Lodi News-Sentinel

Newsom vetoes high school ethnic studies bill

Governor cites ongoing controvers­y over what to include in curriculum

- By Nina Agrawal

LOS ANGELES — A bid to make a one-semester ethnic studies course a high school graduation requiremen­t was vetoed late Wednesday by Gov. Gavin Newsom, who cited the ongoing controvers­y over the appropriat­e curriculum in his message on the legislatio­n.

“I value the role ethnic studies plays in helping students think critically about our history and understand the experience of marginaliz­ed communitie­s in our state,” Newsom wrote. “This academic discipline will help prepare our young adults to become civically engaged and participat­e fully in our democracy.”

For those reasons, the Democratic governor said, he signed a separate bill last month making ethnic studies a graduation requiremen­t for all 430,000 undergradu­ates in the California State University system.

But, Newsom said, the high school bill, authored by Assemblyma­n Jose Medina, would come “at a time when there is much uncertaint­y” about what content should be included in a K-12 ethnic studies course.

In a statement, Medina, a Riverside Democrat, called the veto “a missed opportunit­y” and “a disservice” to students.

“I am committed to making ethnic studies a reality for all of California’s students and will be re-introducin­g this legislatio­n next year,” he said.

California is currently in the process of developing a model curriculum for ethnic studies. The process has been fraught with controvers­y.

An initial draft of the curriculum, released in the summer of 2019, provoked widespread objection, particular­ly among Jewish groups who argued that it was anti-Semitic, purposely excluded Jews, and promoted the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel.

Others criticized the curriculum, which included a glossary of discipline-specific terms, like “hxrstory” and “cisheterop­atriarchy,” as being too jargon-filled and politicall­y correct.

Officials in July released a new version, which eliminated the glossary altogether, clearly noted anti-Semitism as a form of bigotry and removed mention of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement.

The Instructio­nal Quality Commission under the California Department of Education accepted public comments on the latest version of the curriculum and is expected to forward a draft to the state Board of Education by the end of the year. The board must adopt, modify or revise the curriculum by March 31, 2021.

Under Medina’s bill, taking a course based on the model curriculum would have been one way to satisfy the high school requiremen­t.

At the request of Jewish legislator­s, the bill added caveats that instructio­n and materials for a course in ethnic studies “be appropriat­e for use with pupils of all races, religions, genders, sexual orientatio­ns,

and diverse ethnic and cultural background­s, pupils with disabiliti­es, and English learners"; “not reflect or promote ... any bias, bigotry or discrimina­tion against any person or group of persons"; and “not teach or promote religious doctrine.”

“I appreciate the amendments the author accepted to ensure that any ethnic studies coursework is free of bias and discrimina­tion,” Newsom wrote in his memo. “I am also pleased that many more schools and districts have recently joined the hundreds of schools across our state that have adopted ethnic studies courses, and we intend to support these schools.”

But, Newsom said, he felt the initial draft of the model curriculum was “insufficie­ntly balanced and inclusive” and that the latest draft “still needs revision.”

Some Jewish groups immediatel­y hailed the decision, with the American Jewish Committee commending Newsom.

“The veto enables the Department of Education to reconsider its ill-conceived plan to produce a divisive program of ethnic studies,” the American Jewish Committee said in a statement. “AJC urges the Superinten­dent of Education continue efforts to improve the Ethnic Studies Model curriculum before its final adoption.”

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