Is Texas Reshaping American Education with Conservative Textbooks?

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In summary: well, you get the idea.I am pretty sure the Texans are way more proud of being American than they are of being ex-Mexicans.Texas is a large and influential state, so it makes sense that their recommendations would have a large impact on the nation as a whole. The Board is trying to promote a more balanced perspective in the classroom, and they believe that Jefferson is not a good representation of the founders. The Board is also trying to emphasize the importance of Christianity in the development of the United States, and they believe that other historical figures should be given more credit. This is a rather disturbing measure, to say the least.
  • #106
techmologist said:
You are forgetting that America is officially "One Nation Under God". Has been since 1954. All over my town, you see little placards in people's front yards reminding you of this important national fact. So, Jefferson and the secularists can suck it.
Jefferson would not have objected to any of the facts about your town, suggesting we do in deed need better textbooks.
 
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  • #107
calculusrocks said:
Reading turbo's link to the UCLA study.
Thoughts?

ADD: This quote is taken right before the introduction.
W repeatedly trotted out the poor inner-city school children as an example of who would be helped. The problem is that most of the schools are over-crowded and under-staffed, and there is no excess capacity to allow the movement of students from one school to another. No existing infrastructure to allow for the movement, and no proposal to fund and build such infrastructure. Helping "inner city" kids with vouchers was a very cynical sham. Give the parents of inner city kids vouchers, and they would have to direct them to the same failing schools or come up with a way to pay for commutes to other schools, IF the other schools had the capacity to accept them.
 
  • #108
turbo-1 said:
W repeatedly trotted out the poor inner-city school children as an example of who would be helped. The problem is that most of the schools are over-crowded and under-staffed, and there is no excess capacity to allow the movement of students from one school to another. No existing infrastructure to allow for the movement, and no proposal to fund and build such infrastructure. Helping "inner city" kids with vouchers was a very cynical sham. Give the parents of inner city kids vouchers, and they would have to direct them to the same failing schools or come up with a way to pay for commutes to other schools, IF the other schools had the capacity to accept them.

The author of the UCLA study that you linked to makes the "cynical" claim that vouchers would help inner city African Americans.

While voucher defenders have vastly overstated the racial-justice claim, there is some prospect that vouchers might improve educational outcomes for low-income African American children. I argue that vouchers should be permitted at least until they can be more thoroughly evaluated to determine their impact on a group so in need of better educational opportunities.

ADD: This quote is directly above the introduction.
 
  • #109
mheslep said:
That's all true. As it happens, I'm in the camp of American exceptionalism especially when it comes to the country's founding. But the above pertains more to the courage of convictions (which also deserves room in the textbook), and not the intellectual domain per se.

I do agree with this point of view, however, I can't help myself to feel this situation similar like crediting relativity to Newton. Of course is a forced comparison, but it describes my feelings well.

There is no doubt that an educated thinker cannot claim that he rediscovered the whole civilization and endless centuries of social progress. But at the same time we should not minimize some of the greatest of us because they where smart enough to educate themselves, and critically look at history and social systems.
 
  • #110
calculusrocks said:
The author of the UCLA study that you linked to makes the "cynical" claim that vouchers would help inner city African Americans.
ADD: This quote is directly above the introduction.
Did he say "inner-city" anywhere there? It would be possible to improve outcomes for African American students in rural or small-town environments if the conditions were right, but inner-city schools that W cited so often have special problems that cannot be addressed by pulling public funding and substituting parent-directed vouchers. That much should be evident.

The immediate beneficiaries would be parents who already send their kids to non-public (often religious) schools. You don't have to be an economist so appreciate that.
 
