Imperial Valley Press

GOP states weigh limits on how race and slavery are taught

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LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Complainin­g about what he called indoctrina­tion in schools, former President Donald Trump created a commission that promoted “patriotic” education and played down America’s role in slavery. But though he’s out of the White House and the commission has disbanded, the cause hasn’t died. Lawmakers in Republican states are now pressing for similar action.

Proposals in Arkansas, Iowa and Mississipp­i would prohibit schools from using a New York Times project that focused on slavery’s legacy. Georgia colleges and universiti­es have been quizzed about whether they’re teaching about white privilege or oppression. And GOP governors are backing overhauls of civic education that mirror Trump’s abandoned initiative­s.

Republican­s behind the latest moves say they’re countering left- wing attempts in K- 12 schools and higher education to indoctrina­te rather than teach students. Teachers, civil rights leaders and policymake­rs are fighting back, saying students will su er if states brush over crucial parts of the nation’s history.

“The idea of simply saying you’re not going to use certain materials because you don’t like what they’re going to say without input from profession­als makes no sense,” said James Grossman, executive director of the American Historical Associatio­n.

Statehouse fights over what’s taught in public schools are nothing new.

Arkansas lost a court battle over a 1981 law that required the teaching of creationis­m in its classrooms, and in recent years conservati­ves have waged battles over how evolution, climate change and other topics are taught. But the latest e orts show just how much Trump’s rhetoric on race continues to resonate in the mostly rural and white states he won.

The proposals primarily target The New York Times’ “1619 Project,” which examined slavery and its consequenc­es as the central thread of U.S. history. The project was published in 2019, the 400th anniversar­y of the first arrival of African slaves. The project was also turned into a popular pod

cast and materials were developed for schools to use.

A measure pending in Arkansas’ Legislatur­e criticizes the project as a “racially divisive and revisionis­t account of history that threatens the integrity of the Union by denying the true principles on which it was founded.”

Republican Rep. Mark Lowery, who sponsored the measure, called slavery a “dark stain,” but said the project minimizes the Founding Fathers and cited criticism from some historians about parts of it.

“It should not be taught as history,” he said.

Republican U. S. Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas has also been a frequent critic of the project.

Nikole Hannah-Jones,

who won a Pulitzer Prize for the lead essay in the project, called it a work of journalism that wasn’t intended to replace what’s being taught in schools. Born and raised in Iowa, one of the states looking to prohibit the project’s use, Hannah- Jones said it’s clear the project is being used to whip up political fears.

“It’s one thing to not like a particular piece of journalism, it’s another thing to seek to prohibit its teaching,” she said.

The Pulitzer Center, which partnered with the Times to develop 1619 Project lesson plans, said it’s heard from more than 3,800 K-12 teachers and nearly 1,000 college educators who planned to use

them. Of those, only about two dozen were from Arkansas.

Jonathan Rogers, a journalism teacher at Iowa City High School, said he’s used the project’s podcast in his classes.

“(Students) definitely responded to thinking about using di erent sources or alternativ­e storytelli­ng,” Rogers said. “Also, just hearing Black voices is so important when we’re talking about diversity and perspectiv­es, whether it’s historical events or current events.”

Other measures would go even further than targeting the 1619 Project, including a broader bill Lowery said he’s reworking that currently calls for banning courses that promote social justice for one racial group. In Oklahoma, one bill would allow teachers to be fired for teaching that the U.S. is fundamenta­lly racist, or other topics deemed divisive.

Critics say that, besides eating away at local control, the proposals show an unwillingn­ess to address the country’s shortcomin­gs as well as its successes.

“This country does have a history that we have to reckon with and that sometimes our education system glosses over,” said Rep. Emily Virgin, the top Democrat in the Oklahoma House.

After taking o ce, President Joe Biden revoked the report submitted by the commission Trump formed in response to the 1619 Project. Widely mocked by historians as political propaganda, Trump’s 1776 Commission glorified the country’s founders and played down the role of slavery.

“American parents are not going to accept indoctrina­tion in our schools, cancel culture at work, or the repression of traditiona­l faith, culture and values in the public square,” Trump said when he announced the panel last year.

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, a close ally of Trump’s, last month proposed $900,000 to ramp up her state’s civics curriculum to emphasize the U.S. as “the most unique nation in the history of the world.” Mississipp­i Gov. Tate Reeves is proposing a $3 million “Patriotic Education Fund” to combat what he called revisionis­t history.

 ?? VIA AP
JONATHON GRUENKE/THE DAILY PRESS ?? In this 2019 file photo, Jerome Jones explores inside the Fort Monroe Visitor And Education Center during the First African Landing Commemorat­ive Ceremony at Fort Monroe, Va.
VIA AP JONATHON GRUENKE/THE DAILY PRESS In this 2019 file photo, Jerome Jones explores inside the Fort Monroe Visitor And Education Center during the First African Landing Commemorat­ive Ceremony at Fort Monroe, Va.

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