State Board of Education fields concerns about Christian bias in proposed K-12 curriculum

The proposal comes as part of a larger effort by officials in Texas and across the country to inject Christianity into public life.

State Board of Education fields concerns about Christian bias in proposed K-12 curriculum

Members of the public told the Texas State Board of Education on Thursday they worried a proposed elementary school curriculum infused with religious references is too complicated, biased toward Christianity and below the standards of a classical education.

The public hearing occurred a month after the Texas Education Agency unveiled the curriculum and offered the public an opportunity to share their thoughts with the body that will decide whether to approve the materials.

An initial review by The Texas Tribune of the proposed textbooks showed that religious references are featured prominently, with texts sourced from the Bible being the most heavily used.

The curriculum promotes, for example, lessons on Leonardo Da Vinci’s “The Last Supper” alongside the Gospel of Matthew, which centers on Jesus’ crucifixion and its atonement for human sin. References also include the parable of the good Samaritan in a social studies unit and the teaching of “do unto others as you would have them do unto you” in a kindergarten unit about fairy tales and folktales.

TEA Commissioner Mike Morath said last month the curriculum as a whole — which consists of lesson plans for K-12 students and spans other subjects that don’t include religious references like math and science — is based on extensive cognitive science research and will help improve students’ reading and math scores.

The board will decide whether to approve the curriculum in November. If it does, the decision to adopt the curriculum would rest with school districts. Those that use it will receive an incentive of up to $60 per student.

The extra money would be particularly attractive at a time when public schools have not received increased funding from the Legislature in half a decade. Schools are also grappling with expiring pandemic relief money, inflation and multimillion-dollar budget deficits.

The proposed curriculum has drawn praise from top Republican officials while raising eyebrows among some school district leaders, parents and education advocates. Much of the same was true Thursday, when people expressed discontent with the materials.

Some people who spoke before SBOE members said that after reviewing some of the curriculum’s materials they found themselves questioning whether children would understand something as complicated as the Parable of the Prodigal Son, a story about sinning and repenting.

Robert Norris, the founder of Grandparents for Public Schools, told board members that he is concerned that the materials focus too heavily on Christianity and not other religions.

“This could easily lead students to believe that this religion … is the best and most important one in the world,” Norris said. “That kind of messaging does not belong in our public schools.”

Some people said they don’t see the curriculum as classical education. Chris Byrd, an attorney, said he believed Morath was making curriculum decisions based on what he felt “needs to be the truth.”

Lynn Davenport, whose three children attended school in Richardson ISD, accused the TEA commissioner of “tickling the ears of the religious right.”

But others voiced their support for the curriculum. Jonathan Covey, the director of policy for Texas Values — a nonprofit organization that describes itself as being dedicated to faith, family, and freedom — encouraged board members to vet the materials to ensure they do not promote any particular viewpoint. He said he believes the curriculum is part of an academic and rigorous-based approach to education.

“We think it's important having the Bible and Bible characters in the curriculum as part of a well-rounded understanding of America's founding," Covey said.

Many of the questions posed by board members sought clarification from speakers on certain talking points or materials they provided. Aicha Davis, a Dallas area Democrat who represents the SBOE’s District 13, said she has yet to see any research to back the assertion that the curriculum will improve student outcomes.

“It does seem like it’s experimental,” she said.

The proposal comes as part of a larger effort by officials in Texas and across the country to infuse conservative Christianity into public life, perhaps most notably through public schools, which they say are indoctrinating children through their teachings about race, sex and gender.

Religion has also played a role in the push for school vouchers in Texas, which would allow families to use taxpayer dollars to pay for private and religious schools. Throughout the nation’s largest voucher programs, the vast majority of funding is directed toward religious schools, according to a Washington Post examination.

The Texas Legislature passed a measure last year to allow schools to use unlicensed chaplains in mental health roles. Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who presides over the Texas Senate, recently pledged that the Legislature would pass a proposal requiring public schools to display the Ten Commandments in classrooms.

Louisiana became the first state to pass such legislation earlier this month, resulting in a legal challenge. Oklahoma’s state superintendent Thursday directed public schools to teach the Bible.