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  • #111
turbo-1 said:
W repeatedly trotted out the poor inner-city school children as an example of who would be helped. The problem is that most of the schools are over-crowded and under-staffed, and there is no excess capacity to allow the movement of students from one school to another. No existing infrastructure to allow for the movement, and no proposal to fund and build such infrastructure.
Are you under the impression that the vouchers were for schools planned, built, or created by government? Seriously? :rolleyes:
 
  • #112
turbo-1 said:
Did he say "inner-city" anywhere there? It would be possible to improve outcomes for African American students in rural or small-town environments if the conditions were right, but inner-city schools that W cited so often have special problems than cannot be addressed by pulling public funding and substituting parent-directed vouchers. That much should be evident.

Forgive me, it said "low-income", not "inner city". I would imagine that there are many people with low incomes reside in the inner city. So, it appears to me that the author of the study undermines your characterization of school vouchers as a "cynical sham". Now you are apparently backpedaling and saying the way President Bush proposed vouchers was a "cynical sham", when nobody was talking about President Bush's proposal to begin with.

If we were to go the voucher route, I'd think that you could have vouchers for school transportation for people who couldn't afford it.
 
  • #113
mheslep said:
Even if that is now the interpretation of US law, crediting him with any thing like 'separation' terms in the law as written is a mistake. Jefferson's rule as it was written (either time) does not use any separation wording. Instead it's clear that he wanted to prohibit another 'Church of England' popping up in America, or the clergy becoming a protected class of the state. In his Virginia Bill of Rights, the wording is "all men are equally entitled to the free exercise of religion", and in the US 1st amendment this became the establishment clause "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion". Period. There is no separation wording hiding somewhere in the fine print.

We've had this same discussion in other threads about Jefferson.

1) Jefferson would prefer ANY government, whether city, county, state, or federal, be completely separate from religion.

2) Jefferson's personal views probably weren't overly important in the wording of the First Amendment since James Madison wrote it, based on George Mason's Virginia Bill or Rights (even if we dilute history books with people other than Jefferson, it won't matter, since we'll just give Jefferson credit, anyway). Not actually being the person to write it isn't the same as saying he had no influence on it. In fact, both Madison and Jefferson provided some inputs to the Virginia Bill of Rights, even if George Mason had the responsibility for actually writing it.

3) Madison's personal views probably weren't nearly as important as the fact that different states had different state religions and some states had laws dictating strict separation of church and state. We were a union of individual states, not a single country; and each state handled this issue differently. The First Amendment prohibited establishment of a national religion because not doing so would automatically bust the union since it would have been impossible for the states to agree on a national religion. Madison was very pragmatic and tried to only accept recommendations that most of the states proposed since he did not want a proposed bill of rights to turn into a new constitutional convention so soon after getting the Constitution ratified.

4) The First Amendment did not ban state religions. Each state was free to handle the issue on their own until the US Supreme Court decided the 14th Amendment made the establishment clause applicable to the states, as well. This application of the 14th Amendment to the 1st Amendment essentially becomes separation of church and state (with state meaning government, in general).
 
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  • #114
BobG said:
This application of the 14th Amendment to the 1st Amendment essentially becomes separation of church and state (with state meaning government, in general).

I've never heard this interpretation before. Can you explain?
 
  • #115
Taken verbatim from William Safire's "Safire's Political Dictionary", published 2008:

"Another use of the wall as a symbol - in this case, a 'good' one - was by Thomas Jefferson in a time when the Founders frequently identified freedom and emocracy with the will of the Creator. In an 1802 letter to Connecticut's Danbury Baptist Association, Jefferson wrote approvingly about 'a wall of separation between Church & State.'"

So, he did say it.
 
  • #116
Char. Limit said:
So, he did say it.

Did anyone doubt that?
 
  • #117
BobG said:
4) The First Amendment did not ban state religions. Each state was free to handle the issue on their own until the US Supreme Court decided the 14th Amendment made the establishment clause applicable to the states, as well. This application of the 14th Amendment to the 1st Amendment essentially becomes separation of church and state (with state meaning government, in general).

CRGreathouse said:
I've never heard this interpretation before. Can you explain?

