(July 16, 2020 / JNS) More
than a dozen California school boards have adopted resolutions in
support of the state’s proposed ethnic-studies model curriculum, despite
it have
come under fire for containing anti-Semitic and anti-Israel content, and not addressing issues of anti-Semitism or including Jewish Americans.
“Over the past few months … individuals, who call themselves
‘Save CA Ethnic Studies,’ have attempted to take advantage of state and
local education officials’ focus on addressing the COVID-19 crisis to
get school boards throughout the state to rubber-stamp, with little or
no discussion, a resolution that ‘affirms support of the California
Ethnic Studies Model Draft … ,’ ” read a
letter written by some 88 state and national organizations to the California Department of Education (CDE).
The groups also accused the Save CA Ethnic Studies campaign of deceiving local officials.
“School board members asked to vote on the resolution are not
shown the original draft curriculum, and not informed about the enormous
outpouring of criticism it engendered or that a CDE process is well
underway for the curriculum’s redesign,” said the letter.
As such, local school officials believe that they are voting to
support a 2016 California law to establish ethnic-studies curriculum,
known as
AB-2016.
School board members are “led to believe that in voting for the
resolution they are showing support for AB-2016 and affirming the
importance of ethnic studies classes in general, rather than endorsing
the highly controversial draft curriculum that was condemned by dozens
of state leaders and tens of thousands of Californians,” stated the
letter.
The proposed curriculum section on “Arab American Studies Course
Outline” contains a number of passages concerning the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, such as “Direct Action Front for Palestine
and Black Lives Matter,” “Call to Boycott, Divest and Sanction Israel”
and “Comparative Border Studies: Palestine and Mexico.” It also includes
studying national figures such as Rep.
Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), Rep.
Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), the late Columbia University professor
Edward Said, Women’s March leader
Linda Sarsour, the late radio personality
Casey Kasem, actress
Alia Shawkat and the late White House correspondent
Helen Thomas—all of whom are associated with anti-Semitic and anti-Israel rhetoric, and in the case of the congresswomen, a push to enact
legislation punishing Israel.
The California State Capitol in Sacramento. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
Last year, following
outrage by California
lawmakers, Jewish and pro-Israel groups, and the Jewish and non-Jewish
community at large for such bias and omissions, the California Board of
Education
announced that it would
substantially revise its current draft ethnic-studies curriculum, noting
that it did “not yet fully align with the statutory requirements” and
the state’s guidelines.
In August 2019, the California State Board of Education
stated that
“the current draft model curriculum falls short and needs to be
substantially redesigned. Following the Instructional Quality
Commission’s review and response to all public comments, a new draft
will be developed for State Board of Education review and potential
approval. The Board will ultimately adopt an ethnic studies model
curriculum that aligns to California’s values.”
The State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond agreed,
calling for “greater balance to this entire curriculum,” including in
how it handles Jewish Americans, anti-Semitism and Israel.
In January, California’s Department of Education announced that it
will recommend that the Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum (ESMC) focus on
four “foundational” groups: African-Americans, Asian-Americans,
Chicano/Latinos and Native Americans. That move was
criticized
for its narrow focus on “people of color” while ignoring several other
significant ethnic or religious groups in the state, such as the Jewish,
Greek and Armenian communities.
Despite the ongoing debate over the ethnic-studies curriculum, at
least 13 school boards in the state have recently passed resolutions
affirming their support for the ethnic-studies model curriculum draft:
Hayward (April 22), Castro Valley (April 23), Albany (April 28), San
Francisco (April 28), West Contra Costa (May 6), Alhambra (May 19),
Oakland (May 27), South San Francisco (May 28), Jefferson Union (June
2), Jefferson Elementary (June 17), San Mateo Foster City (June 18), El
Monte Union (June 24) and Santa Rosa City Schools (July 8).
“Save CA Ethnic Studies’ misleading campaign to get district
school-board members throughout California to adopt disingenuous
resolutions in support of the original draft is a clear attempt to
circumvent the state’s official plan for revisions of the model
curriculum,” said Tammi Rossman-Benjamin, director of the AMCHA
Initiative, which initiated the letter to the California Department of
Education.
‘Unclear what we are supporting’
For example, the Oakland Unified School Board passed a resolution
with four votes in favor, two against and one abstention, stating that
it supports “the California Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum Draft as
written,” including content about Pacific Islanders, Arab Americans,
Central Americans, and West Asian Americans and to keep “its framing and
language of the discipline, with additional scaffolding as necessary to
be inclusive and supportive of multiple users.”
During its May 27, 2020 school-board meeting, Oakland Unified School
Board president Jody London raised questions over the ethnic-studies
curriculum that they were considering. She said in theory, she supported
having an ethnic-studies model curriculum and passing a resolution
setting forth the values the Oakland School Board would like to see in
the state’s model curriculum, instead of one that interferes with the
state’s process, according to meeting notes. This “resolution doesn’t
allow [revisions]” and is “unclear about what is it we are supporting,”
London told the board.
