Porterville Recorder

Ethnic studies to be required at Cal State U’s

- By CUNEYT DIL

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Students at California State University, the nation’s largest four-year public university system, will need to take courses in ethnic studies under legislatio­n advanced Thursday, a move by lawmakers to impose new graduation requiremen­ts that the colleges want to set themselves.

For supporters, debate over the bill took on more urgency amid the uproar over racism after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, saying the new rules would ensure students learn the complete picture of American history and the experience­s of marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

Critics said the legislatur­e should not impose course decisions on academia and that the public college system’s 23 campuses were already facing uncertain school years and lean budgets because of the pandemic.

After over an hour and a half of discussion, which sometimes turned personal as lawmakers shared stories about times they witnessed discrimina­tion, the Senate passed the bill 30-5. The Assembly has to review minor amendments before sending it to the governor.

“For over 400 years, we have sanitized and white-washed history,” said Sen. Steven Bradford, D-gardena, who presented the legislatio­n authored by Assemblywo­man Shirley Weber, D-san Diego.

It’s the latest proposal in the nation’s most populous state meant to address the country’s past and current discrimina­tion against black Americans, Latinos and other minorities. On Wednesday, a Senate committee also passed a bill that would place a ballot initiative to end California’s ban on affirmativ­e action policies for employment and admissions in public colleges.

The ethnic studies bill would require California State University campuses starting in the 2021-2022 academic year to offer courses on race and ethnicity focusing on Native Americans, African Americans, Asian Americans and Latina and Latino Americans. Students would need to take one 3-credit course to graduate. The system enrolls over 481,000 students.

A separate bill requiring ethnic studies in high school has been sitting in a Senate committee since last summer.

California State University has opposed the measure for over a year and said it’s in the middle of approving reforms that would require students take courses on a wider array of marginaliz­ed communitie­s that include Jewish, Muslim and LGBTQ groups. The university’s proposed Ethnic Studies and Social Justice requiremen­t is before its board of trustees.

“The CSU requiremen­t avoids setting a dangerous precedent for legislativ­e interferen­ce and keeps the higher education curriculum setting process within those institutio­ns,” Toni Molle, director of public affairs at the university, wrote in an email.

Supporting the university’s stance, Sen. Steve Glazer, D-contra Costa, said courses on Armenian studies, for instance, would not count toward the bill’s graduation requiremen­t. He warned of “political interferen­ce in the academy.”

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 ?? AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I ?? In this Aug. 30, 2018, file photo, Assemblywo­man Shirley Weber, D-san Diego, talks with Sen. Steven Bradford, D-gardena at the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif.
AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I In this Aug. 30, 2018, file photo, Assemblywo­man Shirley Weber, D-san Diego, talks with Sen. Steven Bradford, D-gardena at the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif.

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