Oroville Mercury-Register

California makes ethnic studies a high school requiremen­t

- By Jocelyn Gecker

SAN FRANCISCO » Along with English, science, math and other graduation requiremen­ts, California high school students will have to take a course in ethnic studies to get a diploma starting in 2029-30.

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill Friday that makes California among the first in the nation to list ethnic studies as a graduation requiremen­t for all public high school students.

Assemblyma­n Jose Medina, a Democrat from Riverside who authored the legislatio­n that has been years in the making, called it a huge step for California.

“It’s been a long wait,” said Medina. “I think schools are ready now to make curriculum that is more equitable and more reflective of social justice.”

The new law requires all public schools in the state to offer at least one ethnic studies course starting in the 2025-26 school year and requires students graduating in the 2029-30 school year to have completed a one-semester course in the subject.

The ethnic studies movement has its roots in California, where students protested in the late 1960s at San Francisco State University and the University of California, Berkeley to demand courses in African American, Chicano, Asian American and Native American studies.

Earlier this year, the state

Board of Education approved a model ethnic studies curriculum that offers dozens of suggested lesson plans and instructio­nal approaches. The curriculum is not mandatory but schools can choose from its lesson plans or use it as a guide to design their own.

The curriculum underwent several drafts over three years and was subject to heated debate before winning approval in March.

The model curriculum focuses on four historical­ly marginaliz­ed groups that are central to collegelev­el ethnic studies: African Americans, Chicanos and other Latinos, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and Native Americans. It also includes lesson plans on Jews, Arab Americans, Sikh Americans and Armenian Americans who are not traditiona­lly part of an ethnic studies curriculum. Those groups were added after objecting to an earlier draft that left them out.

The new legislatio­n adds the completion of an ethnic studies course to other standard graduation requiremen­ts, including three years of English and social studies, two years of math and science, among others. It gives a few years lag time so schools can prepare.

“Schools can’t just flip the switch and be ready. This gives school districts plenty of time to get their curriculum in place and hire well qualified teachers to teach these classes,” Medina said.

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