Mike Morath – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Fri, 27 Mar 2026 19:23:56 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Mike Morath – 社区黑料 32 32 Florida Educator Tapped to Lead Fort Worth Schools Under Texas Takeover /article/florida-educator-tapped-to-lead-fort-worth-schools-under-texas-takeover/ Mon, 30 Mar 2026 16:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1030479 This article was originally published in

A Floridian who briefly led one of the nation鈥檚 largest school districts will captain Fort Worth ISD while it is under state control.

Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath appointed longtime Florida educator Peter B. Licata as FWISD鈥檚 new leader. Licata, who served as Broward County Public Schools superintendent for less than a year, is now charged with driving rapid academic gains for FWISD鈥檚 nearly 68,000 students.

He is Fort Worth鈥檚 fourth superintendent in as many years and comes to a district facing similar challenges he faced in Florida.

Alongside the new superintendent, Morath named nine managers who essentially replaced the district鈥檚 locally elected trustees. The managers assume governing authority over the district鈥檚 nearly $1 billion budget, buildings and what children learn.

Licata served as superintendent of the 236,263-student Broward County Public Schools for 10 months starting in 2023. He resigned and stepped away from day-to-day leadership over health concerns.

Licata spent nearly three decades working in Florida schools, primarily in Palm Beach County, where he rose from classroom teacher and coach to principal and district leader.

After taking the Broward job, he described his approach to equal opportunity as ensuring students receive additional support without lowering academic expectations.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 raise the floor by lowering the ceiling,鈥 he said in .

Broward students saw modest increases in proficiency rates during Licata鈥檚 tenure during the 2023-24 school year. His superintendency occurred alongside  that measures progress at the beginning, middle and end of the year.

Palm Beach saw its proficiency rates stay relatively flat between 2015 and 2023 鈥 the time he was in central administration, according to data from the Florida Department of Education.

He served as that district鈥檚 regional superintendent overseeing dozens of schools and was part of the leadership focused on improving academic outcomes across a large, diverse student population. Palm Beach County Schools serves roughly 185,000 students.

Hispanic students make up 38.5% of Palm Beach鈥檚 enrollment, while Black students make up 28.1% and white students 27%.

Broward County鈥檚 enrollment was nearly 40% Latino, 38% Black and 15% white.

Nearly two-thirds of Fort Worth ISD students are Latino, with Black students at 18.6% and white students at 11.3%.

English language learners comprise 18.2% of the Palm Beach district and 14% in Broward. In Fort Worth, they account for 42% of students.

Nearly 4 in 5 FWISD students are from low-income families. Just over half of Broward students are low income, while Palm Beach has 66%.

Licata emphasized student achievement in public statements throughout his career, often pointing to measurable goals 鈥 such as improving district academic accountability ratings and expanding access to advanced coursework.

Fort Worth ISD has been on a downward academic trajectory since 2016, when 57% of students were proficient across all subjects 鈥 and within striking distance of the state鈥檚 rate. In 2025, 34% of students were proficient across all subjects, a 4 percentage-point gain from the previous year.

Licata holds a bachelor鈥檚 degree from the University of Miami, a master鈥檚 degree from Barry University and a doctorate in global leadership from Lynn University.

His tenure in Broward County was short and unfolded in a district already dealing with instability.

The Broward School Board hired him in summer 2023 after a national search, looking for steadier leadership in a district that had cycled through superintendents and public conflict in the years before his arrival.

Board members approved a three-year contract with a $350,000 base salary and up to $20,000 in performance bonuses tied to academics and progress on the school system鈥檚 long-delayed bond program.

His contract negotiations drew public debate. Broward board members rejected Licata鈥檚 request for a higher bar to remove him without cause, kept the termination threshold at a simple majority and required him to move from Palm Beach County into Broward.

Licata took over the nation鈥檚 sixth-largest school district promising to help Broward regain an A rating from the state and bring steadier leadership to the system.

Less than a year later, in April 2024, he announced his retirement, citing health reasons. He said he reached the decision after discussions with his doctors, his wife and his four adult children.

