LOL @ a blog post.
Biblical values and Confederates promoted in Texas textbook revisions
By Tom Leonard in New York
Published: 5:45PM BST 21 May 2010
American students will learn more about the virtues of free enterprise, Biblical values and the Confederacy's cause, and less about slavery and civil rights in a controversial new curriculum being pushed through by the Texas school board.
Members of the state's board of education put the finishing touches on Friday to a new history and social studies curriculum for the state's 4.8 million state school students.
The proposed programme, which will affect other parts of the US due to Texas's large share of the school textbook market, has prompted months of fierce argument and protests outside the board's headquarters in Austin.
Conservatives, who constitute a two-thirds majority on the 15-strong board, which is composed of non-education specialists, say the new curriculum will be more positive about America, particularly the South, and its history.
Once every 10 years, the board edits hundreds of pages of educational guidelines known as the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills.
Conservative members claim that a liberal bias had crept into the curriculum under previous Democrat-controlled boards.
Yesterday, the board approved a proposal to make students consider the political views of Jefferson Davis, the Confederate president, alongside those of Abraham Lincoln. Board members said it should be made clear the American Civil War was fought principally over states' rights rather than slavery - though the group did drop a plan to refer to the slave trade as the "Atlantic triangular trade".
Other changes water down criticism of Senator Joe McCarthy's anti-communist witchhunt in the 1950s and portray the UN's funding for international humanitarian relief and environmental initiatives as threats to individual freedom and US sovereignty.
Students will be required to study conservative organisations and movements such as the Moral Majority and the National Rifle Association.
Ronald Reagan has been added to a list of "great Americans", while country music, but not hip hop, can be described as an important cultural movement.
The board's five Democrats put up little resistance to the changes before a main vote on Thursday night but drew the line at a Republican call for President Barack Obama to be included in the curriculum using his controversial second name of Hussein.
Last year, conservatives on the same board changed the science curriculum to downplay the teaching of evolution and the Big Bang theory of the creation of the Universe.
It's official: the Texas Board of Ed approved changes to its Social Studies guidelines
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...tes-promoted-in-Texas-textbook-revisions.html
It's official: the Texas Board of Ed approved changes to its Social Studies guidelines
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...tes-promoted-in-Texas-textbook-revisions.html
(Pssst ... Cynthia Dunbar is a Fundie Loon)
It bears repeating.
Well if it started tiled left and tiled it right what does that mean?
The "progressive" still cant explain why the violence of the black panthers shouldn't be taught along side the peaceful movements during the civil rights movement or why the unintended consequences of the civil rights act shouldn't be taught alongside of its benefits.
I always thought they should teach both sides of the story not just the "progressive" side.
Yes, it does. QFT!
What will Texas do when their schools lose their accreditation and universities in other states refuse to accept students' applications and schools in other states refuse to accept their credits when their parents move to a state outside of the moronosphere? :hmm:
In other news, Texas is also demanding that all chemistry, English, history, geography, math and physics textbooks should be formatted as coloring books supported by links to facebook, myspace, youtube and that great repository of all idocy, the George W. Bush Library.![]()
Excluding Confederate figures is left leaning? WTF?
I'm seeing all sorts of comments from people about the supposed guidelines -- some lambasting them, others praising them. The stuff they teach in schools nowadays is generally slanted to the politically correct and left-leaning, so a little adjustment to the right is probably a good thing. Going overboard with fundie revisionism is not.
As a country we need to do a better job of keeping political bullshit from both sides out of the classrooms. There's gotta be a middle road somewhere.
School should be, to the extent possible, about teaching facts and how to think about them, not in pushing any particular agenda.
Excluding Confederate figures is left leaning? WTF?
Heh... weird. We actually did refer to the slave trade as the Atlantic triangular trade in a few of my classes growing up (they were for the most part interchangeable). I'm surprised that's the contentious issue they backed off from.
Edit: I'm from the Northern Virginia/D.C. area.
Because they lost. Get over it.What rational can you give to exclude Confederate figures?
I'm seeing all sorts of comments from people about the supposed guidelines -- some lambasting them, others praising them. The stuff they teach in schools nowadays is generally slanted to the politically correct and left-leaning, so a little adjustment to the right is probably a good thing. Going overboard with fundie revisionism is not.
As a country we need to do a better job of keeping political bullshit from both sides out of the classrooms. There's gotta be a middle road somewhere.
Rightwingers have a such a unique interpretation of truth. I mean, America WAS founded by a bunch of racist white dudes.
Once again the stupidity of religion infects the minds of our youth.
Indoctrination is rampant in our school systems. Thing is, this kind of crap is the minority, whereas the most prolific is liberalism.