Just in: Former U.S. Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyoming; U.S. Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pennsylvania; and Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt will take the stage at The Texas Tribune Festival, Sept. 5–7 in downtown Austin. Buy tickets today!

OTHER NEWS

32 minutes ago

Camping insurance is a good idea, and you may already have it

32 minutes ago

Craft breweries call for help amid closures

32 minutes ago

Seven-hour water supply disruption in these parts of Cape Town

32 minutes ago

Sheffield Wednesday can forget Ugbo by signing lethal striker

32 minutes ago

Pitso Mosimane and Robert Marawa bury the hatchet

32 minutes ago

'Unforgettable moment' as Michael J Fox makes surprise Coldplay Glastonbury appearance

32 minutes ago

German weapons exports on course to hit new record

32 minutes ago

‘He’s gone’ – Mercedes’ blunt prediction with ’12kph’ deficit revealed

32 minutes ago

FDNY boss Laura Kavanagh rips firefighters in texts to NY AG Letitia James: ‘I can’t fix them’

34 minutes ago

BLOG: Trump rally in Chesapeake, first appearance after initial debate

35 minutes ago

Saudi Arabia urges citizens to leave Lebanon immediately

35 minutes ago

Devastated South Africa reflect on missed opportunity

35 minutes ago

Goal-shy Danes head home leaving Hjulmand with questions to answer

35 minutes ago

Podcast Picks: Cultivating a car-sharing community; meet rising singer-songwriter Shazza

35 minutes ago

Tommie Gorman was ‘unique force’ with ‘hope for better future’, funeral hears

35 minutes ago

Finding graphene on the Moon could challenge current theories

35 minutes ago

Voters in long-time Liberal B.C. riding react to Tories' byelection win in Toronto

35 minutes ago

'The Bear' Season 3 Episode Release Schedule: Can You Binge Them All at Once?

40 minutes ago

Glastonbury crowd go wild as Michael J. Fox makes surprise stage appearance with Coldplay amid Parkinson's battle

40 minutes ago

Novak Djokovic 'won't hold back' as he bids to win eighth Wimbledon crown

40 minutes ago

What does the Toronto–St. Paul's result mean for Liberal MPs in B.C.?

40 minutes ago

‘Everybody feels amazing’: Georgia seek history against formidable Spain

40 minutes ago

Watch: VAR frenzy plus Havertz, Musiala goals send Germany to Euro quarterfinals

42 minutes ago

Leeds reject £35million Brentford bid for Archie Gray

42 minutes ago

Gabby Logan reveals she threatened to leave her husband when menopause hit

42 minutes ago

Doctor shares red flags when it comes to injectables

42 minutes ago

Gutsy Cowboys ambush Panthers in Origin-affected clash

42 minutes ago

Gordon Brown insists Keir Starmer's Labour government 'will be even better than 1997'

42 minutes ago

Man overwhelmed with emotion after hearing for the first time

42 minutes ago

S-400 deal delays: Russia's anti-aircraft sale to India under scrutiny

42 minutes ago

German track star Alicia Schmidt, dubbed 'the world's sexiest athlete', goes public with her photographer boyfriend as they share a kiss after her race

44 minutes ago

Rishi Sunak says he is proud of disastrous election campaign - and claims he will win

47 minutes ago

Video: Europe's weather meltdown: Cars are washed down the road as huge floods hit Italy and Switzerland as torrential downpours batter the continent after extreme 42C heatwave

47 minutes ago

Video: More than 15,000 Malaga residents join anti-tourism demo amid claims they are 'strangers in their own city' after being 'overrun' by foreign visitors

48 minutes ago

Bus driver in Genting Highlands crash arrested, travel agency may be suspended

48 minutes ago

Concert review: K-pop boy band NCT Dream play up their sexy and cute sides

48 minutes ago

My Dubai Rent: Doctor enjoys Dh90,000 Greens apartment with big courtyard for the kids

48 minutes ago

Mary Earps appears to take swipe at Sir Jim Ratcliffe's project in Man Utd exit statement

48 minutes ago

Darragh O’Brien attacks Sinn Féin’s ‘half-baked’ housing policy

48 minutes ago

Orania may serve as learning opportunity