EVERSON v BOARD OF EDUCATION OF EWING TP in 1947.
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=US&vol=330&invol=1

The only contention here is that the State statute and the resolution, in so far as they authorized reimbursement to parents of children attending parochial schools, violate the Federal Constitution in these two respects, which to some extent, overlap. First. They authorize the State to take by taxation the private property of some and bestow it upon others, to be used for their own private purposes. This, it is alleged violates the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Second. The statute and the resolution forced inhabitants to pay taxes to help support and maintain schools which are dedicated to, and which regularly teach, the Catholic Faith. This is alleged to be a use of State power to support church schools contrary to the prohibition of the First Amendment which the Fourteenth Amendment made applicable to the states.

This Court has previously recognized that the provisions of the First Amendment, in the drafting and adoption of which Madison and Jefferson played such leading roles, had the same objective and were intended to provide the same protection against governmental intrusion on religious liberty as the Virginia statute. ... Prior to the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, the First Amendment did not apply as a restraint against the states. Most of them did soon provide similar constitutional protections for religious liberty. But some states persisted for about half a century in imposing restraints upon the free exercise of religion and in discriminating against particular religious groups.

The court relied on the precedent set in MURDOCK v. COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA in saying the 14th made the 1st applicable to the states (except Murdock v. Pennsylvania was focused on freedom of religion vs. establishment or support of a religion).

By the way, the Supreme Court upheld New Jersey's right to provide public transportation to Catholic schools in that case. While confirming the logic of the argument was valid, the assistance provided didn't meet the standard of establishing or supporting a state religion.

New Jersey cannot consistently with the 'establishment of religion' clause of the First Amendment contribute tax-raised funds to the support of an institution which teaches the tenets and faith of any church. On the other hand, other language of the amendment commands that New Jersey cannot hamper its citizens in the free exercise of their own religion. Consequently, it cannot exclude individual Catholics, Lutherans, Mohammedans, Baptists, Jews, Methodists, Non-believers, Presbyterians, or the members of any other faith, because of their faith, or lack of it, from receiving the benefits of public welfare legislation.

That's not the same as saying New Jersey had to provide public transportation to parochial or private schools. They could have made the bus transportation part of the public school service. By separating the bus service from the schools, the transportation was a public service for all as opposed to a service provided by the schools.

I guess that leaves the question open about whether a state could quit providing public schools completely and just send people vouchers to choose their own private schools. Or to decide to quit providing public shools completely and not bothering to provide any educational assistance to the public.
 
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  • #118
BobG said:
We've had this same discussion in other threads about Jefferson.

1) Jefferson would prefer ANY government, whether city, county, state, or federal, be completely separate from religion.
I'll grant that from the Danbury Baptists letter we might infer his personal preferences, but none of his public declarations or their derivatives contain ANY notion of complete separation. Also, the public commons was full of religious artifacts in his day, but there are no tales of Jefferson calling for an 18th century ACLU equivalent to tear them all down, ban prayer, etc.

2) Jefferson's personal views probably weren't overly important in the wording of the First Amendment since James Madison wrote it, based on George Mason's Virginia Bill or Rights (even if we dilute history books with people other than Jefferson, it won't matter, since we'll just give Jefferson credit, anyway). Not actually being the person to write it isn't the same as saying he had no influence on it. In fact, both Madison and Jefferson provided some inputs to the Virginia Bill of Rights, even if George Mason had the responsibility for actually writing it.
Well recall that the US Bill of Rights was heavily influenced by the VBR, please excuse the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Bill_of_Rights" for now:
wiki said:
The Bill was influenced by George Mason's 1776 Virginia Declaration of Rights, the 1689 English Bill of Rights, works of the Age of Enlightenment pertaining to natural rights, and earlier English political documents such as Magna Carta (1215).
Regarding the content of the VBR, I maybe wrong. It turns out that I was thinking of Jefferson's 'Stature for Religious Freedom', but that was 1779 when he was Governor and after Mason's 1776 VBR. Still, I thought the 'free exercise' wording in the VBR came to Mason from Jefferson, which means the Madison used it in constructing the US 1st. But can't find a reference so maybe I am wrong.

