Los Angeles Times

The right’s anti‘woke’ panic

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Re “How Florida bullied the College Board on Black studies,” Opinion, Feb. 6

It’s no mystery why ultraconse­rvative Republican­s relish denouncing any public school curriculum that might include a wisp of “critical race theory.”

Not that people like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis ever bother to explicitly define a term as amorphous

as critical race theory; they much prefer pedagogica­l twisting of its true meaning.

Truth told, their anticritic­al race theory stance appeals to the parental masses’ emotions, not intellect. All the better to maximize political mileage that such a fraught wedge issue can provide.

Sandra Perez Santa Maria

The story all over the American media is that

DeSantis basically made the College Board change the Advanced Placement African American Studies curriculum.

To the contrary, this was reported in the New York Times:

“College Board officials said Wednesday that they had a time-stamped document showing that the final changes to the curriculum were made in December, before the Florida Department of Education sent its letter informing the College Board that it would not allow the course to be taught.”

In other words, the College Board said it made changes to the curriculum in the 10 intervenin­g months between the leaked February version of the course and the December version. However, the College Board released the revised version after DeSantis’ screed, which was based on the February 2022 version.

The public needs the media not to give undeserved credit (not to mention power) to a highly partisan politician for influencin­g what scholars teach in college-level courses. Sheila Bernard Camarillo

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Goldberg’s column on the College Board makes a number of good and interestin­g points. The one flaw I see in his argument is that academics, not politician­s, should decide what is taught.

While it happens rarely, we as citizens can vote a politician out of office. On the other hand, tenured academics have jobs for life, and we have no say in the matter.

Hardly seems balanced.

Joe Sykora Woodland Hills

 ?? Daniel A. Varela Associated Press ?? FLORIDA GOV. Ron DeSantis speaks before signing what was dubbed the “stop woke” bill in April.
Daniel A. Varela Associated Press FLORIDA GOV. Ron DeSantis speaks before signing what was dubbed the “stop woke” bill in April.

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