The Mercury News

California schools chief calls for new plan on racism, bias

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SAN FRANCISCO >> California’s education chief said Monday that he plans to lead an effort focusing on racism in public schools during emotional remarks about George Floyd, whose killing has left him struggling to answer his own children, who asked, “Why did this happen?”

“Now is the time to address racism and implicit bias in education,” Tony Thurmond said, blinking back tears during a live stream Monday. “We must not let this moment go unnoticed.”

Thurmond is the only elected state official who is African American.

Thurmond said he has reached out to state superinten­dents around the country and will initiate conversati­ons with California educationa­l leaders, parents and students but also go beyond the education sphere and work with elected officials, police chiefs and government agencies.

“We have to deal with racism and bias in every sector of our community,” Thurmond said. “We have to go beyond education, because racism is taught.”

The conversati­ons will focus on how schools can provide more training for staff and students on implicit bias, building empathy and tolerance. They will also examine legislatio­n and inequaliti­es in California schools, where black and brown students are more likely to be suspended or pushed out of school and into the criminal justice system, he said.

Thurmond said he has been haunted by Floyd’s killing while in police custody last week in Minnesota and struggled with it as an elected official, as a black man “who every day thinks about the impacts of race,” and as a father.

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