FLORIDA
Florida and DeSantis dig in as criticism of Black
history curriculum mounts
The teaching standards have again thrust Florida and
DeSantis into America’s politically polarized fight over how and what to teach
children.
By ANDREW
ATTERBURY
07/24/2023
04:48 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/07/24/florida-desantis-black-history-education-00107859
TALLAHASSEE,
Fla. — Florida officials are digging in and defending the state’s new standards
for teaching Black history amid continued widespread criticism on Monday,
including threats of possible legal action from a group of civil and religious
leaders.
Black
leaders and Democrats — and some Republicans — are using the issue to hammer
Gov. Ron DeSantis and his White House ambitions, specifically targeting the new
standards that require middle schoolers to be instructed that “slaves developed
skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.”
The
DeSantis administration, meanwhile, is attempting to characterize criticisms of
the history standards as dishonest and a political stunt perpetrated by
Democrats like Vice President Kamala Harris to tarnish Florida.
The
teaching standards have again thrust Florida and DeSantis into America’s
politically polarized fight over how and what to teach children. Republicans
have praised DeSantis and state education officials for supporting
controversial education measures, including pushing Florida’s Parental Rights
in Education law, known by opponents as “Don’t Say Gay,” restricting lessons on
race and banning colleges and universities from spending on many diversity,
equity and inclusion programs. Democrats and civil rights groups, however, have
demonized the governor and Florida over such bills and have threatened boycotts
of the state.
“He’s not
going to rewrite and redefine Black history, not while we’re still alive,” Rev.
R.B. Holmes Jr., pastor of Bethel Missionary Baptist Church in Tallahassee,
told reporters Monday at an event condemning the teaching standards.
The new
teaching standards, approved unanimously last week by Florida’s Board of
Education, are the latest attempt by state leaders to regulate how students
learn about race in public schools. They were crafted by a Florida Department
of Education workgroup to match the so-called Stop WOKE Act, something
specifically requested by DeSantis in 2022 to target lessons over issues like
“white privilege” by creating new protections for students and workers,
including that a person should not be instructed to “feel guilt, anguish, or
any other form of psychological distress” due to their race, color, sex or
national origin.
Touted by
education officials for teaching the “good, the bad and the ugly” about
American history and slavery, the standards were met with immediate criticism
from Florida’s largest teachers union and other groups, attention that quickly
gained steam nationally.
Much of the
scrutiny surrounds a particular standard requiring middle school students to
learn “how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied
for their personal benefit.” But there are also objections to lessons that classify
acts of violence perpetrated “against and by” African Americans, like the Ocoee
Massacre of 1920, when a white crowd burned Black homes and churches to the
ground and killed Black residents in a small Florida town enraged by a Black
man attempting to vote.
In the face
of this mounting criticism, including Holmes and a coalition of Black faith
leaders on Monday signaling intentions to rally and possibly pursue legal
action, the DeSantis administration is showing no signs of changing the
controversial new standards, even as the Republican governor defended the
standards Friday during a stop in Utah and claimed that he “wasn’t involved in
it.”
“These were
scholars who put that together, it was not anything that was done politically,”
DeSantis said.
To that
end, the DeSantis administration has leaned on statements from two Black
members of the history workgroup to defend the standards and swat away
naysayers. The joint statement insisted that “any attempt to reduce slaves to
just victims of oppression fails to recognize their strength, courage and
resiliency during a difficult time in American history.”
The Florida
Department of Education, as one defense, listed 16 examples of historic figures
they say developed “highly specialized trades” that benefitted them after
slavery, although several critics noted some people listed as examples were
never enslaved. “It is the case that Africans proved resourceful, resilient and
adaptive, and were able to develop skills and aptitudes which served to their
benefit both while enslaved and after enslavement,” workgroup member William B.
Allen, emeritus dean and former Professor of Political Philosophy in the
Department of Political Science at Michigan State University, said in clips a
DeSantis spokesperson posted on social media.
But those
answers and explanations are doing little to quell opponents, who claim the
standards are Florida “whitewashing” history lessons. Some, such as civil
rights attorney Benjamin Crump, fear that other states will be emboldened by
Florida’s standards and enact similar policies. Speaking to reporters Monday,
Crump, who came short of pledging to sue the DeSantis administration, claimed
that the state’s “revisionist history” will cause “psychological trauma” for
Black students.
“If we
don’t bash this racist curriculum in the head like a snake, then I worry that
it will manifest all across America,” Crump told reporters Monday.
The
conflict over Florida’s history standards are similar to what unfolded when
state Education Department officials earlier this year rejected the College
Board’s African American studies AP program for initially including coursework
on queer theory and other aspects it deemed objectionable, such as critical
race theory.
In this
case, too, the DeSantis administration was scorned by Black leaders, and Crump
threatened to sue if students were blocked from taking the course.
The course,
however, is still not being offered in Florida. But, in one key difference
between the two issues, Florida and DeSantis are now taking heat from other
Republicans. It comes at a difficult time for DeSantis’ campaign, which has
struggled to gain traction amid frequent criticism from former President Donald
Trump.
Two of
DeSantis’ GOP presidential primary opponents, former Texas Rep. Will Hurd, who
is Black, and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who both publicly
lambasted the new standards. Christie also targeted how the governor seemed to
distance himself from the standards in Utah, claiming those “are not the words
of leadership.”
“Governor
DeSantis started this fire with the bill that he signed and now he doesn’t want
to take responsibility for whatever is done in the aftermath of it, and from
listening and watching his comments he’s obviously uncomfortable,” Christie
said Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”
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