Dems Push for “Educational Gag Order” Over Palestine Lessons in California

For years California Democrats have defended their landmark activity to put ethnic studies classes in high schools across the state In the face of national right-wing media attacks and local critics the state s governing supermajority passed a law in making ethnic studies a graduation requirement which supports school boards to develop their own curricula for the courses But one particular area of survey threatens to unravel the Democratic consensus Palestine In the past year state lawmakers have teamed up with area groups and the lobbying coalition Jewish Residents Affairs Committee of California or JPAC in a push to regulate the ethnic studies undertaking They re aiming to pass a law that curbs local school board control over ethnic studies curricula in response to classwork focusing on the history of Israel and Palestine that they say has promoted unprecedented bigotry against Jewish students The bill s backers are framing the effort as a way to ensure that ethnic studies will combat all forms of hate as one of the bill s authors Assemblymember Dawn Addis wrote in a March op-ed At a time when the federal leadership is trying to rewrite American history by banning diversity initiatives California must persist in elevating the lived experiences of everyone in this country wrote Addis whose office did not respond to inquiries from The Intercept But as right-wing groups oppose the bill and ethnic studies more broadly a coalition of critics warn that the new controls could lead to the same type of state censorship in schools that has been put into law in conservative states like Texas and Florida This language goes far beyond supporting culturally-responsive coaching in a general sense and echoes educational gag order act we ve seen in other states nationwide noted PEN America spokesperson Suzanne Trimel in a declaration This could upshot in state functionaries forcing a school or educator to pull certain materials they believe aren t fair or don t provide enough variety of perspective concepts that are intricate to define Assembly Bill introduced in February would create new state standards for the ethnic studies classes that California schools must offer by the beginning of this coming school year The discipline has its roots in California s college apprentice strikes of the s and was codified into state training law after years of deliberation in In that legislative process teachers and scholars advocating for a more explicitly anti-imperialist approach in line with its radical origins lost out Lessons on Palestine were excised from the law before it passed and the left wing of the ethnic studies movement was sidelined from the process But still the law required schools to begin offering an ethnic studies subject by the fall of and schools teaching the class had the choice to develop curricula on their own working with consultants and local communities or drawing upon guidance from the state Under the new law standards will be written by a panel of academic experts in a specific subset of disciplines African American studies Latinx Chicanx studies Asian American Pacific Islander studies and Native American studies with additional input from representatives of communities preponderance frequently impacted by hate crimes according to state law enforcement The bill s author has also promised more traditional scholars will be chosen by the governor The state s current model curriculum on human rights and genocide within the history and social science category briefly characterizes the Nakba as an event in which Palestinians left Palestine The California Department of Tuition would also receive all materials approved by local districts by and post their curricula online with an eye for avoiding abstract ideological theories and focusing on the domestic experience On a call in March the bill s backers gathered on a webinar to discuss the championship plan State Sen Josh Becker a Silicon Valley Democrat co-authoring the bill announced the bill doesn t ban anything He explained the audience that his th-grade son received a presentation in an ethnic studies class that had a puppeteer s hand holding strings and revealed Israel is a country created on Palestinian land The United Nations says this is illegal We all knew the U N created Israel and there was no Palestine before that and Gaza was controlled by Egypt Becker mentioned in remarks that were cut from the final video posted on Youtube And we all know the history this was not that Becker s office did not respond to requests for comment but he later posted on social media on the comments I don t mean and haven t meant to say or imply anything minimizing the Palestinian connection to the land David Bocarsly executive director of JPAC explained to hundreds of listeners why he saw a new state law as a necessary step District-by-district outreach became a match of whack-a-mole and we knew that we needed a statewide key he revealed Part of PEN America s criticism is that A B s compliance provisions take a one-size-fits all approach to guidance that could amount to educational intimidation Related As Students Return to School a Proposed Law Targets Campus Protests But a large segment of California s Democratic establishment is lining up behind this bill Thirty-one state Democrats including all but one member of the California Legislative Jewish Caucus have already signed on as co-authors of the bill The state superintendent of population instruction Tony Thurmond who plans to run for governor in has endorsed an earlier version of the bill that was held by the author in an August committee hearing And his office of late investigated a San Jose ethnic studies mentor finding that they violated Jewish students rights by failing to intervene with another perspective during a apprentice project on genocide with a slide titled Genocide of Palestinians The scrutiny notes no students complained and the district explained The Intercept it will be responding to the state s findings Two candidates running to replace Thurmond in have also indicated sponsorship for JPAC s efforts on ethnic studies One of them Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi chairs the committee where the bill will face its first hearing His office did not respond to questions from The Intercept The current movement to clamp down on teaching Palestine in ethnic studies curriculum coalesced around a story out of Orange County The Santa Ana Unified School District adjacent to one of the nation s largest Arab American communities approved two world history ethnic studies courses in April that briefly taught about Israel and Palestine including content about the Nakba and settlements After pro-Israel organizations objected the district s superintendent vowed not to remove any group s narrative in May But in September of that year an Anti-Defamation League-backed coalition sued on procedural grounds During the messy litigation lawyers pressed district staff and board members for their thoughts on Zionism and Hamas and in August they uncovered text messages indicating senior district officers