The State Board of Education is set to vote Thursday on what’s become a politically controversial set of standards for social studies in K-12 public schools.
It all started last month when the new Republican State Superintendent Catherine Truitt decided to amend the state education department's recommendations for the standards. That included changing phrases that required mention of "systemic racism" to just "racism" and “systemic discrimination” to just “discrimination.” Along with changing reference from “gender identity” to “identity.”
At Wednesday’s meeting, some Republican board made clear they still don't the standards. Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson took issue with the idea that the standards were "inclusive" and said conservative voices like his are being silenced. He said that students were permitted to wear clothes ing Black Lives Matter but were not allowed to publicly Blue Lives Matter, for example.
As proof, he cited a political cartoon recently published by Capitol Broadcasting Co. which owns WRAL. The cartoon depicted Republican board who pushed for the changes to the education department’s recommendations as of the Ku Klux Klan.
But Robinson also questioned whether school clubs that the Black lives matter movement, like one at Durham Public Schools, should be allowed to exist.
Board James Ford took issue with the premise that more inclusive standards would silence anyone’s voice.
“The notion that if you don’t blindly gush with unquestioning adoration for your nation then you are un-American, un-Democratic, or teaching hate — these are extremist positions and only seize the poles on each end of that debate without respect for the complexity or nuance,” Ford said.
Truitt and Board Chair Eric Davis read some of the many letters they’ve been sent with opinions on the standards. They presented a united front in a bid to get enough board to vote in favor of the current plan.
Truitt read from a statement she wrote to preview the standards. She said the standards taught to North Carolinians must reflect the totality of the nation's diversity.
"This means teaching the hard truths of: Native American oppression, anti-Catholicism, exploitation of child labor, and Jim Crow, to name a few,” Truitt said. “While simultaneously teaching that the U.S. Constitution created the world’s first organized democracy since Ancient Rome, and that 90 years into our country’s history President Lincoln ended the United States’ participation in what had been more than 9,000 years of legalized slavery and human bondage in nearly every corner of the world.”
The board will vote on the proposal tomorrow, it's unclear whether the current standards will with the required majority.