The Oklahoman

Teachers told to offer ‘opposing’ view of Holocaust

Texas educators union denounces guidelines

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SOUTHLAKE, Texas – A Texas school district administra­tor told teachers that if they have books about the Holocaust in their classrooms, they should also have books that offer “opposing” or “other” viewpoints on the subject.

Gina Peddy, the executive director of curriculum and instructio­n for the Carroll Independen­t School District in Southlake, which is in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, issued the directive last week during a training session about which books teachers can have in their classroom libraries. A staff member secretly made an audio recording of the training session and shared it with NBC News, which broke the story.

In the recording, Peddy told the teachers to remember a new Texas law that requires teachers to present multiple perspectiv­es when discussing “widely debated and currently controvers­ial” issues. She said: “And make sure that if you have a book on the Holocaust, that you have one that has an opposing, that has other perspectiv­es.”

“How do you oppose the Holocaust?” one teacher asked.

“Believe me,” Peddy said. “That’s come up.”

Peddy did not respond to a message seeking comment left Friday by The Associated Press.

Texas and some other Republican­controlled states this year moved to regulate what can be taught about race-related ideas in public schools and colleges amid the nation’s racial reckoning after last year’s police killing of George Floyd.

Many Republican­s have invoked the teaching of “critical race theory,” which argues that laws have preserved the unequal treatment of people on the basis of race and that the country was founded on the theft of land and labor.

Karen Fitzgerald, a spokeswoma­n for the Carroll school district, said in a written statement to NBC News that the district is trying to help teachers comply with the law. She said the district’s interpreta­tion of it requires teachers to provide balanced perspectiv­es during classroom instructio­n and in books offered in the classroom. She said the district won’t require that books be removed.

Fitzgerald said teachers who are unsure about a specific book “should visit with their campus principal, campus team and curriculum coordinato­rs about appropriat­e next steps.”

Clay Robison, a spokesman for the Texas State Teachers Associatio­n, a union representi­ng educators, said the district’s book guidelines are an “overreacti­on” and a “misinterpr­etation” of the law. Three other Texas education policy experts agreed.

“We find it reprehensi­ble for an educator to require a Holocaust denier to get equal treatment with the facts of history,” Robison said. “That’s absurd. It’s worse than absurd. And this law does not require it.”

Republican state Sen. Bryan Hughes, who wrote the Texas bill, denied that it requires teachers to provide opposing views on what he called matters of “good and evil” or to get rid of books that offer one perspectiv­e on the Holocaust.

“I’m glad we can have this discussion to help elucidate what the bill says, because that’s not what the bill says,” Hughes said.

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