U.S. schools revamp curricula in response to Black Lives Matter
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[August 21, 2020]
By Ernest Scheyder
(Reuters) - John Marshall keeps a picture
of Breonna Taylor in his office at the headquarters of Kentucky's
largest school district, a visual reminder, he says, of the need for
curriculum changes that better honor and focus on Black stories.
Taylor, a Black emergency medical technician, spent her senior year of
high school at Kentucky's Jefferson County Public Schools, where
Marshall, the district's chief diversity officer, has been leading a
system-wide revamp of teaching materials and practices.
Taylor was shot dead by police officers in March. Her death and that of
George Floyd, killed by Minneapolis police in May, and others have set
off a national reckoning over race and race relations.
No criminal charges have been filed against the officers involved in
Taylor's death, infuriating many in the school district, where a
majority of the nearly 100,000 students are students of color.
For educators in Jefferson County and across the United States, the
deaths have jump-started demands for teaching materials and practices
that help Black students better understand their history and place in
the country.
After a summer of teacher workshops focused on updating curricula,
millions of students will return to U.S. classrooms in coming weeks -
virtually or in person - that focus more on Black history and
experiences, according to interviews with teachers, officials,
publishers and others.
"We're not just talking about a couple of lesson changes," said
Marshall. "We're getting to the quintessential work of trying to put
race, equity and inclusion inside of our curriculum."
A June survey by the EdWeek Research Center, which is affiliated with
the prominent trade publication Education Week, found that 81% of U.S.
teachers support the Black Lives Matter movement.
"We can't control what happens with the police, but we can control what
happens in our school systems," said Michael McFarland, head of the
National Alliance of Black School Educators and a superintendent of the
Crowley Independent School District in Texas.
Some of the changes don't necessarily involve new material, but rather
teaching the same material from a new perspective.
In the Jefferson County schools, for instance, teachers discussing the
Space Race of the 1960s plan now to focus on the Black women
mathematicians whose computations underpin modern rocket science.
In Houston, teachers at YES Prep public charter schools will dissect
James Baldwin's iconic book of essays "The Fire Next Time" less as a
history of racial struggle and more as a guide for Black students to
overcome injustice.
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These and other recommendations came after school districts spent
summer months updating educational materials because most public
school textbooks are only updated by publishers on a fixed schedule.
How and what U.S. students learn about American history depends on
the school. The country's public K-12 education system is run by
more than 98,000 local and state school board members, who nearly
always have the final say on which textbooks are bought for
classrooms.
In 2014, the Texas State Board of Education came under fire
for approving a Mexican-American studies textbook that critics
decried as riddled with mistakes and demeaning stereotypes. Other
school boards either bought different textbooks or didn't offer the
same course.
'DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS'
The National School Board Association, which advises school
districts on curriculum changes, said requests for advice on
crafting racially diverse educational material doubled this summer
from the same period last year.
"They're making sure teachers are teaching the right history in
their classrooms," said Anna Maria Chavez, the association's
executive director.
Scholastic Corp, which publishes educational material to supplement
textbooks, said it has seen a surge in demand for books that focus
on diversity and equity.
"Schools are wanting to have these more difficult conversations
about race and social justice," said Michael Haggen, Scholastic's
chief academic officer.
Staff at Houston's YES Prep said their returning 15,000 students can
expect to spend more time reflecting on how the deaths of Taylor,
Floyd and others connect to a timeline of injustice.
The goal for YES Prep students, nearly all of whom are Black or
Latino, is to consider how they can not only oppose racism, but be
part of broader cultural change, said Kiara Hughes, YES Prep's
director of organizational strategy and initiatives.
"This isn't a singular moment in time," said Hughes. "This is a
fight that people have been fighting for a hundred of years."
(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder; Editing by Amran Abocar and Daniel
Wallis)
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