The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Education:

Georgia officials complained about omissions, perceived leftist bias.

- By Eric Stirgus estirgus@ajc.com

Some changes will be made to the Advanced Placement U.S. History course for balance,

College Board officials announced Thursday some changes to the Advanced Placement U.S. History course, which had been criticized by some Georgians, state lawmakers and Georgia’s school superinten­dent for omitting some historical figures and presenting informatio­n with what they said was a left-leaning bias.

The changes include explicitly mentioning historical figures including the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., the sacrifices of U.S. servicemen and women during World War I and II and including statements that are “more historical­ly precise and less open to misinterpr­etation of perception­s of imbalance.” Nearly 18,000 Georgia students took the elective course in 2014, College Board officials said.

The changes will take effect this school year.

Georgia school Superinten­dent Richard Woods called the changes “a big step in the right direction.”

College Board officials made some revisions to the course last year to give teachers more flexibilit­y. Those changes angered conservati­ve activists across the nation, who said the altered course had a revisionis­t viewpoint that diminishes U.S. history. The Republican National Committee quickly passed a resolution demanding the College Board delay implementi­ng the changes. Many teachers and historians, though, supported the changes and disputed claims of bias.

The criticism soon grew in Georgia, particular­ly in Gwinnett County, where a handful of residents made monthly presentati­ons to school board members decrying the revisions. The Georgia Senate adopted a resolution earlier this year by a two-thirds margin asking the state’s education department to demand the College Board return to a course framework, or guideline for teaching, that is more compatible with the state’s performanc­e stan-

dards.

Critics such as Gwinnett resident Ken Craft are pleased some changes were made, but said other advanced placement courses need revisions.

Jane Robbins, a prominent critic of last year’s revisions, said she has glanced at the changes and is still concerned. Robbins, a senior fellow at the American Principles Project, a conservati­ve think tank, said the changes must be made to textbooks, not just the course guidelines, to be effective.

“The students don’t know what’s in the framework. They know what’s in the textbooks,” said Robbins, who hopes oth- er organizati­ons besides the College Board will offer such courses.

Fulton County teacher Chad Hoge, who testified in support of the course at a state Legislatur­e joint education committee meeting in February, countered that he encourages teachers to use a variety of materials to teach the class. He said the changes better explain what should be taught in a balanced way. Hoge, who teaches the course at Centennial High School, hopes the revisions will allay student concerns that the course is seriously flawed or that it may go away.

“It’s really been a distractio­n to our students,” Hoge said.

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