Los Angeles Times

Students need black history

- Diana Wolff

Re “The first step is admitting we have a racism problem,” editorial, June 4

I am a parent to a fifthgrade­r at a Burbank public school. Since my daughter has been in this district, she has learned almost nothing about African American history. This does not contribute to having a wellbalanc­ed education.

As we all know, education is one of the most important functions in a society. It is important for children to know the full, true history of this country and how it affects what’s happening today.

African American history is just as important as any other part of this country’s history. It is more than just Black History Month or something that covers a few civil rights leaders, and it needs to be more thoroughly incorporat­ed into our curriculum year-round, regardless of the percentage of people of color in a district. Africa Turner

Burbank

Yes, we should fight racism with education, as your editorial says, but what kind of education?

As budget cuts loom for education, and schools have to decide where and what to cut, let me make the case for music and art education. Traditiona­lly, when education budgets have to be cut, music and art teachers are the first to go. But the arts are what humanize us and civilize us.

What has driven our state curriculum guidelines has been what we choose to test. We don’t test how to be a decent, caring human being. We don’t test knowledge of how to deal with bullying, racism or abuse of power. We don’t test the knowledge of what music and art teach us about our shared humanity.

The time has come to reorder our priorities. How and what we teach needs to be reevaluate­d.

If we don’t spend our money on the best kind of education, we will be doomed to spend it responding to law enforcemen­t abuses and protests.

Rancho Palos Verdes The writer is a professor emerita of education at Cal State Dominguez Hills.

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