There’s a resolution on the agenda of tomorrow’s Texas Board of Education meeting concerning the “balanced treatment of religious groups in textbooks.”
That rather benign description on the board’s webpage doesn’t totally reflect what’s going to be debated.
As MSNBC puts it, the board “is taking up another explosive curriculum question: Are Texan youth being fed a sugar-coated version of Islam while Christianity is unfairly taken to task for its sins?”
Or, according to the Dallas Morning News, “the board will consider a resolution ... that would warn publishers not to push a pro-Islamic, anti-Christian viewpoint in world history textbooks.” The newspaper adds that:
“A preliminary draft of the resolution states that ‘diverse reviewers have repeatedly documented gross pro-Islamic, anti-Christian distortions in social studies texts’ across the U.S. and that past social studies textbooks in Texas also have been ‘tainted’ with pro-Islamic, anti-Christian views.”
Basically, its school system is so large that if Texas presses publishers to make changes in textbooks, the revisions will likely spread to other states as well. In March, the Texas board approved new social studies curriculum guidelines that “put a conservative stamp on history and economics textbooks,” as The New York Times reported.
The man who has drafted the resolution being considered this week, unsuccessful school board candidate Randy Rives of Odessa, tells MSNBC that “our documentation clearly shows that the bias is there. ... And we feel that it was not done on accident.”
The Texas Freedom Network, which calls itself “a mainstream voice to counter the religious right,” says “the resolution and its supporting materials are based on claims that are superficial and grossly misleading.” It has posted an analysis here.
Rives’ resolution is here.
Question: Has anyone seen what they would consider to be an anti-Christian or pro-Islamic bias in school textbooks?