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Florida rejects math textbooks for ‘prohibited topics’ like critical race theory

Top state Republican official claims textbook publishers are making ‘systematic attempt’ to ‘infiltrate’ classrooms

Alex Woodward
New York
Tuesday 19 April 2022 02:25 EDT
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Florida official claims math textbook publishers are trying to 'infiltrate' schools with CRT

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Florida’s Department of Education has rejected more than 50 math textbooks for the upcoming school year, claiming that instructional materials incorporated “critical race theory” and the “unsolicited addition” of social-emotional learning concepts.

The department said that 54 out of 132 of submitted textbooks, or roughly 41 per cent, were “impermissible” with state standards or contained “prohibited topics” such as critical race theory, a high-level academic framework that addresses systemic racism in institutions.

Twenty-eight math textbooks were “not included on the adopted list because they incorporate prohibited topics or unsolicited strategies, including [critical race theory],” while 14 books did not “properly align” to state standards and included “prohibited topics or unsolicited strategies,” according to Florida’s Education Department.

Most of the rejected texts (71 per cent) were for kindergarten through fifth grade levels.

The Independent has requested the titles of the textbooks and the reasons why the agency rejected them.

There is no evidence that critical race theory is taught in Florida grade schools, though the phrase has become a catch-all term – invoked by conservative activists aided by dozens of local and national groups, conservative think tanks, law firms and GOP officials – that encompasses teachings on the history of slavery, racism and civil rights movements, among other topics, with legislation broadly aimed at censoring classroom lessons.

Conservative officials argue that such concepts or teaching materials are not directly discussing the theory but are derived from it.

The Education Department also rejected books that it says contain Common Core concepts, national standardised academic targets in reading and math that Florida rejected in 2020. Those targets were replaced with Benchmarks for Excellent Student Thinking, or BEST, standards.

Joining a nationwide effort taking aim at “divisive lessons” in classrooms, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and Republican state legislators have sought to censor classroom discussion and materials, limiting teachings on race and racism as well as LGBT+ history, events and people.

In June, the Florida State Board of Education approved a rule to ban “critical race theory” from state schools, claiming that the theory “distorts historical events” and is “inconsistent” with the state board’s approved standards.

Last month, Governor Ron DeSantis signed the “Stop Wrongs Against Our Kids and Employees Act,” or “Stop WOKE Act,” into law, prohibiting classroom discussion that suggests someone is responsible for actions “committed in the past by other members of the same race, color, sex or national origin,” which critics argue could censor lessons on historic atrocities, from slavery to the Holocaust.

It also requires classroom materials – as well as professional development materials in the workplace – be “consistent with principles of individual freedom” and allows residents to sue schools and workplaces over perceived violations.

The governor and Florida legislators also approved a measure that requires school districts to involve parents on committees that make recommendations to school boards about the “ranking, eliminating or selecting” of instructional materials.

Republican officials have also increasingly targeted “social emotional learning” concepts, which seek to help students manage their emotions, develop positive relationships and make good decisions – from learning how to ask for help to how to identify whether someone is having a bad day.

“We don’t want things like math to have, you know, some of these other concepts introduced. It’s not been proven to be effective, and quite frankly, it takes our eye off the ball,” the governor said during a news conference on 18 April.

In a statement, he claimed that textbooks included “indoctrinating concepts like race essentialism, especially, bizarrely, for elementary school students.”

Florida’s Lt Governor Jeanette Nunez claimed without evidence that the state has seen a “systematic attempt by these publishers to infiltrate our children’s education by embedding topics” such as critical race theory.

Democratic state Rep Carlos Smith said the governor “is hysterically pulling math books” from the state.

“This isn’t just crazy right-wing pandering – next they’ll spend MILLIONS of tax dollars forcing schools to buy math books from GOP campaign donors,” he said.

“I get it. The goal of math is to solve problems which the Republican Party of Florida doesn’t like to do,” said Democratic state Rep Anna Eskamani.

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