By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close

Forums - General Discussion - Revisionaries - How a group of Texas conservatives is rewriting textbooks

Don McLeroy is a balding, paunchy man with a thick broom-handle mustache who lives in a rambling two-story brick home in a suburb near Bryan, Texas. When he greeted me at the door one evening last October, he was clutching a thin paperback with the skeleton of a seahorse on its cover, a primer on natural selection penned by famed evolutionary biologist Ernst Mayr. We sat down at his dining table, which was piled high with three-ring binders, and his wife, Nancy, brought us ice water in cut-crystal glasses with matching coasters. Then McLeroy cracked the book open. The margins were littered with stars, exclamation points, and hundreds of yellow Post-its that were brimming with notes scrawled in a microscopic hand. With childlike glee, McLeroy flipped through the pages and explained what he saw as the gaping holes in Darwin’s theory. “I don’t care what the educational political lobby and their allies on the left say,” he declared at one point. “Evolution is hooey.” This bled into a rant about American history. “The secular humanists may argue that we are a secular nation,” McLeroy said, jabbing his finger in the air for emphasis. “But we are a Christian nation founded on Christian principles. The way I evaluate history textbooks is first I see how they cover Christianity and Israel. Then I see how they treat Ronald Reagan—he needs to get credit for saving the world from communism and for the good economy over the last twenty years because he lowered taxes.”

Views like these are relatively common in East Texas, a region that prides itself on being the buckle of the Bible Belt. But McLeroy is no ordinary citizen. The jovial creationist sits on the Texas State Board of Education, where he is one of the leaders of an activist bloc that holds enormous sway over the body’s decisions. As the state goes through the once-in-a-decade process of rewriting the standards for its textbooks, the faction is using its clout to infuse them with ultraconservative ideals. Among other things, they aim to rehabilitate Joseph McCarthy, bring global-warming denial into science class, and downplay the contributions of the civil rights movement.

Battles over textbooks are nothing new, especially in Texas, where bitter skirmishes regularly erupt over everything from sex education to phonics and new math. But never before has the board’s right wing wielded so much power over the writing of the state’s standards. And when it comes to textbooks, what happens in Texas rarely stays in Texas. The reasons for this are economic: Texas is the nation’s second-largest textbook market and one of the few biggies where the state picks what books schools can buy rather than leaving it up to the whims of local districts, which means publishers that get their books approved can count on millions of dollars in sales. As a result, the Lone Star State has outsized influence over the reading material used in classrooms nationwide, since publishers craft their standard textbooks based on the specs of the biggest buyers. As one senior industry executive told me, “Publishers will do whatever it takes to get on the Texas list.”

Until recently, Texas’s influence was balanced to some degree by the more-liberal pull of California, the nation’s largest textbook market. But its economy is in such shambles that California has put off buying new books until at least 2014. This means that McLeroy and his ultraconservative crew have unparalleled power to shape the textbooks that children around the country read for years to come...

 

 



Around the Network

http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2010/1001.blake.html

is the link and the rest of the article..



Hmm.. the conservative state has the ability to shape the US classroom, while the liberal state ran out of power, and thus has no way to counterbalance Texas.

Yet another example why taking care of people who won't take care of themselves impacts everyone in a much larger scale.

I digress.

And to your point, if this nutcase succeeds, he won't rewrite history, he just will delay the truth for a while. "We are here because some god put us here" has been our history since the beginning of time.



rehabilitate Joe McCarthy? Seriously?

 

If there's one blot on American history that needs to be remembered as a horrible, horrible idea so that we never ever do that again, it's Joe McCarthy.



Monster Hunter: pissing me off since 2010.

I'm conservative too so I don't mind seeing this. I'm sick of all this talk of keeping religion out of schools but its okay to teach theories (big bang theory) as if they are fact.



Around the Network
Chairman-Mao said:
I'm conservative too so I don't mind seeing this. I'm sick of all this talk of keeping religion out of schools but its okay to teach theories (big bang theory) as if they are fact.

While we are at it why don't we make the schools teach the thousands of religions that there are in the world? Maybe that would actually make people more secular



 

Kirameo said:
Chairman-Mao said:
I'm conservative too so I don't mind seeing this. I'm sick of all this talk of keeping religion out of schools but its okay to teach theories (big bang theory) as if they are fact.

While we are at it why don't we make the schools teach the thousands of religions that there are in the world? Maybe that would actually make people more secular

That would take way too long. I don't have a problem with no religion in school; just don't tell the kids the big bang THEORY is FACT or anything like that. 



Chairman-Mao said:
Kirameo said:
Chairman-Mao said:
I'm conservative too so I don't mind seeing this. I'm sick of all this talk of keeping religion out of schools but its okay to teach theories (big bang theory) as if they are fact.

While we are at it why don't we make the schools teach the thousands of religions that there are in the world? Maybe that would actually make people more secular

That would take way too long. I don't have a problem with no religion in school; just don't tell the kids the big bang THEORY is FACT or anything like that. 

I see. I can agree with that!



 

Chairman-Mao said:
Kirameo said:
Chairman-Mao said:
I'm conservative too so I don't mind seeing this. I'm sick of all this talk of keeping religion out of schools but its okay to teach theories (big bang theory) as if they are fact.

While we are at it why don't we make the schools teach the thousands of religions that there are in the world? Maybe that would actually make people more secular

That would take way too long. I don't have a problem with no religion in school; just don't tell the kids the big bang THEORY is FACT or anything like that. 

I would be fine with teaching Religion THEORY as well, but for some reason, everyone who is for religion talks about it like it's FACT.

It's called "The Big Bang Theory" for a reason. You mind changing your religion to "The Theory of God"?



Errr... aren't theories supported by physical evidence and facts, while religion and its gods concern itself with super natural things?

I mean it's

Naturalistic science

vs

Supernatura