Everything is better in Texas!!
http://www.slate.com/id/2250999
Everything is better in Texas!!Well, not everything. The State Board of Education is re-writing history through the contents of children's text books. No more:
http://www.slate.com/id/2250999 Originally Posted by Rudyard K
Well, not everything. The State Board of Education is re-writing history through the contents of children's text books. No more:You have a bit of a problem with comprehension, don't you? Did you even read the article?
See http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/13/ed...n/13texas.html.
- Thomas Jefferson
- Martin Luther King, Jr.
- Bishop Romero
- Theory of Evolution
- Removing separation of church and state
- Emphasizing Christian principles
The list goes on. Originally Posted by charlestudor2005
You have a bit of a problem with comprehension, don't you? Did you even read the article?- The Board removed Thomas Jefferson from the Texas curriculum, "replacing him with religious right icon John Calvin."
No more Thomas Jefferson? Didn't see that. Did see that one reference to him on one subject matter replaced him on a list.
No more removing separation of church and state? I'm kind of guessing that is just a distorted sentence that means you are saying that the words "separation of chuch and state" is not in the constitution. Hate to clue you in, but they are not. Originally Posted by Rudyard K
- The Board removed Thomas Jefferson from the Texas curriculum, "replacing him with religious right icon John Calvin."You might want to link the actual changes, as proposed by the BOE, not some link to some reporter's view of what it said. I have had trouble finding it. I did find where it was being proposed that Jefferson was being removed as a key player in philosophical teachings related to some historical thought process...but not "removed from the Texas curriculum" as you and your reporter implies.
- The Board refused to require that "students learn that the Constitution prevents the U.S. government from promoting one religion over all others." Originally Posted by winemaker
What Texas decides to teach in their schools is the business of the state (mostly, the Feds have No Child Left Behind and other stuff). Votes are held for the Board of Education (and one of the most conservative members in fact lost in his re-election bid).. Originally Posted by discreetgentAgree. Texans should teach what they want. If you don't like it, get involved in the process. Change the School Board.
What does trouble me is the outsized effect that the Texas curriculum has on textbooks that are then used in many other states. Unlike many other states Texas buys textbooks en masse. So having a textbook certified for use in Texas is a major deal for the book publishers. What that means is that those textbooks are then often used unchanged in other states and that would be my issue. Originally Posted by discreetgentFine. But if you don't like what Texas is teaching, get involved in the process. Change the School Board where you live. Nobody is holding a gun to your head to use the same books Texas is using.
It sounds to me like if anything a lot of lazy/savvy/resource constrained/(you pick your adjective here depending on how you see it) school districts are leveraging the work & investment Texas has made in curriculum development. Originally Posted by atlcomedyIt needs to happen on a much bigger scale than a district here and a district there. There has to be an economic incentive for the publishers to publish multiple editions of a textbook.
It needs to happen on a much bigger scale than a district here and a district there. There has to be an economic incentive for the publishers to publish multiple editions of a textbook. Originally Posted by discreetgentLet me answer this one for you ATL.
Who'd a thunk it? We have some nut jobs on the school board but its swinging back to the middle DG.Yep, it is a question of "Top Down" regulation, or "Bottom Up" regulation. It would seem that the current regulatory quest is to try to come up with a Top Down regulatory system. In other words, "How do we come up with regulations to keep Fat Cats from preying on the poor?" Just look around...We have Payday loans, overdraft protection, credit cards for poor credit folks, and mortgages for poor credit folks.
From RK link. RK had a link? Very intresting.......
"House prices didn't experience a bubble in the same way as the rest of the nation," said Anil Kumar, senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. But it's also because of two attributes not commonly associated with the Longhorn State: financial restraint and comparatively strong regulation. Unlike many of its neighbors, Texas has state laws that prohibited consumers from using home-equity lines of credit to increase borrowing to more than 80 percent of the value of their homes
Originally Posted by WTF
If Texas controls the school book publishers, it is because they got involved some time ago. Now, if others want to, they must do the same. Originally Posted by Rudyard KWhen did Texas put in place its policy of buying books state wide? A more interesting question: was it done specifically to influence what was in them?
When did Texas put in place its policy of buying books state wide? A more interesting question: was it done specifically to influence what was in them? Originally Posted by discreetgentI don't know the answer to either question. Don't really care.