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Texas State Board of Education considers curriculum changes

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by JESSICA VESS / KVUE News

Posted on November 18, 2009 at 1:08 PM

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This week the State Board of Education will continue considerations to changes with the curriculum in public school classrooms. The discussion centers on social studies.

The focus lies among historical figures and religious holidays.

Board member Mary Helen Berlanga wants to see more Hispanic historical figures in the Texas school curriculum.

“We learned more about the Spanish explorers when I was going to school than what appears now under the required list. It's amazing. Instead of going forward it looks like we're going backward,” said Berlanga.

Numerous Hispanic leaders are currently recommended for classroom lessons, but very few are required.

Berlanga and her fellow board members will listen to public opinion this week. They will take a first reading on the suggested in January.

“Today is just a discussion. You might think well, it's just a discussion item; it's not that important because it's not up for a vote.  Well, this is when you make the difference -- when you start discussing something before it's up for a first reading. This is when you want to make the changes,” said Berlanga.

Along with changes to lessons regarding historical figures, the board is also considering changing what religious holidays are taught.

It's possible, based on current recommendations, that the Christian holiday of Christmas will be eliminated from state curriculum. Instead, the board is considering replacing the study of Christmas with the study of the Hindu holiday, Diwali.

A final vote is expected in March. Any changes adopted by the board will last for the next 10 years.
 

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rbellmetereau said on November 19, 2009 at 1:11 PM

Members of the current Board of Education want to exclude Hispanics from the social studies curriculum, with no Mexican American figures to be taught in the first three years. Do they expect us to believe there are no Hispanics who affected Texas history? What about the explorer Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, who wrote the first book about the exploration of North America? Isn't this ground-breaking author and explorer a significant historical figure for Texas children who are learning to read and write? I am shocked and saddened that we must still battle to teach comprehensive history in the 21st Century. I am running for SBOE 5 to ensure a curriculum representing all people who have contributed to the history of Texas and the United States. Our young people deserve a complete and thorough history, not one limited to elite figures hand-picked by incumbent Ken Mercer and his cohorts. This is why I, Rebecca Bell-Metereau, am running for SBOE 5 to bring the focus back to education.