As a culture war battleground, revision of the social studies curriculum standards in Texas isn't likely to stir the same level of rancor as abortion or gay marriage. Will students really care if the textbooks they skim to pass multiple-choice tests refer to "free enterprise" rather than "capitalism" or "constitutional republic" rather than "democratic republic"?
It's doubtful. But the revisions tentatively approved by the state education board's 10 Republican members do raise interesting questions. What role should politics play in what our schools are teaching (or not teaching) about American history? More importantly, how should teachers handle the growing tensions between religious conservatives and secular progressives?
Over the past year, religious conservatives clearly dominated the board's discussions and suggested revisions, which were given preliminary approval earlier this month. (A final vote is scheduled for May.) The most obvious example of that influence was the board's 10-5 party-line rejection of a standard requiring students to learn that the nation's Founders "protected religious freedom by barring government from promoting or disfavoring any particular religion over all others."--snip--
Among other interesting revisions, the board:
-- Mandated the observance of 'Celebrate Freedom Week.'
-- Added Diwali (Hindu, Sikh and Jain) and Hajj (Muslim) to a list of teachable religious holidays.
-- Added instruction on the significance of the Social Gospel, Social Darwinism, and 20th Century missionaries,
-- Added a unit on "the conservative resurgence" of the 1980s and 1990s, including instruction about the Moral Majority, Newt Gingrich's Contract with America, the Heritage Foundation and the NRA.
http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith/undergod/2010/03/rewriting_correcting_god_and_country.html---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Why is it not enough to teach your children your beliefs at home or at church? Why do believers feel the need to constantly FORCE their beliefs onto the rest of us?