After Licata announced his plans, the Broward trustees voted the same day to replace him immediately with a deputy superintendent. The speed of that transition drew scrutiny in South Florida as some felt the move was staged and others criticized the lack of transparency, .

Trustees ultimately rejected a consulting arrangement with Licata and reduced his salary for his final weeks before his employment ended July 1, 2024.

His exit came as Broward was dealing with possible campus closures tied to long-term enrollment declines, charter school funding disputes and broader questions about district governance and finances, .

His appointment in Fort Worth comes at a similar moment of transition.

Morath ordered the takeover of Fort Worth ISD in October after one campus received five consecutive failing academic ratings under the state鈥檚 accountability system.

As superintendent, Licata will lead the district under state oversight, working alongside the managers and conservator appointed by the commissioner.

That role carries significant authority 鈥 and pressure.

The new superintendent is tasked with improving academic outcomes across Fort Worth schools, where reading and math performance have lagged behind state averages for years.

Licata steps into a district where roughly one-third of students read on grade level and slightly more than a quarter meet expectations in math, according to recent state testing data.

Fort Worth ISD faces much uncertainty as parents, teachers and community leaders raise concerns over potential employee turnover, changes to instruction and the loss of local control as the state assumes authority over the district.

At the same time, some education and business leaders say the state intervention could bring needed urgency and focus to improving student outcomes.

Licata has not previously worked in Texas schools.

Jacob Sanchez is education editor for the Fort Worth Report. Contact him at jacob.sanchez@fortworthreport.org or .

Matthew Sgroi is an education reporter for the Fort Worth Report. Contact him at matthew.sgroi@fortworthreport.org or .

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Texas Education Agency Taking Over Lake Worth, Connally and Beaumont School Districts /article/texas-education-agency-taking-over-lake-worth-connally-and-beaumont-school-districts/ Mon, 15 Dec 2025 13:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1026005 This article was originally published in

The Texas Education Agency is replacing the elected school boards of the Beaumont, Connally and Lake Worth school districts, Education Commissioner Mike Morath announced Thursday. 

State law allows Morath to either close a campus or appoint new leadership if at least one school in the district receives five consecutive failing grades in Texas鈥 academic accountability system. Each of the districts met that threshold. 

Pending appeals, the commissioner plans to replace each district鈥檚 school board with a state-selected board of managers. Morath will also appoint a conservator with governing authority over current district and campus leaders during the transition, which typically takes several months to complete. 


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The education agency will solicit applications from local community members interested in joining each district鈥檚 board of managers. Morath will also appoint superintendents to lead the districts. 

The takeovers add to the growing list of districts subject to state interventions, which also includes two of Texas’ largest: Fort Worth and Houston. The Fort Worth school board has said it plans to appeal the commissioner鈥檚 decision, which was in October. 

The education agency said in August that five school districts were at of intervention after enduring five consecutive years of unsatisfactory ratings. Since then, it has announced plans to take over four of them: Fort Worth, Lake Worth, Connally and Beaumont. Morath has not said whether he plans to intervene in the fifth district, Wichita Falls. 

Each of the schools that triggered takeovers in the Beaumont, Connally and Lake Worth districts educates a majority Black and Hispanic student population, and the overwhelming majority of their children come from low-income families.

Lake Worth鈥檚 Marilyn Miller Language Academy triggered the intervention in that district. In letters informing the districts about the takeovers, Morath noted that during the latest round of accountability ratings, all but one of Lake Worth鈥檚 six campuses earned failing grades. Meanwhile, five campuses have received unacceptable ratings for more than a year, while only 22% of students are meeting grade level across all subjects. 

Lake Worth school district leaders were acutely aware of the challenges facing the school district leading up to the takeover, said Superintendent Mark Ramirez, who was hired this year. Ramirez said the district has focused on addressing the challenges facing each campus, which should serve as a foundation for the incoming board of managers to build upon. 

鈥淥ur preparation ensures zero instructional loss for our children,” Ramirez said. 

The Connally district had two campuses that met the state鈥檚 takeover threshold: Connally Junior High and Connally Elementary. Since the 2022-23 school year, the number of campuses with academically unacceptable scores in the district has doubled, Morath noted. Only 24% of students in the district are meeting grade level. The junior high improved from an F to a D in the most recent ratings. 

