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swag

(26,483 posts)
Wed May 26, 2021, 11:20 AM May 2021

Montana superintendent, AG enter national controversy on critical race theory

Read the whole article. Arntzen seems like a real piece of work.

https://dailymontanan.com/2021/05/25/montana-superintendent-ag-enter-national-controversy-on-critical-race-theory/?eType=EmailBlastContent&eId=8dfbab2d-92b3-4658-b998-62a96f6bf1a0

By Keila Szpaller - May 25, 2021

Superintendent Elsie Arntzen’s bid to fight critical race theory in public schools is likely to pull Montana into a political debate over history and social studies education that’s taking place across the country.

On May 12, Arntzen made a formal request that Attorney General Austin Knudsen issue an opinion on “the legality of teaching so-called ‘antiracism’ and Critical Race Theory in Montana Public Schools.”

Knudsen has not released a public opinion, but he was among 20 Republican attorneys general who signed a May 19 letter to the U.S. Department of Education that describes critical race theory as “deeply flawed and controversial.” The letter of eight pages asks the Department of Education not to fund grant projects that are based on the theory.

Critical race theory describes an academic approach to teaching racial disparities in the United States and the way it has shaped public policy. EducationWeek notes the concept is roughly 40 years old but only recently in the limelight.

. . . more

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Montana superintendent, AG enter national controversy on critical race theory (Original Post) swag May 2021 OP
Oh, Elsie. Honey. STFU and go ... I dunno... do something helpful. CurtEastPoint May 2021 #1
from the CA History Social Studies Framework for middle school: Claire Oh Nette May 2021 #2
OK delete if necessary: They want to erase the facts of the violent oppression of African Americans ShazamIam May 2021 #3
This woman is a hack. MontanaMama May 2021 #4

Claire Oh Nette

(2,636 posts)
2. from the CA History Social Studies Framework for middle school:
Wed May 26, 2021, 11:53 AM
May 2021

Montana Social Studies Standards. They're not detailed, and there is no mention of Critical Race Theory. [http://opi.mt.gov/Educators/Teaching-Learning/K-12-Standards-Revision/Social-Studies-Standards]

From the very detailed CA History Social Studies Framework:

History

Historical thinking is a process of chronological reasoning, which means wrestling with issues of causality, connections, significance, perspectives, and context. The goal is to develop credible arguments about the past based on reasoned interpretation of evidence from a variety of primary and secondary sources in diverse media formats.

In middle school, students place events, ideas, and developments in historical context by considering the date, place, and other developments happening at the same time. They evaluate the relevance, credibility, and utility of a historical source based on information such as author, date, place of origin, intended audience, and purpose.

Students analyze the factors that influenced the perspectives of people during different historical eras and how and why the perspectives have changed over time.

Students understand and distinguish cause, effect, sequence, and correlation in historical events, including the long- and short-term causal relations.

Finally, students detect possible limitations in the historical record and recognize that interpretations of history are subject to change as new information emerges


HSS Framework, CH. 12 8th grade US History:

Students should consider topics that divided the Founding Fathers and examine the compromises adopted to produce a unifying document. Several compromises preserved the institution of slavery: namely, the three-fifths rule of representation, the slave importation clause, and the fugitive-slave clause. Students may explore quantitative information about where slaves lived and the work they did to determine why slave-holding provisions were so important to Southern delegates. Students can also wrestle with a question faced by some Founding Fathers: How could the nation’s ideals of freedom, liberty, and democracy be adopted alongside slavery? With careful guidance from the teacher, students can speculate on the question What were the long-term costs of slavery, both to people of African descent and to the nation at large? In addition, students discuss the status of women in this era, particularly relating to voting and the ownership of property.

Although political rights for women were not advocated by the Founding Fathers, some women, such as Abigail Adams, wrote explicitly about how women’s interests, especially as mothers, needed to be considered by male leaders.


Asking students to read primary source documents, summarize the arguments, trace cause and effect, not so much CRT.
Fact: White supremacy exists and is baked into the laws and institutions of the country. Fact: Our history is a constant struggle to expand the franchise to meet the promise that all humankind is created equal under the eyes of the law. More Perfect Union is a beautiful concept, unless you think things were already perfect. Those squealing loudest to deny white privilege and supremacy prove not only that the truth hurts, but it's working, too.

ShazamIam

(2,564 posts)
3. OK delete if necessary: They want to erase the facts of the violent oppression of African Americans
Wed May 26, 2021, 12:42 PM
May 2021

and deny its existence even as they are again expanding that oppression with their special voting limitations.

MontanaMama

(23,292 posts)
4. This woman is a hack.
Wed May 26, 2021, 03:38 PM
May 2021

I cannot believe MT voted this poor excuse of an educator into office...and yet, here we are.

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