[My] Life in Wisconsin

Teach Me to Be Uninformed.


http://tfninsider.org/2010/05/14/it-gets-even-worse/

Image from here

Hi all;
I am stealing this link from Will, (and remembering to take my Micardis
(telmisartan) as I read).
In Will's own words:
"I really wouldn't care much if Texas was the only state affected.   It's not.
Those books are used in most of the nation's secondary and high-school classrooms. They affect literally everything. 
{Every one in every state}

The extreme Right is close to winning this one - and it'll be a MAJOR victory for them; something that Joe Average Moron American won't even BEGIN to understand for a decade or more, until the little FundieRobots (TM) start making genuine decisions for America...."


My questions ~What in God's good name is wrong with Texas?
  • What CAN they be thinking???

My daughter, Jennifer, lives in Texas. (Politically, her husband runs to the right of Rush Limbaugh).

This makes me ill. Especially where my 2 grandsons are concerned!

XOXO
Me

"Publishers have tailored textbooks to Texas, {} because [TX] has been an enormous customer with a reliable source of textbook funding from the $22 billion Permanent School Fund." B. Cassel



It Gets Even Worse on Social Studies

By TFN

State Board of Education member Don McLeroy, R-College Station, is circulating new changes he wants to make to proposed social studies curriuclum standards for Texas public schools. We didn’t think next week’s state board meeting on the standards could get any worse than what happened in March. But McLeroy’s proposed new changes have disabused us of that hopeful thought. We just issued the following press release:

New changes a Texas State Board of Education member wants to make to proposed curriculum standards represent a stunning rewrite of American history on issues ranging from religious freedom to civil rights and would politicize public school classrooms, the president of the Texas Freedom Network said today.

“Even at the eleventh hour, board members are trying to rewrite history and promote political agendas in our kids’ classrooms,” TFN President Kathy Miller said.
“The education of our schoolchildren should be based on the work of academic experts and scholars, not the political biases and fringe ideas of dentists, realtors and other politicians on the state board.”

Don McLeroy, a Republican board member from College Station, has circulated to board colleagues changes he plans to recommend next week when the board resumes debate over proposed new curriculum standards for social studies.

*** Among the changes McLeroy wants to make:

  • Add a standard to the eighth-grade U.S. history course that maintains separation of church and state was not the intent of the Founders who drafted the Constitution and Bill of Rights: “Contrast the Founders’ intent relative to the wording of the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause and Free Exercise Clause, with the popular term ‘Separation of church and state.’”
  • Strike from a standard in the high school U.S. history course a 1948 court decision, Delgado v. Bastrop ISD, that barred segregation of students of Mexican descent in Texas public schools.
    • McLeroy proposes replacing that decision with 2009 Supreme Court employment discrimination decision involving white firefighters in Connecticut (Ricci v. DeStefano) and a 2005 decision dealing with the government’s powers of eminent domain (Kelo v. City of New London).
  • Change a high school U.S. history standard to downplay the positive impact of Progressive Era reforms and suggest that the work of the era’s reformers like Upton Sinclair, Susan B. Anthony, Ida B. Wells and W.E.B. DuBois created a negative portrayal of America.
  • Add a standard to high school U.S. history requiring students to “evaluate efforts by global organizations to undermine U.S. sovereignty.”
  • Add a standard to high school U.S. history having students “discuss alternatives regarding long term entitlements such as Social Security and Medicare, given the decreasing worker to retiree ratio.”

CLICK: The full text of McLeroy’s amendments and his justifications for each are available here.

Proposed changes like these make it even more important that the board delay a final vote on the standards and appoint a panel of real academic experts and classroom teachers to review changes board members have made since January, Miller said.

This entry was posted on May 14, 2010 at 2:39 pm




Link to: "It Gets Even Worse on Social Studies « Texas Freedom Network"

23 comments:

  1. Everytime I go through this it makes me sick to my stomach----

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  2. Hi Heidi-
    You are so right. It is sickening at best.
    (At worst, it is ignorance almost at its finest).

    Did you click for the PDF information?

    Very very interesting how these people even manage to get past the idea stage?

    XOXO
    Me


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  3. yes I did and the more I read the unhappier I got--and I can't understand why no one is saying anything--
    actually in Ca they are hoping mad about it cause they understand the implications of the text books--

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  4. I have decided I will be keeping my old encyclopedias, they can't re-write history, it's an abomination!

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  5. Make sure any primary education books are held onto also.

    Write/go to school board meetings and decry any newer purchases of textbooks also.

    XOXO
    Me

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  6. The ones anyone has now 'should be' ok.

