, culture or heritage.

"Too often, African-Americans are marginalized in American society," 
said Sandra Dungee Glenn, a commission member who was the driving 
force behind making the course mandatory. "People's views and 
understanding of who we are focus on us as descendents of slaves. It 
begins and ends there, giving us inferior status." 

The course is designed to alter those perceptions by reviewing the 
origins of civilization in Africa and early developments in African 
history before tracking the movement of Africans to North America as 
slaves.

>From that point, the course follows the progress and travails of 
blacks throughout American history with a special emphasis on their 
contributions.

As a pilot program, African history was offered in the spring 
semester this year in four high schools.

Patricia Thomas Whyatt taught the course at Strawberry Mansion, a 
nearly all-black school of 900 students, and found that even her own 
students had misconceptions of their race.

"The first day I asked students to make a list of everything they 
knew about Africa, then we went through each item," Ms. Whyatt 
said. "They thought Africa was all jungle, that people ran around 
with spears and lived in huts. A lot of crazy things like that."

By the end of school this month, she said, not only had perceptions 
changed but self-esteem had improved as well.

One of her students, Christopher Davis, 18, said: "In American 
society, we're known as gangsters, drug dealers and killers. People 
don't know all about our heritage, what we stood for, our 
accomplishments as a culture. I feel better now because I know a 
little bit more about how we lived before we got here."
-0-






 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/scifinoir2/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to