USA TODAY US Edition

Ill. moves against racism, hate

State mandates teaching Asian American history

- Grace Hauck

CHICAGO – Amid a dramatic rise in hate crimes against Asian Americans during the COVID-19 pandemic, the governor of Illinois signed a law Friday requiring public schools to teach a unit of Asian American history – a move education experts said is the first of its kind nationwide.

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed the Teaching Equitable Asian American Community History (TEAACH) Act, which mandates “a unit of instructio­n studying the events of Asian American history, including the history of Asian Americans in Illinois and the Midwest, as well as the contributi­ons of Asian Americans toward advancing civil rights from the 19th century onward.”

The units are required by the start of the 2022-2023 school year.

“No state has ever done this,” said Sohyun An, a professor of elementary and early childhood education at Kennesaw State University in Georgia. “It is a watershed moment in history in terms of teaching Asian American history in K-12 schools.”

Illinois state Rep. Jennifer GongGersho­witz, a third-generation Chinese American who co-sponsored the bill, said it “helps create a more inclusive and comprehens­ive understand­ing of American history for all students in Illinois and helps fight anti-Asian racism and xenophobia.”

“For the 100,000 Asian American K-12 students in Illinois, it ensures they see themselves accurately represente­d,” she said in a statement this year. “Asian American history is American history.”

Gong-Gershowitz said her grandparen­ts came to the USA in the 1920s, but it wasn’t until law school that she first learned about the Chinese Exclusion Act signed in 1882 that restricted immigratio­n for decades and the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II.

“The TEAACH Act will ensure that the next generation of Asian American students won’t need to travel across the county or attend law school to learn something about their heritage,” Gong-Gershowitz said.

TEAACH Act becomes law

Stewart Kwoh, co-founder of the Asian American Education Project, called the Illinois bill a “pace-setting legislativ­e measure.” About 10 states are considerin­g something similar, he said.

“There’s a national movement to pass some kind of ethnic studies. There’s a struggle in terms of how the ethnic studies will be presented,” Kwoh said. “The schools are being forced to catch up to the interest.”

Some states consider mandating “traditiona­l ethnic studies programs,” such as a semester-long course on Asian American and Pacific Islander history, Kwoh said. Others are focused on integratin­g Asian American history into American history courses or offering shorter survey courses on various groups.

Oregon mandates an ethnic studies component in all grades, which incorporat­es Asian American and Pacific Islander content, according to Ting-Yi Oei, director of the Asian American Education Project. In California, an ethnic studies model curriculum was approved by the Board of Education in March, but no implementa­tion plan for the state as a whole exists – it’s to be determined by local educationa­l authoritie­s, Oei said.

Anti-Asian crimes spike

Lawmakers and activists have long called for public education dedicated to the history of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, but the push gained increased attention amid the rise in hate crimes committed against those communitie­s during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The group Stop AAPI Hate collected reports of more than 6,600 hate incidents – which include both crimes and incidents of violence or discrimina­tion – from March 2020 through March 2021. That month, a gunman fired on Atlantaare­a spas, killing eight people, including six women of Asian descent.

In the first quarter of 2021, there was a more than 164% increase in anti-Asian hate crime reports to police in 16 major cities and jurisdicti­ons compared with last year, according to a report from the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino.

In the spring of 2020, the nonprofit Asian Americans Advancing Justice Chicago responded to the rise in antiAsian violence by launching a campaign to include Asian American history in schools, according to Grace Pai, the group’s executive director.

“We’ve seen examples in the Chicago area of people harassed or attacked because of their perceived identities, and I think everybody feels the need of something like this to address the root of the violence,” Pai said.

Kwoh’s nonprofit Asian American Education Project spun out of the group Asian Americans Advancing Justice last year. The project offers more than 50 lesson plans for teachers and started hosting free teacher training.

Asian American historical figures

Illinois public school students spoke at the signing ceremony Friday about their experience­s growing up without the kind of curriculum the TEAACH Act aims to provide.

Kiana Yoshiko Kenmotsu, a fourthgene­ration Japanese American and high school senior, said her advanced placement U.S. history class held a mock trial on the internment of Japanese Americans.

“I was incredulou­s when my classmates staunchly believed that my Korea War veteran grandfathe­r, 442nd Regiment great uncle and thousands of innocent Americans were rightfully incarcerat­ed,” Kenmotsu said.

Laura Houcque Prabhakar, a former student and now educator in Illinois public schools, said she wasn’t able to learn about her family history at home “due to refugee trauma.” With little sense of history to help ground her identity, Houcque Prabhakar said, she struggled at a young age with what it meant to be Asian American.

“I don’t remember ever learning about Asian American historical figures or about Southeast Asian refugees like my own family, who survived the Khmer Rouge genocide. What I do remember is feeling a lack of pride in my heritage,” said Houcque Prabhakar, a community leader with the Cambodian Associatio­n of Illinois.

She said, “The implementa­tion of this bill will help us take actionable steps forward in acknowledg­ing the humanity and diversity of our historical­ly excluded communitie­s.”

In May, President Joe Biden signed the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act, which aims to speed up the review of pandemic-related hate crimes and provide grants to states to improve hate crime reporting. Rep. Grace Meng, D-N.Y., wrote the legislatio­n.

 ?? JUSTIN L. FOWLER/AP ?? Illinois state Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz says the bill she co-sponsored “helps create a more inclusive and comprehens­ive understand­ing of American history ... and helps fight anti-Asian racism and xenophobia.”
JUSTIN L. FOWLER/AP Illinois state Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz says the bill she co-sponsored “helps create a more inclusive and comprehens­ive understand­ing of American history ... and helps fight anti-Asian racism and xenophobia.”

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