The Denver Post

State GOP lawmakers try to limit lessons

- By Bryan Anderson

RALEIGH, N.C.» Teachers and professors in Idaho will be prevented from “indoctrina­ting” students on race. Oklahoma teachers will be prohibited from saying certain people are inherently racist or oppressive, whether consciousl­y or unconsciou­sly. Tennessee schools will risk losing state aid if their lessons include particular concepts about race and racism.

Governors and legislatur­es in Republican-controlled states across the country are moving to define what race-related ideas can be taught in public schools and colleges, a reaction to the

nation’s racial reckoning after last year’s police killing of George Floyd. The measures have been signed into law in at least three states and are being considered in many more.

Educators and education groups are concerned that the proposals will have a chilling effect in the classroom and that students could be given a whitewashe­d version of the nation’s history. Teachers are worried about possible repercussi­ons if a student or parent complains.

“Once we remove the option of teachers incorporat­ing all parts of history, we’re basically silencing the voices of those who already feel oppressed,” said Lakeisha Patterson, a third-grade English and social studies teacher who lives in Houston and worries about a bill under considerat­ion in Texas.

At least 16 states are considerin­g or have signed into law bills that would limit the teaching of certain ideas linked to “critical race theory,” which seeks to reframe the narrative of American history. Its proponents argue that federal law has preserved the unequal treatment of people on the basis of race and that the country was founded on the theft of land and labor.

Those states include Arizona, Arkansas, Idaho, Iowa, Louisiana, Mississipp­i, Missouri, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and West Virginia.

The latest state to implement a law is Tennessee, where the governor last week signed a bill to ban the teaching of critical race theory in schools.

The legislativ­e debate over that bill caused a stir this month when a Republican lawmaker who supports it, state Rep. Justin Lafferty, wrongly declared that the Constituti­on’s original provision designatin­g a slave as three-fifths of a person was adopted for “the purpose of ending slavery.” Historians largely agree that the compromise gave slave-holding states more political power.

Some other states have taken steps that fall short of legislativ­e change.

After Utah’s Republican governor blocked a vote on a set of similar bills, the GOP-controlled Legislatur­e passed a symbolic resolution recommendi­ng that the state review any curriculum that examines the ways in which race and racism influence American politics, culture and the law.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp wrote in a letter to state education board members that they should “take immediate steps to ensure that Critical Race Theory and its dangerous ideology do not take root in our state standards or curriculum.”

Montana’s attorney general issued a binding decision Thursday declaring that certain teachings violate the U.S. and state constituti­ons and that schools, local government­s and public workplaces could lose state funding and be on the hook for damages stemming from lawsuits if they provide critical race theory training or activities.

The National Education Associatio­n and the National Council for the Social Studies oppose legislatio­n to limit what ideas can be presented inside a classroom.

“It creates a very chilling atmosphere of distrust, educators not being able to be the profession­als they are not only hired to be but are trained to be,” said Lawrence Paska, a former middle school social studies teacher in New York and executive director of the council.

Republican­s have said concepts suggesting that people are inherently racist or that America was founded on racial oppression are divisive and have no place in the classroom.

This month Republican­s in the North Carolina House moved to prohibit teachers from promoting seven concepts that critically examine race and racism, including the belief that a person’s race or gender determines their moral character, that people bear responsibi­lity for actions committed in the past by other members of the same race or gender, and that they should feel guilty because of those two characteri­stics.

Rep. John Torbett, a Republican who leads North Carolina’s House education committee, said the legislatio­n was intended to promote equality, not rewrite history.

“It ensures equity,” Torbett said during a hearing this month. “It ensures that all people in society are equitable. It has no mention of history.”

Kimberlé Crenshaw, executive director of the African American Policy Forum, was among those who helped popularize critical race theory in the 1970s and 1980s as a response to what she and others believed was a lack of progress after passage of civil rights legislatio­n in the 1960s.

She said Republican­s are twisting the concept to inflame racial tensions and motivate their base of mostly white supporters.

“This is a 2022 strategy to weaponize white insecurity, to mobilize ideas that have been mobilized again and again throughout history, using a concept or set of ideas that they can convince people is the new boogeyman,” Crenshaw said.

The boundary between teaching ideas and promoting them has stirred concern among teachers and racial justice scholars.

Uncertaint­y about that boundary could cause teachers to avoid difficult conversati­ons about American history, said Cheryl Harris, a UCLA Law School professor who teaches a course on critical race theory.

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