Once social change begins, it cannot be reversed. You cannot un-
educate the person who has learned to read. You cannot humiliate the person who feels pride. You cannot oppress the people who are not afraid anymore. Cesar Chávez. November 9, 1984.
By 2019, every Los Angeles Unified School District high school student will need to take a class in ethnic studies to graduate.
Cesar Chavez & Duane Campbell, 1972. |
By 2019, every Los Angeles Unified School District high school student will need to take a class in ethnic studies to graduate.
The LAUSD
board voted 6-1 on Tuesday to require the courses and increase ethnic
studies classes as hundreds of students rallied outside the district's downtown
headquarters, shouting "We won!"
District
officials estimate the new requirement will cost $3.9 million to roll out to
all 140,00 high school students, but the board has yet to be presented with the
program's budget.
Ethnic
studies, the interdisciplinary study of race, ethnicity and culture, has long
been offered in colleges, but has not been widely available in high
schools.
Several
ethnic studies courses, such as Chicano Literature or African American
History, are already offered at 19 district schools, but fewer than half count
towards California university entrance, according to a board report.
Supporters
say exposing students to the stories and cultures of other ethnicities promotes
racial tolerance and teaches a more accurate version of the country's history.
“There is a
saying: 'The real story of the hunter will be told when the lion and the
buffalo get to write,'" said LAUSD board member George McKenna, co-sponsor
of the resolution who represents South Los Angeles.
Angie
Escalante, a senior at Orthopaedic Hospital Medical
Magnet High School near USC, complained her history and
literature courses focus too heavily on white people.
"It
says that we don't exist and when we do, it's for something bad,"
Escalante said. She heard about the initiative to require ethnic studies and
encouraged her classmates to attend the board meeting – a first for many.
"When I
heard we would have the chance to change history, I was like, 'That would be
awesome,'" said Brenda Perez, her voice cracking from four hours of
shouting.
"We
think this builds a young person's sense of self and empathy in
others,"said Manuel Criollo with Community Rights Campaign, an
advocacy group supporting the ethnic studies policy. The group shuttled in
dozens of Little Caesars' pizzas to feed the crowds of teenagers.
KPCC http://www.scpr.org/blogs/education/2014/11/19/17582/lausd-requiring-ethnic-studies-for-graduation/
Why California Students Need Ethnic Studies
By Duane Campbell
Children and young adults need to see
themselves in the curriculum. Students, particularly students of color,
have low levels of attachment to California and U.S. civil society messages in significant part because the
government institution they encounter the most- the schools- ignore the
students own history, cultures and experiences.
A fundamental way to engage students in
civic culture is to engage them in their own schools and communities.
That is where the students most encounter civic opportunities.
When the 51 % of the California students
who are Latino , and the 9 % who are Asian do not see themselves as part
of history, for many their sense of self is marginalized. Marginalization
negatively impacts their connections with school and their success at
school. It contributes to an up to 50% drop out rate for
Latinos and some Asian students. A more accurate, more complete
history provided in Ethnic studies courses would provide some
students with a a sense of self, of direction, of
purpose, even a sense that they should stay in school and learn
more. And, ethnic studies would provide Anglo students with an informed, accurate history
of the political and cultural development of our society. Ethnic studies
classes should help young people acquire and learn to use the civics
skills, knowledge, and attitudes that will prepare them to be competent and
responsible citizens throughout their lives.
Add their history to the textbooks.
Add their literature to the literature books. Include all students in
Ethnic Studies classes. These students
are are California’s children. You can start by revising the California
History/ Social Science Framework to include their history.
In 2014 some California policy “leaders”
called for a renewal of civic learning in order to promote civic
education. Unfortunately, but
predictably, they have not proposed increasing ethnic studies. Instead, they have written a report, Revitalizing
K-12 Civic Learning in California, and they call it a Blue Print for
Action. http://www.powerofdemocracy.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/CLTF-Final-Report.pdf
The report even recognizes the diversity of California students.
They say,
“Civic learning is also vital for our increasingly
diverse California society. In 2012-2013, our 6.2 million K-12 students were 53
percent Latino, 26 percent white, 9 percent Asian and 6 percent African American, with the remaining 6
percent comprised of other
ethnicities. In addition, an increasing number of our students are not native speakers of
English. Almost 4 in 10 kindergarteners are English language learners. This
diversity, and the attention it requires, is now acknowledged in our school funding
model. The Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF) recognizes
the necessity of investing in the reduction
and ultimate removal of inequitable outcomes in California public schools. Revitalizing civic learning
opportunities, in an
equitable manner, can contribute to meeting these goals.”
While it is beneficial to
recognize the need to “revitalize civic learning opportunities, in an equitable
manner,” it is not equitable to continue to impose an inaccurate and deceptive
view of history on the students.
While it is accurate that we
have a general problem of civic engagement of the young, it is also true
that we have a very specific problem with the rate of Latino and Asian voter
participation and civic engagement.
The report, as is common, is well
illustrated with compelling photos of very pleasant multi racial and
multiethnic student faces. They even note that the current
History Social Science Framework and Standards are over 15 years out of date- a
reminder that the State Board of Education and the California Legislature
should heed.
Regretfully the curricular directions they
propose take little or no account of the diversity of the students in our
schools.
What happens when students
and teachers are not considered- just policy insiders?
Two recently passed legislative bills
in California provide avenues through which communities and advocates can
work with schools to increase youth voter participation:
Assembly Bill 700 (2013) requires the
Instructional Quality Curriculum in all California high schools. This bill was
developed to increase civic participation and education
Assembly Bill 1817 (2014) encourages voter
participation among high school students, allowing students to register or pre-
register qualified classmates on high school campuses to vote in upcoming
elections. This bill amends current Education Code §49040 which established
“High School Voter Education Weeks” during the last two weeks in April and September
of a school year.
The report and these new laws miss the
single most direct and clear issue. The 1987 California History Social
Science Framework still in use today to guide the selection of
California textbooks expanded African American, Native American,
and women’s history coverage but remains totally inadequate in the coverage of
Latinos and Asians. The only significant change between the 1985 and the 2005
adopted Framework was the addition of a new cover, a cover letter, and a photo
of Cesar Chavez.
A more accurate, more complete
history provided in Ethnic studies courses would provide some
students with a a sense of self, of direction, of
purpose, even a sense that they should stay in school and learn
more. And, ethnic studies would provide Anglo students with an informed, accurate history of
the political and cultural development of our society. Ethnic studies classes should
help young people acquire and learn to use the civics skills, knowledge,
and attitudes that will prepare them to be competent and responsible citizens
throughout their lives.
Add their history to the textbooks.
Add their literature to the literature books. Include all students in
Ethnic Studies classes. These students
are California’s children. We can
start by revising the California History/ Social Science Framework to include
their history and joining LA Unified in requiring Ethnic Studies Classes in
high school. This would be much more effective than the required voter
registration efforts of the report on Civic Competence.
For more on this topic see: www.MexicanAmericanDigitalHistory.org
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