3) Madison's personal views probably weren't nearly as important as the fact that different states had different state religions and some states had laws dictating strict separation of church and state. We were a union of individual states, not a single country; and each state handled this issue differently. The First Amendment prohibited establishment of a national religion because not doing so would automatically bust the union since it would have been impossible for the states to agree on a national religion. Madison was very pragmatic and tried to only accept recommendations that most of the states proposed since he did not want a proposed bill of rights to turn into a new constitutional convention so soon after getting the Constitution ratified.
I believe Madison's position before hand was that the Constitution didn't need a 1st amend. - that the Articles as written didn't grant the power to create a national religion.
His view didn't carry the day.
4) The First Amendment did not ban state religions. Each state was free to handle the issue on their own until the US Supreme Court decided the 14th Amendment made the establishment clause applicable to the states, as well. This application of the 14th Amendment to the 1st Amendment essentially becomes separation of church and state (with state meaning government, in general).
Edit: Agreed for all the 14th A. implications, except that you seem to be using 'establishment clause' and 'separation of church and state' interchangeably here, as if they amount to the same thing. I assert they are not.
 
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  • #119
mheslep said:
Regarding the content of the VBR, I maybe wrong. It turns out that I was thinking of Jefferson's 'Stature for Religious Freedom', but that was 1779 when he was Governor and after Mason's 1776 VBR. Still, I thought the 'free exercise' wording in the VBR came to Mason from Jefferson, which means the Madison used it in constructing the US 1st. But can't find a reference so maybe I am wrong.
Or maybe not. Like I mentioned, both Madison and Jefferson were involved in the VBR, even if George Mason was the one that actually wrote it.


I believe Madison's position before hand was that the Constitution didn't need a 1st amend. - that the Articles as written didn't grant the power to create a national religion.
His view didn't carry the day.
Madison didn't think the Constitution needed a Bill of Rights at all. Just as you mentioned how Jefferson's public declarations, etc didn't support the idea that he favored complete separation, there are some people who will accept the fact that performance of a public job requires adhering to the public's point of view vs your own personal views. You make your arguments, then you do what the majority wants.

Edit: Agreed for all the 14th A. implications, except that you seem to be using 'establishment clause' and 'separation of church and state' interchangeably here, as if they amount to the same thing. I assert they are not.

The establishment clause and freedom of religion create a separation for functional purposes. However, just as the Everson case illustrated, not every mere contact with religion constitutes establishing a state religion. In other words, separation of church and state isn't the same as quarantining religion.
 
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  • #120
Thanks for the reference, BobG. But the opinion seems to specifically deny the relevance of the 14th Amendment -- that the only objections that could be raised would be on 1st Amendment grounds:
It is much too late to argue that legislation intended to facilitate the opportunity of children to get a secular education serves no public purpose. Cochran v. Louisiana State Board of Education, 281 U.S. 370 , 50 S. Ct. 335; Holmes, J., in Interstate Consolidated Street Ry. Co. v. Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 207 U.S. 79, 87 , 28 S.Ct. 26, 27, 12 Ann.Cas. 555. See opinion of Cooley, J., in Stuart v. School District No. 1 of Village of Kalamazoo, 1878, 30 Mich. 69. The same thing is no less true of legislation to reimburse needy parents, or all parents, for payment of the fares of their children so that they can ride in public busses to and from schools rather than run the risk of traffic and other hazards incident to walking or 'hitchhiking.' See Barbier v. Connolly, supra, 113 U.S. at page 31, 5 S.Ct. at page 359. See also cases collected 63 A.L.R. 413; 118 A.L.R. 806. Nor does it follow that a law has a private rather than a public purpose because it provides that tax-raised funds will be paid to reimburse i dividuals on account of money spent by them in a way which furthers a public program. See Carmichael v. Southern Coal & Coke Co., 301 U.S. 495, 518 , 57 S.Ct. 868, 876, 109 A.L.R. 1327. Subsidies and loans to individuals such as farmers and home owners, and to privately owned transportation systems, as well as many other kinds of businesses, have been commonplace practices in our state and national history.

