In the second installment of Accuracy in Media's Texas investigation, educators are seen on hidden camera explaining just how they use linguistic trojan horses in order to defy Gov. Greg Abbott's Critical Race Theory ban and continue teaching controversial topics and theories to students unbeknownst to parents.ย
โThey had to change the wording,โย Donna Hodge, advanced academic coordinator at Keller Independent School District, told AIM's investigators when describing how schools dealt with the CRT ban.
Now, according to Hodge, โwe talk about the specific things, not the big label.โ
In the summer of 2021,ย Abbott signedย House Bill 3979. The law prohibits the teaching that some individuals are โinherently racist, sexist, or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously.โ And though the bill is written as specifically as possible to address CRT's proliferation in schools, it has proven unsuccessful at keeping its principles out of the classroom.ย
Jodi Ferguson, Curriculum Director at Calallen ISD, told investigators that โwe probably don't say โ1619,'โ referencing the widely debunkedย New York Times Magazineย longform piece by controversial author Nikole Hannah-Jones.ย
โBut, are some of the concepts in there, in the way we're teaching it, are they in there? I would say yes,โ she said. โBut we just can't say โ1619 Project.'โย
โThat would be a terminology we would avoid,โ Ferguson said.ย
According to Kelly Glos, social studies curriculum coordinator at Eagle Mountain Saginaw ISD,ย โThe way the social studies TEKS [Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills] are written and you can look them up, they're online, you know, it's pretty ambiguous where you could make a case for just about anything.โ
Glos isn't the only one who has learned to work around the guidelines.ย
Evan Whitfield, director of science at Coppell ISD,ย similarly admitted thatย โwe kind of dance, tap dance, around calling it anything,โ to avoid getting calls from the Texas Education Agency.
โWe just do the right thing at the end of the day,โย Whitfield explained.ย
Brad Cloud, director of instructional technology at South San Antonio ISD, echoed that the standards areย โopen for interpretation,โ adding that โI mean as long as they're following our TEKS, you know, they're teaching the standards, then they're not going to get much flak from the building administrator.โ
โThe language explicitly saysโit doesn't say anything about, you know, diversity or inclusion, but it says creating a safe and belonging environment,โ Director for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion at Plano ISD Brian Lyons said on hidden camera. โWhen you start looking at inclusion, equity, those areโit's rooted in that. And so, we can infuseโwe can embed that into that. So, we're going to do it. It's just going to be under another requirement that the district has us do.โ
โBut there are ways in which, you know, we canโwe've been crafty enough to get ahead of it,โ he added.ย
Clearly, this ban isn't stopping CRT's principles from entering the classroom. Activist educators are simply adapting and working to covertly teach it.ย
It's evident that the current law isn't addressing the issue. The only route left to ensure that parents can secure non-activist-driven education is school choice.ย
With school choice, these public schools would be forced to shape up and be transparent with families in order to compete.ย
Several school choice bills have already been introduced in the Texas state legislature this session.ย
State Sen. Mayes Middleton (R-Galveston) introducedย Senate Bill 176, which would be one of the largest school choice wins in the state if passed.ย
Middleton's bill would โestablish the Texas Parental Empowerment Program to provide funding for approved education-related expenses of eligible children admitted into the program.โ
Under the bill, families of children who have opted out of their public school would receive a payment from the state for the average cost of a Texas student's education, which is roughly $10,000 a year, per theย Texas Tribune.
Accordingย to Middleton, โWhat my bill would do is it would empower every single parent in the state of Texas to choose which education works best for their children's unique educational needs.โ
This article originally appeared in Accuracy in Media. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions ofย American Liberty News. Republished with permission.
4 Comments
Those that are teaching Diversity, Inclusion, Equity (DIE) in any form are killing the meritocracy that was the foundation of our countries excellence. We out to be teach “E Pluribus Unum), Liberty, and in God We Trust”.
AG – the factย that some teachers voluntarily choose to teach crt/die just shows how deceitful and manipulative they are in trying to indoctrinate kids instead of teaching them.
A majority of Texans don’t want CRT taught at all, so hearing about all these ways these people are circumventing the Law is unacceptable. I’m going to assume this is being taught in history class only? It doesn’t seem appropriate for math, science, or english classes.
Fire the lot of them,post haste; and hire some teachers! We shouldn’t be paying for lying indoctrinators who believe it’s their right to circumvent the laws!