sought to avoid scrutiny by passing courses on a Jewish holiday Two congressional Republicans subsequently called for the district to undergo a federal review District leaders meanwhile responded by shelving the contested courses as part of a February settlement inviting the litigants to provide input to the syllabus process while denying alleges of discrimination The agreement also promises not to include several references to the oppression of Palestinians from a book about ethnic cleansing by a British sociologist A minimal days after the Santa Ana settlement A B was introduced in the California legislature and JPAC published five examples of what it called examples of antisemitism and harmful rhetoric in ethnic studies classrooms But JPAC didn t provide any sources for their contends and in various situations it s unclear exactly to which materials they are referring Bocarsly the executive director of JPAC did not respond to requests for comment or more information on the list JPAC included the Fort Bragg Unified School District on the list for its lesson with a map of Palestinian dispossession and land loss Superintendent Joseph Aldridge revealed that he first learned of JPAC s allegation from The Intercept and is now removing the lesson from the unit which has not yet been taught and also includes a lesson on Middle Eastern Jewish communities Aldridge announced that he wished that JPAC had gotten in touch to discuss the issue before putting the district on the list I was a little disappointed to see our district s name out there without at least specific chance to have a conversation about it he noted A spokesperson for another district on the JPAC list San Francisco Unified responded we are looking into this when contacted by The Intercept Following up its spokesperson later noted that the district was in alignment with state law Maria Su the district s superintendent did not respond to inquiries Janet Schulze the superintendent of Pittsburg Unified School District reported The Intercept she was very surprised and puzzled to see JPAC s claim that the district used a biased definition of the Boycott Divestment and Sanctions movement in its class and announced that they had been working with the curriculum consulting firm Locality Responsive Schooling for years We have not received any negative feedback or reports of anti-semitism from our region regarding this program or any of the other courses we have that meet the Ethnic Studies requirement she commented in a message A representative from the national pro-Israel group StandWithUS a member of JPAC s coalition did however criticize the contract with Population Responsive Instruction in a school board meeting The push to clamp down on ethnic studies curricula picked up political momentum in the wake of the October attacks in Israel and the subsequent anti-war movement in the U S but one of the bill s authors has made it clear that the fight stretches back to the late s Los Angeles Assemblymember Rick Chavez Zbur has called opponents to A B advocates who have been peddling radical curricula to school districts They have a big presence in the Cal State system they re organized there are liberated ethnic studies adherents within the teachers unions he warned listeners on the JPAC webinar in March His office declined an interview request and did not respond to questions from The Intercept After losing out in the legislative wrangling over the original ethnic studies bill the spurned left wing of the expert body convened by the state Department of Teaching created a consulting firm in called the Liberated Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum Consortium with the goal of helping school districts interested in the more radical vision of the discipline construct their courses The group has been in the crosshairs since while similar firms and coalitions have popped up nationwide A federal judge in November threw out a lawsuit alleging that LESMCC covertly spreads antisemitism and bias throughout Los Angeles and California schools writing in his decision It would be of great concern for the educational project and for academic freedom if every offended party could sue every time they did not like a curriculum or the way it was taught The scenario is being appealed None of the districts cited by JPAC have contracts with the group though CRE which works with the Pittsburg district was co-founded by Allyson Tintiangco-Cubales an Asian American studies professor at San Francisco State University who is on the LESMCC leadership group Theresa Monta o an LESMCC founder and California State University Northridge professor of Chicano a studies mentioned that lawmakers seem to want to label all the material they dislike as liberated ethnic studies She declared that school districts and teachers choose to work with her group s professor training or classroom materials of their own volition What they choose to teach is their sentiment and it s the sentiment of a lot of their students Monta o announced But she noted that her group is just a small part of a larger movement in schooling and several districts arrive at curricula that particular consider controversial on their own When you re engaged in a movement it s organic it s dynamic it s ever changing it s created from the grassroots up she declared Nobody controls that movement not liberated ethnic studies not region responsive coaching not any consulting group around ethnic studies Opposition to CRE s work in the Pajaro Valley Unified School District which covers a majority Latino farm area south of Santa Cruz sparked a year-and-a-half long fight over whether to renew the group s contract That came to a close just last week when the board voted to renew the CRE contract on the grounds that they uncovered no antisemitism in the actual curriculum But the ADL California and StandWithUs have continued to push back demanding school board members apologize for statements that they say drew on antisemitic tropes which drew an official warning from the superintendent of Santa Cruz County Schools Other small diverse California communities are speaking out against the new bill Cudahy a percent Hispanic city of just in Los Angeles County unanimously passed an April resolution saying the bill undermines local control This is clearly a way to manipulate the narrative of the genocide in Palestine If we read the language of the text of the bill it s pretty evident disclosed Councilmember Daisy Lomeli at the meeting Though various are reevaluating their courses hundreds of California districts are moving forward with the ethnic studies effort in the face of vital political pressure and without the over million in funding the state estimated was necessary for evolving their classes The bill is set to be heard on April in the Assembly Guidance Committee in what is expected to be a lively hearing unless lawmakers vote to extend the deadline in advance Those pushing to inject harmful content into our classrooms are loud reads one message from JPAC to supporters We need to be louder The post Dems Push for Educational Gag Order Over Palestine Lessons in California appeared first on The Intercept