In a statement, the Connally district thanked the efforts of Superintendent Jill Bottelberghe in boosting academic performance in recent years but acknowledged the need for improvements. 

鈥淲e recognize that there is still work that needs to be done,鈥 the statement said. 鈥淚t is our hope that the appointed Board of Managers will work to not only improve our district鈥檚 academic performance, but also serve our community with the same passion and sincerity as our Board of Trustees has.鈥

ML King Middle School and Fehl-Price Elementary in the Beaumont district have also endured five consecutive years of failing grades. The commissioner cited data showing that the elementary school has never earned an acceptable rating, while the middle school has gone 11 years without one. The district has seven campuses with unacceptable ratings for more than a year and has not earned an overall acceptable rating since 2019. Thirty percent of students in the district are meeting grade level. 

Thomas Sigee Sr., president of the Beaumont school board, said the district had sought to help its struggling campuses 鈥 including by with charter schools 鈥 but ultimately could not lift them up to state standards. He questioned why the commissioner opted to take over the entire district instead of shutting down the schools. 

鈥淲e could have closed the schools for a year and facilitated those students to other campuses and go forward,鈥 Sigee said. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 want the takeover because I knew it would spread chaos in our community.鈥 

If the decision is finalized, it would mark the second time the state has placed the Beaumont district under its oversight. The education agency did so from 2014-2020 due to financial mismanagement. 

Each of the three districts will have opportunities later this month to attend an informal hearing with the commissioner to make their appeals. If Morath stands by his decision to intervene, they can then formally appeal to the State Office of Administrative Hearings. 

Takeovers were once rare in Texas, but they have grown more common in the last decade, thanks to that made it easier for the state to step in after five consecutive F grades. It also expanded the commissioner鈥檚 ability to initiate special investigations, which could lead to an intervention. 

That A-F grading system is on the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness, a standardized exam that lawmakers voted this year to replace in 2027. 

Before 2015, El Paso experienced the only academic takeover in Texas, due to a widespread . Since the law鈥檚 passage, the education agency has officially taken over three districts because of low academic performance: Marlin, Shepherd and Houston. 

Morath and state-appointed Superintendent Mike Miles believe the Houston ISD intervention was warranted, and they tout as evidence the improved test scores in the two years since it started. Students have improved in every tested subject. None of the district鈥檚 campuses received an F on the state鈥檚 accountability ratings in the 2024-25 school year, a drastic improvement from the 56 underperforming campuses in 2022-23. 

But the intervention has also run into strong criticism. Teacher departures have . Thousands of students have . And improved test scores have that the district has accomplished its gains, in part, because of a hyperfocus on testing and moving students into less rigorous math and science classes.

Stephen Simpson, Jess Huff and Alex Nguyen contributed to this report.

This first appeared on .

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How a Single Fort Worth ISD Campus Prompted a State Takeover /article/how-a-single-fort-worth-isd-campus-prompted-a-state-takeover/ Mon, 03 Nov 2025 15:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1022708 This article was originally published in

The Texas Education Agency is taking over the Fort Worth Independent School District 鈥 a district with more than 70,000 students 鈥 because a campus with just over 300 sixth graders repeatedly failed to meet state academic standards.

While Leadership Academy at Forest Oak Sixth Grade ultimately set off the state鈥檚 ability to intervene, the threat of a state takeover has been looming over the district for nearly two decades 鈥 with the first dating back to 2008. The district has a history of struggling to bring students鈥 grades up across the city, especially at campuses in low-income neighborhoods with large Black and brown populations.


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TEA Commissioner Mike Morath his decision to remove all decision-making power from elected Fort Worth ISD school board members. Soon, the state will replace them with a board of managers and a superintendent handpicked by Morath. The new set of appointed leaders will wield substantial power. They will preside over one of North Texas鈥 biggest school districts 鈥 around 鈥 and their responsibilities will range from deciding how to spend the district鈥檚 $1 billion budget to hiring the directors who will lead day-to-day operations such as bus transportation and campus maintenance.

