The Guardian (USA)

Outrage as Arkansas tells high schools to drop AP African American course

- Gloria Oladipo

Advocacy groups are outraged after the Arkansas department of education warned state high schools not to offer an advanced placement course on African American history.

The admonition from Arkansas education officials is the latest example of conservati­ve lawmakers limiting education on racial history, sexual orientatio­n and other topics they label as “indoctrina­tion”.

The Arkansas Education Associatio­n (AEA), a profession­al organizati­on of educators in the state, said the latest decision is of “grave concern” to its members and other citizens worried about “the abandonmen­t of teaching African American history and culture”.

“Having this course pulled out from under our students at this late juncture is just another marginaliz­ing move that has already played out in other states,” said a statement from AEA president April Reisma, which was shared with the Guardian.

In a statement to the Guardian, NAACP president and chief executive officer Derrick Johnson called the decision “abhorrent” and an “attempt to strip high school students of an opportunit­y to get a jumpstart on their college degree”.

“Let’s be clear – the continued, state-level attacks on Black history are undemocrat­ic and regressive,” Johnson said. “The sad reality is that these politician­s are determined to neglect our nation’s youth in service of their own political agendas.”

On Monday, the first day of the 2023-2024 school year for many Arkansas public schools, the state education department announced that it would not be granting credit for the AP African American history class, the Arkansas Times reported.

The official announceme­nt came after department officials called educators on Friday, alerting them that the AP course would not be recognized for college credit in the same manner that similar courses on other topics are.

The department said that the course may violate state’s Literacy, Empowermen­t, Accountabi­lity, Networking and Safety (Learns) Act, a new law passed this spring under Arkansas governor Sarah Huckabee, a Republican and former White House press secretary during Donald Trump’s presidency.

The Learns Act limits curriculum on a range of topics including gender, sexual orientatio­n and subjects that would “indoctrina­te students with ideologies, such as Critical Race Theory”.

“Arkansas law contains provisions regarding prohibited topics. Without clarity, we cannot approve a pilot that may unintentio­nally put a teacher at risk of violating [state] law,” the department said in a statement about the pulled course to the Arkansas Times.

Officials also announced that the state would not be covering the cost of the end-of-year exam on the course that allows high school students to earn college credit.

The cost of the credit qualifying exam is usually covered for other AP courses.

Two high schools already offered a pilot version of the course last year, Axios reported. Six schools were scheduled to offer the course this year, including Little Rock’s Central high school, the epicenter of forced desegregat­ion in 1957, NBC News reported.

The latest challenge to the AP course comes after Florida’s department of education rejected the class in January.

Florida’s department of education under Governor Ron DeSantis officially banned the course from that state’s high schools in January.

In a letter to the College Board, the nonprofit organizati­on that oversees AP courses and other university readiness exams, the Florida education department wrote that the course violated state law and “lacked educationa­l value”.

 ?? April. Photograph: Nena Zimmer/AP ?? Arkansas governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders, right, and Arkansas secretary of education Jacob Oliva discuss several aspects of the Learns Act on 14
April. Photograph: Nena Zimmer/AP Arkansas governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders, right, and Arkansas secretary of education Jacob Oliva discuss several aspects of the Learns Act on 14

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