What happens in Texas won’t stay in Texas

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Battle lines are being drawn in Texas for a protracted fight over what gets taught in the state’s social studies classrooms. And since Texas has an outsized influence on what goes into textbooks nationwide, the winners could end up writing history for us all.

The opening skirmish is over reviews just in from six outside analysts appointed by the State Board of Education to review the K-12 social studies curriculum. Three reviewers were chosen by social conservatives on the board and three by moderates and liberals — setting up a culture-war clash of competing versions of history and government.

Over the next nine months, we can anticipate heated conflicts over everything from multiculturalism to whether the United States should be called a republic, a democracy or both.

Case in point: A reviewer on one side wants more about Cesar Chavez, who led a civil rights struggle on behalf of farmworkers. A reviewer on the other side wants less of Chavez, arguing that “he’s hardly the kind of role model that ought to be held up to our children as someone worthy of emulation.”

The hottest debate will be over that perennial favorite, the role of religion in American history. Simply including study of religion in the curriculum mix isn’t the problem: Left and Right have long agreed that a good education requires public schools to teach about religion in history, literature and other subjects.

But the Texas board appears to be divided over how to characterize the role of religion — specifically Protestant Christianity — in our nation’s founding. Reviewers on the left ignore the question, which is unfortunate because the current curriculum says far too little about religion in U.S. history.

But worse than ignoring religion in history is using the curriculum to promote religion. And that’s what two reviewers on the right, David Barton and Peter Marshall, sound like they’re trying to do by calling for teaching the “biblical foundations” of a “Christian America.”

Of course, no good historian would deny that biblical religions have influenced Western civilization, including American laws and customs. But it would be educational malfeasance for Texas public schools to teach that America was founded as a Christian nation in any formal or legal sense.

We can only hope that the Texas-sized debate about teaching history will end with victory for a fair, balanced and accurate account of American history – one that reflects a commitment to sound scholarship and constitutional principles. If that happens, I won’t mind if history is written by the winners.

Haynes is senior scholar at the First Amendment Center in Washington, D.C.

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by rjma on August 17, 2009 at 6:38 am

Thanks Charles.  I do wish though that you could have fit a little in about how the US textbook industry is so concentrated allowing a Texas to have so much influence.

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