Similarly, questions were also raised after Albany Unified School Board voted to support the ethnic-studies curriculum.
On April 28, the Albany Unified School Board unanimously passed a
resolution that “affirms support for the current California Assembly
Bill 2016 Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum draft” and for the curriculum
to “keep the disciplinary language, framing, guiding values, principles
and outcomes of the field of Ethnic Studies.”
After that meeting, it got some public pushback so, on June 9, the board discussed whether to revisit that vote.
Among the public input the Albany Board received was a statement from
the presidents of the California Latino School Boards Association.
Asian Pacific Islander School Board Members Association and the
Association of Black School Educators supporting the model curriculum
with “additional integration of Jewish Americans and other ethnic
groups, as well as a definition of anti-Semitism … as long as they do
not decenter communities of color in any way from the curriculum.”
The Anti-Defamation League’s Central Pacific Region, writing in favor
of the Albany Board revisiting this resolution, stated that its
resolution “is not about supporting Ethnic Studies but instead endorses
the polarizing and offensive political views. The California Department
of Education (CDE) already rejected the ESMC for its failure to meet the
goals of the authorizing statute AB-2016.
The CDE is making substantive
revisions to be made public in August 2020. The Resolution before you
is misleading and contravenes the legal process.”
The Albany Unified resolution was not revisited for another vote.
Curriculum ‘should be free from politics’
As local school boards debate the issues regarding the ethnic-studies
curriculum, a bill in the California Assembly is being pushed forward
that would require ethnic studies as part of graduation requirement,
known as AB-331.
AB-331 is
a bill that, if passed, would
require ethnic studies as a California high school graduation
requirement, starting with the 2024–25 school year, “based on” the
ethnic studies model curriculum developed by the state.
It was introduced in the Spring of 2019 by Assembly Member Jose
Medina, a Democrat who chairs the Assembly Higher Education Committee
and is a member of the California Legislative Jewish Caucus.
Medina suspended his bill after the summer 2019 ethnic-studies draft curriculum controversy, he
said
because “it is more important to me that we get it right than we do it
quickly…My goal as a teacher was to leave students who could think for
themselves.”
He also said, “I did not feel comfortable having the senate vote on a
curriculum that is not finished.” “The curriculum would be stronger if
it were more comprehensive of additional groups’ experiences.”
In a seeming reversal, Medina is now pushing forward with the bill
ahead of the Aug. 31 deadline for bills introduced during the
legislative session to pass, before the ethnic studies model curriculum
is finalized.
“#AB331 is moving through the legislative process, but we still need
your help to make #EthnicStudiesforALL! Keep up the momentum to get AB
331 out of the Senate Appropriations Committee at the end of July. Our
history should not be optional,”
tweeted Medina on June 26.
AB-331 is scheduled to be heard by the California Senate
Appropriations Committee on July 31. If it passes there, it will be
voted on by the California Senate and Assembly ahead of the August
deadline. If that passes, it will go to Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom for
signature or veto before the model curriculum is approved by the state.
A Medina spokesperson told JNS that the assembly member “has been
working with the Jewish community and different Jewish groups.”
Jewish and pro-Israel groups have called for Jews to be represented in the ethnic-studies curriculum.
The AMCHA Initiative is “incredibly concerned about this deceitful
maneuver by those who helped write the deeply flawed and widely
condemned initial draft curriculum,” Rossman-Benjamin told JNS.
“Regarding AB-331, at a time when our country is in deep distress in
so many ways and we’re so divided and so polarized, it is critical that
the curriculum put forth by the state aims to unite people and will help
create a more positive, healthier climate in California’s school,” said
Rossman-Benjamin. “That was the problem with the initial draft
curriculum; it wasn’t meant to educate students but to promote a
political agenda, a radical one at that.”
Therefore, continued Rossman-Benjamin, “I think it’s important that
we know that the curriculum which will form the basis for what is taught
in California high schools and mandated by AB-331 will be free of
politics. Curriculums should educate, not indoctrinate students into the
particular political ideology of its drafters.”
Sarah Levin, executive director of JIMENA: Jews Indigenous to the
Middle East and North Africa, told JNS that her organization “looks
forward to our schools and students receiving the highest quality, most
rigorous ethnic-studies curriculum, which is surely not the earlier
draft curriculum that omitted the voices of diverse Middle Eastern
Diasporic communities that live in California.”
She continued, “We are proud to work together with a broad coalition
of minority voices from inside and outside the Jewish community,
including Coptic-Christians, Assyrian-Christians and Iranians of
different faiths, to support the creation of an Ethnic Studies
Curriculum that is accurate, balanced and reflects Middle Eastern
student demographics in California.”
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