Insofar as the second phase of the due process argument may differ from the first, it is by suggesting that taxation for transportation of children to church schools constitutes support of a religion by the State. But if the law is invalid for this reason, it is because it violates the First Amendment's prohibition against the establishment of religion [330 U.S. 1, 8] by law. This is the exact question raised by appellant's second contention, to consideration of which we now turn.

Am I misreading this?
 
  • #121
CRGreathouse said:
Thanks for the reference, BobG. But the opinion seems to specifically deny the relevance of the 14th Amendment -- that the only objections that could be raised would be on 1st Amendment grounds:


Am I misreading this?

No, you're not misreading it. The 14th just provides the link so the 1st Amendment can be applied to a state government (as opposed to being restricted just to the federal government). The logic of the case still depends on the 1st Amendment.

The 1st Amendment originally only applied to the federal government. It was this clause from the 14th Amendment that made the Bill of Rights applicable to the individual states:

No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
 
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  • #122
Nebula815 said:
Well that's actually what the public education system was designed for when one looks at its history and designers, problem is, teaching skills necessary to form a better qualified labor force isn't necessarily the same thing as educating people. The original goal of the educational system was to teach people to obey and follow orders. It was based off of the Prussian system, which was designed to produce soldiers and employees (with the idea that a classical education only be given to an elite few). It was not designed to enhance critical thinking skills and in certain ways was designed to retard them.

So you're saying that early public education was designed to produce people that would go the whole 450 Volts on the Milgram experiment.
 
  • #123
BobG said:
So you're saying that early public education was designed to produce people that would go the whole 450 Volts on the Milgram experiment.

~65% would go anyway with it :P

But regardless of this, its very convenient for a government to have high rates of obedience in population.
 
  • #124
mheslep said:
/SNIP/

Even if that is now the interpretation of US law, crediting him with any thing like 'separation' terms in the law as written is a mistake. Jefferson's rule as it was written (either time) does not use any separation wording. Instead it's clear that he wanted to prohibit another 'Church of England' popping up in America, or the clergy becoming a protected class of the state. In his Virginia Bill of Rights, the wording is "all men are equally entitled to the free exercise of religion", and in the US 1st amendment this became the establishment clause "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion". Period. There is no separation wording hiding somewhere in the fine print.

/SNIP/

This seemed to suggest he thought Jefferson never spoke the words...
 
  • #125
BobG said:
EVERSON v BOARD OF EDUCATION OF EWING TP in 1947.
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=US&vol=330&invol=1
The only contention here is that the State statute and the resolution, in so far as they authorized reimbursement to parents of children attending parochial schools, violate the Federal Constitution in these two respects, which to some extent, overlap. First. They authorize the State to take by taxation the private property of some and bestow it upon others, to be used for their own private purposes. This, it is alleged violates the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment....
Imagine that, they must have been a bunch of right wing "neocon" extremists on the side of the rich, huh?
 
  • #126
mheslep said:
It turns out that I was thinking of Jefferson's 'Stature for Religious Freedom', but that was 1779 when he was Governor and after Mason's 1776 VBR.

Are we really sure we want to endorse Jefferson's Statute for Religious Freedom?

Jefferson's Statute for Religious Freedom said:
that our civil rights have no dependence on our religious opinions any more than our opinions in physics or geometry

I'm not sure I agree with the "physics or geometry" part. :smile:
 
  • #127
BobG said:
How come Texas is so much more important than California when it comes to textbooks?

