Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

1st state to require teaching Asian American history

Illinois law applies to public elementary and high schools

- By Dan Petrella dpetrella@chicagotri­bune.com

In the wake of increased antiAsian violence during the coronaviru­s pandemic, Illinois on Friday became the first state to require Asian American history to be taught in public schools.

Under the measure Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed into law Friday, every public elementary and high school in the state will be required to include a unit on the history of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, including their history in Illinois and the Midwest. The requiremen­t begins during the 2022-23 school year.

State Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz, a Glenview Democrat and one of five Asian Americans in the Illinois legislatur­e, said during a bill-signing ceremony at Niles West High School that she didn’t learn about the Chinese Exclusion Act and her grandparen­ts’ struggles with discrimina­tion and the fear of deportatio­n until she was in law school.

“My family’s story, or at least what I knew of it until law school, was the fairy tale version of the quintessen­tial American immigrant story, one that paints a picture of success, achievemen­t and belonging,” said Gong-Gershowitz, who sponsored the legislatio­n in the House. “It’s all true, except that it’s not the whole story.”

Teaching about that history, along with the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II and the contributi­ons people of Asian descent have made to American history and culture, will lead to greater understand­ing, both for fellow Asian Americans and for others, Gong-Gershowitz said.

This is particular­ly important in the face of anti-Asian sentiments and violence, she said, tying the recent rise in such incidents to the pandemic and its origins in China.

“Empathy comes from understand­ing, and we cannot do better unless we know better,” Gong-Gershowitz said.

The measure was approved on a 108-10 vote in the House, where some Republican­s argued that curriculum decisions should be left up to local school districts. It passed without opposition in the Senate, where it was sponsored by Democratic Sen. Ram Villivalam of Chicago, the first Indian and Asian American to serve in the chamber.

While the Illinois State Board of Education will provide guidance, it will be up to local school districts to determine the specifics of what is taught and how much instructio­nal time should be devoted to the subject.

The law is the latest in a series of new requiremen­ts Pritzker has signed that aim to make the teaching of history in Illinois schools more inclusive.

Earlier this year, the governor signed a measure backed by the Illinois Legislativ­e Black Caucus that expands requiremen­ts for teaching Black history in public schools, including instructio­n on the centuries before enslaved people were brought to America.

Pritzker signed a measure into

law in 2019 that required schools this year to begin teaching about the contributi­ons of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r people as part of the history curriculum.

The governor, who helped found the Illinois Holocaust Museum and whose great-grandfathe­r was a Ukrainian Jewish refugee, said Illinois has a long track record of making its history curriculum more inclusive, including in 1990 becoming the first state to require public school students to learn about the Holocaust.

“We are setting a new standard for what it means to truly reckon with our history,” Pritzker said. “It’s a new standard that helps us understand one another and ultimately move ourselves closer to the nation of our ideals.”

Later Friday, Pritzker signed another measure requiring high schools to teach a unit on media literacy, also beginning with the 2022-23 school year.

Still awaiting action from Pritzker is a more controvers­ial proposal that would require schools that

choose to teach sex education to adhere to new state guidelines that align with national standards. The measure, also sponsored by Villivalam, would require “age-appropriat­e” teaching of topics including consent, gender identity and sexual orientatio­n.

 ?? JUSTIN L. FOWLER/AP ?? State Rep. Jennifer GongGersho­witz, D-Glenview, celebrates the passage of the legislatio­n on the floor of the Illinois House on the last day of session in Springfiel­d on May 31.
JUSTIN L. FOWLER/AP State Rep. Jennifer GongGersho­witz, D-Glenview, celebrates the passage of the legislatio­n on the floor of the Illinois House on the last day of session in Springfiel­d on May 31.

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