Yuma Sun

School pulls test question equating politics to race, gender

- BY MATTHEW BARAKAT

FALLS CHURCH, Va. – Virginia’s largest school system is removing a test question given to a college-level social studies class that equated liberals and conservati­ves with specific racial and gender demographi­cs.

The question appeared on a test given to students of an AP Government class at Fairfax County Public Schools’ Online Campus.

The multiple-choice question asked students, “Which of the following is an accurate comparison of liberals versus conservati­ves?”

The potential answers for “liberals” included “Young, white males;” “Middle aged, urban lesbian;” “College-educated black male profession­al” and “White, upper-middle class suburban male.”

The potential answers for “conservati­ves” included “East Coast, Ivy League educated scientists;” “Southern male migrant laborer;” “Catholic, midwestern middle-aged male” and “West coast, Hispanic teacher. ”

Rory Cooper, a Fairfax County parent and school system critic who posted the question on Twitter, said it is offensive.

“It’s one thing for adults to analyze demographi­c trends,” he said. “It’s another to tell students that their identity defines their political philosophy.”

The school system said in a statement that the question will be removed from future tests because it “did not meet the division’s high expectatio­ns.” It also said all test questions administer­ed to students in the AP Government Online Campus class will now be reviewed.

The statement said the question was “designed to assess 12th graders’ understand­ing of American political ideology.”

The test is part of an AP, or Advanced Placement, class that allows high-school students to earn college credit if they score well on a final exam.

While the question was part of an AP class, it was not created by the College Board, which administer­s the AP program nationally.

In a tweet, the College Board said the question “is antithetic­al to the content and format of an AP question.”

Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-sears weighed in as well, criticizin­g the assumption­s the question makes about who is liberal and who is conservati­ve. She has frequently bristled at outsiders’ political assumption­s about Black women that are at odds with her stance as a conservati­ve Republican and military veteran.

“Tests like these create division, low morale, fights in our schools,” she wrote in one tweet.

The question is just the latest in a series of critiques that have been levied against public educators. Conservati­ve activists have questioned curricula that they say promote progressiv­e ideology over education fundamenta­ls.

The debate has been particular­ly intense in Virginia, where Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin has made education reform a priority and has sought to change how schools deal with transgende­r students.

 ?? MATTHEW BARAKAT/AP ?? THIS MARCH 4, 2019 FILE PHOTO shows Fairfax County Public Schools in Merrifield, Va.
MATTHEW BARAKAT/AP THIS MARCH 4, 2019 FILE PHOTO shows Fairfax County Public Schools in Merrifield, Va.

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