CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2020 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2020 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“SCHOOL
DISTRICTS APPROVING ETHNIC STUDIES SIGHT UNSEEN”
Academia
is supposed to be a land of objective reality, where ideas enter the standard
curriculum for mass exposure to students only after thorough vetting.
But
that’s apparently not so if the subject is sufficiently politically correct.
That’s
about the only conclusion to be drawn today, as school boards around California
are approving a new ethnic studies curriculum even before it’s been examined in
public hearings or adopted by the state Board of Education.
School
boards in places as disparate as Albany and Alhambra, San Francisco, Oakland
and Hayward have endorsed this proposed curriculum, even though it’s a no more
than a very slightly altered version of the course resoundingly rejected last
year on grounds of bias and unjustified exclusions.
After
that rejection, the curriculum was supposed to get a complete revision. Not
exactly. Pretty much the same folks who wrote the first version turned up on
the committee writing the new one, creating little better than a rerun with a
few t’s crossed differently, so to speak.
People
writing both versions of the curriculum have mostly been adherents of something
called “critical ethnic studies.” Several websites describe the central
question guiding the Critical Ethnic Studies (CES) Assn. as this: “How do the
histories of colonialism and conquest, racial chattel slavery and white
supremacist patriarchies…affect, inspire and unsettle scholarship in the
present?”
The
first version of the planned curriculum divided Californians into four
categories: African Americans, Hispanic Americans, whites and Asian
American/Pacific Islanders.
Inspired
by CES thinking, it focused more on racial and ethnic discrimination and little
on the contributions of various groups that make up those wide categories.
No informed American denies that slavery had a
major role in American history, as did the cheap labor of Chinese and other
immigrants, including the Irish, Hispanics and Jews. Nor is the suffering of
American Indians in dispute, even if they don’t fit neatly into any CES
category.
All
this belongs in history classes, but so do positive contributions of European
colonists and other immigrants who together with the others built this nation.
CES-style
thinking embedded in the proposed curriculum, due for a Sacramento hearing in
August, caused the Vallejo school board to become a rare exception to the trend
toward blind acceptance of a curriculum that has not been thoroughly examined.
Said
Robert Lawson, a school board member there and a former history teacher,
“People shouldn’t be fooled that ethnic studies are mainly to instill pride in
one’s heritage. It’s a means of getting even.”
That
was essentially how the Jewish caucus of the state Legislature saw the original
curriculum proposal, which contained significant lies about Israel’s treatment
of Palestinians. It also ignored the charters of some large Palestinian
factions, including Hamas – the ruling party in Gaza – which call for killing
Jews wherever they are, while completely eliminating Israel.
The planned coursework also
ignored the Armenian genocide carried out by Turkey between 1915 and 1917, in
which at least 1.5 million were massacred, with other millions fleeing to many
places, including California, where they have thrived. It did not include the
major contributions of Portuguese immigrants to California agriculture and said
little about ethnic groups from Samoans to Syrians, Greeks, Yugoslavs and
Egyptians, mostly sticking to the four wide categories favored by CES.
That didn’t bother the school
boards endorsing the “revised” curriculum sight unseen. “Ninety-five percent of
our students are Asian American and Hispanic,” said Alhambra board member
Robert Gin. “I support (it) in its entirety. It is a long time coming.”
Meanwhile, state schools Supt.
Tony Thurmond, in an update early this year, indicated he doesn’t want much
change from the original proposal that was supposedly dumped. He said the new
version “will acknowledge and honor the four (CES) foundational groups,” thus
lumping Jews, Armenians, Irish and other Caucasian hyphenated Americans with
whites in general.
That will inevitably play up
racism and the World War II interning of Japanese Americans and downplay study
of the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust, to name just two seminal events of
the 20th Century.
It adds up to a phony rewrite,
and will likely lead to further delay of ethnic studies and another rewrite –
hopefully a genuine one next time.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias
at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most
Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It,"
is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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