We Reject the Right-Wing Attacks on Racial Justice and Our Classrooms
As of the middle of August, more than two dozen states have introducedand 11 states have enactedbills or rules to restrict the teaching of history and contemporary social realities. Right-wing activists have mounted similar attacks at school board meetings throughout the country. This stunning barrage of legislation and policies aims to ban teaching critical race theory (CRT), and supposedly divisive topics in the curriculum.
But the real target is the truth.
The anti-CRT campaign echoes the Big Lie that Trump won the election. It is the curricular counterpart to the wave of voter suppression laws promoted by the same far-right political forces that have tried to rewrite the history of the 2020 election and cover up the attempted coup on Jan. 6. Although the particular framing of these laws and penalties varies across states, they are all part of a coordinated campaign of repression meant to enforce a single emphatic message to educators: Shut up or else. The Republican sponsors of these measures fear that in the wake of last summers massive Black Lives Matter protests, the anti-racist debates and discussions that have permeated society are seeping into the classroom. With scary buzzwords and misleading framing, both right-wing and corporate media have amplified and spread the perception that classroom teachers are poisoning the minds of children, inviting a wave of harassment against them.
Some provisions of these laws are so sweeping one can imagine teachers finding it virtually impossible to follow the law even if they wanted to. In Tennessee, teachers are prohibited from even including any material in the curriculum that promotes division between, or resentment of, a race, sex, religion, creed, nonviolent political affiliation, social class, or class of people. This law would make it impossible to teach Thomas Jeffersons letter proposing colonization of formerly enslaved people outside the United States or Andrew Jacksons justification of the Indian Removal Act or Franklin Roosevelts second bill of rights speech. The penalties for violating these teaching bans range from fines levied against individual teachers and revocation of their teaching licenses, to withholding state funding and rescinding accreditation of school districts, to the threat of lawsuits by parents.
https://www.commondreams.org/views/2021/08/23/we-reject-right-wing-attacks-racial-justice-and-our-classrooms