D

Live Blog Feed

 

TEA Decides Who’s Hot, Who’s Not in History

The Texas Education Agency’s social studies committee recently recommended updates to the standards for teaching the state’s students. For a history major like myself, taking a look at this document is a lot of fun. It lists the historical figures that must be taught at various grade levels. For example, Joseph Stalin is in, but Vladimir Lenin is out.

Some of the names are required, designated as “including,” others are merely examples of a type of person to be discussed, designated by “such as.”

Now, to the fun part.

A few quick observations:

1. They’re cutting out the tall tales. Goodbye to Paul Bunyan and Pecos Bill.

2. Mary Kay Ash is someone that third-graders need to learn about? But Stanley Marcus can wait until grade 4.

3. Intellectual history seems less important than political and military history. Goodbye to Copernicus, Galileo, Archimedes, Einstein, and Eratosthenes of Cyrene.

4. Phyllis Schlafly? Oprah Winfrey is required?

5. In high school U.S. history: Martin Luther King Jr. but no Malcolm X? “Such as” W.E.B. DuBois but not Booker T. Washington?

(H/T Education Week)

Bookmark and Share
3 Comments to “TEA Decides Who’s Hot, Who’s Not in History”
  • Brandon

    There are a LOT of names on that document I never learned about as a Richardson ISD pupil (1988-2001). Almost all of the Grade 3 figures were never discussed at any grade.

  • Don in Austin

    Galileo? The father of modern science? I guess the religious zealots are still unhappy about the sun being the center of the universe thing. 400+ years later and he’s still under house arrest in Texas.

  • Hannibal Lecter

    Can’t have those radical thinkers like Copernicus, Galileo, et al… Might give the little buggers ideas.

Leave a Reply