Marin Independent Journal

Bill on textbooks seeks to prevent Florida-style bans

- By Sawsan Morrar

Months after Florida schools began removing books from shelves, a new California bill could mean millions of students statewide would read only from textbooks and instructio­nal materials that reflect the Golden State's many groups.

Authored by Assemblyma­n Corey Jackson, D-Riverside, if signed into law Assembly Bill 1078 would prohibit the California Board of Education from approving K-12 textbooks and curriculum that doesn't reflect the diverse state.

The bill states textbooks should include underrepre­sented groups including people from different races, ethnicitie­s, genders and sexual orientatio­ns.

Jackson said the current curriculum used by schools often erases Black, brown, Asian and LGBTQ+ voices and other perspectiv­es.

“When students are exposed to a narrow range of experience­s, they may struggle to relate to the material, which causes them to disengage from learning, or even develop biases that limit them from engaging with people from different background­s,” Jackson said.

“The more they see their own culture reflected in material, the more they enjoy it and get curious about it. The more curious they are, the more interested they are in the learning instructio­n.”

The bill will also prevent school districts from banning curriculum, textbooks and additional material. School districts would need state approval before doing so.

Jackson said the proposal could push other states to introduce similar bills.

The bill follows the ongoing debate in Florida, where some school teachers were ordered to remove books from their classrooms to determine whether they were appropriat­e for children.

Florida has the second highest number of book bans in the U.S. following Texas, according to a 2022 PEN America report. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is also moving to ban classes like AP African American Studies and there has been growing controvers­y over subjects like critical race theory.

Florida approved legislatio­n that would empower school boards and train school staff to determine if instructio­nal materials were appropriat­e. Schools can remove books that are considered inappropri­ate for a grade level, or sex education books they believe are pornograph­ic.

“When the state board education approves various textbooks, we should not be shielding students from science, from reality and from what they will see in the world,” Jackson said.

Some California parents said they are concerned about the bill, and said they think it's in response to increased parent involvemen­t at school board meetings, push back against progressiv­e California school boards and politics, particular­ity around sex education.

Roseville City school board member Jonathan Zachreson said the bill would strip away local control. He also said poor curriculum could easily be added and state bureaucrac­y would make it difficult to remove.

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