Penticton Herald

Study released burnishing U.S. history

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SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem on Monday released a revised proposal for social studies standards in public schools that lays out a mostly shining vision of American history, after an initial draft of the standards came under heavy criticism last year from conservati­ves and Native American educators.

The Republican governor claimed the new proposed standards are free from “political agendas” and include an increased focus on Native American history. But they received swift criticism from some educators as a thinly-veiled political document. They emphasize the qualities of America’s founders and mimic language Noem has used as she jumped on the conservati­ve cause of weeding certain “divisive” teachings on race from public schools.

The 15-member standards workgroup, selected partially by the governor, included Noem’s chief of staff, two Republican lawmakers and the director of the South Dakota Catholic Conference, but just three educators certified by the Department of Education. The group’s work was facilitate­d by William Morrisey, a former professor at Hillsdale College -- a conservati­ve institutio­n in Michigan that has tried to remake education across the country.

Noem, who is seen as a potential 2024 White House contender, has also advocated for the “1776 Pledge to Save Our Schools” as part of a conservati­ve drive to emphasize the qualities of the founders of the United States.

“South Dakota’s children deserve the very best social studies education in the nation,” Noem said in a statement. “These standards raise the bar for the breadth and depth of civics and history education. They feature a true, honest, and balanced approach to American history that is not influenced by political agendas.”

The standards, which provide a list of topics students should comprehend at each K-12 grade level, are widely followed by school districts but are not mandatory.

The new 128-page document more than doubles the length of the proposed standards the Department of Education released last year. They would make the sprawling argument that the United States, though not without fault, is an exceptiona­l nation that has uniquely advanced rights for every race and gender. They are also peppered with Christian history and explore the religion’s influence on the nation’s leading figures and on Western civilizati­on.

For example, seventh grade students are expected to explain how the nation’s founders advanced equal rights for every person and advanced the idea that each person “is endowed with these rights by the God that created them, and that the existence of human slavery was understood by most, but not all, of the founders to be a contradict­ion of the principle of human equality.”

Seventh graders are also to be taught: “Patriotism is the love of country, meaning that one holds his or her country up to an objective standard of moral right and wrong, preserving the ways in which the country does good and correcting the ways it sometimes does wrong.”

The standards state they are intended, in part, to “foster a love of country that, like any love, is not blind to faults.”

Nick Tilsen, the president of an Indigenous advocacy organizati­on called NDN Collective, said that when the standards start out with goals like that, they are bound to further a narrative that continues to treat minority groups unjustly.

“Her approach in this curriculum further perpetuate­s ignorance, further perpetuate­s racism and white supremacy,” he said, adding “These priority areas are dominated by nationalis­m.”

The proposed standards are the Noem administra­tion’s second attempt to update the learning objectives. Both the political left and right criticized last year’s standard-setting process, and Noem scrapped that proposal and relaunched the process. Noem’s new version, released Monday, appeased conservati­ve critics.

Republican state Rep. Sue Peterson, who resigned in protest from last year’s workgroup, praised the new standards in a statement released by the governor’s office. She called them “substantia­l and straightfo­rward standards that emphasize our founding documents, our pursuit of freedom, and treat our nation’s history honestly.”

Noem’s office also attempted to head off criticism from Native American education advocates and included a statement from Joe Circle Bear, a member of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe who was part of the workgroup.

“Governor Noem promised to tell our story as part of American history, and these standards do that,” Circle Bear said in the statement.

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