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  7. I am almost afraid to ask...but.... "What next?!?"

    Like Suzycute, I am keeping my really old World book encyclopedias. (They were already hand-me-downs.) I had bought a newer set when the kids were in High School but they were not useful at all. Only had a paragraph on important subjects that my older books would have pages and pages of info on. I sold those darned things for $40.00. And the couple who bought them wanted to buy my old raggedy books and would have paid a lot more for them.

    But nope. Had to keep telling them they weren't for sale. I STILL use those things.

    It does make you wonder how much information is being "fudged" over time. But when we have lived through the time period in which they are trying to change the information on, then we know. And not being around during the earlier times, its hard to know for sure if even those things we were told were actual facts. But it seems that anything....when rewritten down through time....it has a tendency to get altered.

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  8. lmao rewrite American History.........too funny. silly Texas.

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  9. I seem to remember talk, several months ago, about how TX wanted to withdraw from the United States of America and become their own country(?) Is somebody putting something funny in the water in TX, or what? Or maybe it's the Kool-Aid that's being passed around in the churches.

    As far as textbooks are concerned. Yes, someone does write them. In fact, it's probably a whole team of people. Now, suppose that whole team of people were historians with a right wing fundamentalist bent. What sort of history text books would you end up with? Or suppose all history text books were written to be politically correct. What would that be like? Public schools teach a homogenized version of what the public wants their kids to learn. This is probably why there are so many home-schooled kids in this country.

    I agree with Suzycute, I'll be holding on to my 1952 set of World Book Encyclopedias. Just in case.

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  10. Damned scary though, isn't it?
    Sad.
    St00pid.
    Ignernt.

    (And coming at ALL of us, our children, and grandchildren, like a damned freight train out of control).
    Anyone with half a life of truly loving children- and not ever stifling them, save for their safety just has to be outraged at this all.

    WTH????

    Sure wish I could hear from a few teachers...

    XOXO
    Me

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  11. Not quite true...

    From here: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/13/education/13texas.html
    "The board, whose members are elected, has influence beyond Texas because the state is one of the largest buyers of textbooks."

    To that end, the book companies do not want to issue different books for each state. And Texas books are then sent to all states.

    I believe then that Texas should have all states then on their board of education. Not only members from TX.

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  12. Everyone
    Please go to your school meetings.
    Make sure they know that you will NOT be behind them if they have to order textbooks.
    Not only of the Social Studies" curriculum either.

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  13. Perhaps we can allocate NASA to the US, and they can secede as wished.

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  14. We could begin with the Native American Holocaust.
    (But that's a whole 'nother blog).

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  15. Am copying this from Miss Heidi's blog about the same. http://starfishred.multiply.com/journal/item/2768
    (Also borrowed from Will).
    One of my replies...


    skeezicks1957 said
    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/13/education/13texas.html
    "Sick is correct Heidi."


    Flintville (that's me, by the way)! hehehe wrote today at 8:27 AM, edited today at 8:27 AM

    Thank you for this link too!
    In it, "“We are adding balance,” said Dr. Don McLeroy, the leader of the conservative faction on the board, after the vote. “History has already been skewed. Academia is skewed too far to the left.”

    History is skewed to the left? Of course it is!

    *****************

    Dear Dr. Don McLeroy;
    History is NOT made by rich old men sitting on their asses and denying anything historical took place; and later trying to assume and assimilate the credit for it.
    History is made by real people with balls that they are NOT sitting on 24/7/365!
    History is made by people that are not afraid to go up against the likes of you.

    History would not EVER be made with oppression.
    History can only be made progressively.
    McLeroy, you are a dumbshit!

    *****************


    (Sorry Girls, I am just SO p*ssed at this point)...

    XOXO
    Me

    end copy



    He forgets that the world does not revolve around Texas...

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  16. As an Australian I know very little about your education system in it's entirety or the Texas State Board of Education. However I will say one can try to change history in the written form but they won't change history as it stands. If I lived their in Texas and had school age children then you can rest assured that people would be getting letters and correspondence in many forms.
    I feel that not enough people are willing to change things these days thinking that problems will just go away; they don't.

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  17. Lester, I'd like to agree with you - but there's a saying; 'perception is reality'. Orwell probably said it best - "He who controls the past controls the future.' If the Government says, 'Oceania has always been at war with Eurasia', then Orwell's Everyman, Winston Smith, has to fall in line - or go to the Ministry of Love, where he can be properly 'reeducated'.

    It's a small step from controlling the past to controlling the future.

    History may 'stand' - but the people who write the books guarantee how it's read.

    ReplyDelete