Because we rule.
 
  • #128
Brian_C said:
Because we rule.

Quatsch, my good man, Quatsch.

Everyone knows that it is Washington State who rules
 
  • #129
Char. Limit said:
Quatsch, my good man, Quatsch.

Everyone knows that it is Washington State who rules

A state so important that you have to remind people that you're talking about a real state every time you mention it.
 
  • #130
Well, Wash. State is more important, but D.C. is more famous.

Kind of like how Eric Holder is more important, but Tiger Woods is more famous.
 
  • #131
I always felt that one problem with vouchers which seems to be overlooked is that everyone can't leave the bad school and go to the good school simply because the good school would be so overcrowded it would become the bad school.
 
  • #132
dilletante said:
I always felt that one problem with vouchers which seems to be overlooked is that everyone can't leave the bad school and go to the good school simply because the good school would be so overcrowded it would become the bad school.
In a static world. I gather that what often happens in reality is the bad school is forced to make changes, drop its complacency, and improve. Similarly the existence of FedEx and UPS force the USPS to improve.
 
  • #133
BobG said:
Actually, much more than 50% of the country is Christian. However, that fact is irrelevant. The most heated debate is between a small number of atheists and an equally small number of fundamentalist Christians.
Equally small? According to Pew surveys, about 40% of respondents would prefer that Evolution not be taught at all in schools and be replaced entirely by Creationism. That's roughly the same fraction that also believe that humans and animals have retained the same essential form since the beginning of life, about 10,000 or so years ago. If that group is not what you mean by 'fundamentalist Christians", what is? Atheists make up no more than 10% of the population (closer to 1% by some http://b27.cc.trincoll.edu/weblogs/AmericanReligionSurvey-ARIS/reports/ARIS_Report_2008.pdf surveys)

http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1107/polling-evolution-creationism
 
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  • #134
dilletante said:
I always felt that one problem with vouchers which seems to be overlooked is that everyone can't leave the bad school and go to the good school simply because the good school would be so overcrowded it would become the bad school.

You think that school problems are all caused by overcrowding?
 
  • #135
mheslep said:
It is so far out from the rest of the changes that I suspect the article has it wrong.
You suspect right ... I suspect.

Not a mainstream source nor anywhere close to independent, but I reckon it points out a big boo-boo in the other news stories on this:
http://www.texasinsider.org/?p=24183

Gail Lowe said:
“To say the State Board of Education has excluded Thomas Jefferson from the curriculum framework is irresponsible and untruthful.”
 
  • #136
Gokul43201 said:
Equally small? According to Pew surveys, about 40% of respondents would prefer that Evolution not be taught at all in schools and be replaced entirely by Creationism. That's roughly the same fraction that also believe that humans and animals have retained the same essential form since the beginning of life, about 10,000 or so years ago. If that group is not what you mean by 'fundamentalist Christians", what is? Atheists make up no more than 10% of the population (closer to 1% by some http://b27.cc.trincoll.edu/weblogs/AmericanReligionSurvey-ARIS/reports/ARIS_Report_2008.pdf surveys)

http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1107/polling-evolution-creationism

The percentage of people that don't understand there's even a difference between creationism and evolution make up a sizable chunk of the population, as well.

Most Americans say they are familiar with creationism and evolution, but recent polling suggests that there is some confusion about the meaning of these terms. In an August 2005 Gallup poll, 58% of the public said that creationism was definitely or probably true as an explanation for the origin and development of life, but about the same number also said the same about evolution. Since creationism and evolution are incompatible as explanations, some portion of the public is clearly confused about the meaning of the terms.


Statistics like that bring back memories of scenes from "Rainman".

Still, I'd concede there's probably at least twice as many fundamentalist Christians as there are unaffiliated/agnostic/atheists, even if the more militant factions of both are small minorities.
 
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