The district has been on the upswing academically in the last two years. But TEA, under state law, can take over a school district when a school receives a failing grade on the state agency鈥檚 A-F accountability rating system for five consecutive years, and Leadership Academy at Forest Oak Sixth Grade received its The ratings, which were , had been held back because several school districts to block their release.

But long before the sixth-grade campus reached the threshold for a takeover, conversations of state intervention in Fort Worth had swirled around the community.

In 2008, Meadowbrook Middle School, a campus composed of around 60% Hispanic students and 35% Black students, had missed federal academic standards for years, which nearly led to a state takeover under the now-defunct No Child Left Behind Act.

In the years that followed, the district averted two other threats of an intervention. John T. White and Maude Logan elementaries endured a streak of failing grades and nearly met the takeover threshold before seeing improved scores.

Leadership Academy at Forest Oak Sixth Grade, which the district , was located in Glencrest, a with a median household income the national average. The campus, which drew in refugee and immigrant newcomers, struggled with academic performance for years.

鈥淭here has to be ownership for that,鈥 Fort Worth ISD Superintendent Karen Molinar said in a recent interview with The Texas Tribune. 鈥淚t’s not about a physical building or a statute. The kids were on a campus that was continuously underperforming, and we allowed it for multiple years.鈥

The campus was one of the Fort Worth district鈥檚 lowest-performing, though the struggle to lift students up to state standards has affected the entire district. In 2023, 44% of Fort Worth ISD students could read on grade level. That year, all grade levels with the exception of sixth grade .

But the district has begun to see improvements: Test scores in all of Fort Worth ISD last year. This year, the number of F-rated campuses plummeted from 31 to 11. And the roughly 135 schools overall have earned a C rating the last two years. The education agency considers that an 鈥渁cceptable performance,鈥 meaning the district serves many students well but needs to provide additional support to others.

Trenace Dorsey-Hollins, founder of parent activist group Parent Shield Fort Worth, said some of the credit for the improvements belongs to Molinar, the superintendent, who started her role in an interim capacity late last year and was officially appointed .

鈥淭his is her first year being able to make some changes to the district, and I do feel like she’s doing a pretty good job,鈥 Dorsey-Hollins said.

After Molinar came on board, Ken Kuhl, a parent on the Fort Worth Council of PTAs, said the district has .

The district has sought to introduce more alignment across the district, from creating an infrastructure for educators to gameplan lessons together and attain feedback on their teaching methods, to rolling out what the education agency considers high-quality instructional materials aligned with state standards, to overhauling seven under-resourced campuses with a goal of attracting more effective instructors.

But none of those efforts stopped a takeover.

With a district as large as Fort Worth鈥檚, disparities between schools鈥 performance run deep. Kuhl wonders if the district previously celebrated success at high-performing campuses 鈥渁t the expense of鈥 their academically struggling peers. The Fort Worth community, Kuhl said, would have liked to see the district address its shortcomings sooner.

Molinar said the state takeover was preventable, and the superintendent pointed blame at the district for the current situation.

鈥淚 can be upset and say it’s not fair and be upset with the commissioner,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut I’m more upset that we have not been more aggressive for my students.鈥

Many advocates and families believe the Texas Legislature鈥檚 decisions on have played an outsized role in districts鈥 academic struggles. Hundreds of districts are operating at a budget deficit, meaning they are increasing class sizes, cutting instructional staff and shutting down programs that help drive positive student outcomes. The Fort Worth district had a earlier this year.

The Legislature for six years did not add to schools鈥 base level funding, a critical pot of money that provides districts with flexibility to pay rising operational expenses and boost the salaries of teachers, which . During this year鈥檚 lawmaking session, the state approved nearly , though many district leaders have that the increase falls billions short of catching them up with inflation and that it lacks the spending flexibility they need to tackle all of their campuses’ needs.

Meanwhile, Texas鈥 education agency has been flexing its power to take over schools in recent years, notably in the Houston, La Joya and South San Antonio districts. Fort Worth鈥檚 intervention marks the 11th since 2000 and will be the second largest, following the 2023 takeover in Houston. Four other districts 鈥 Lake Worth, Beaumont, Connally and Wichita 鈥 are .

Academic takeovers are largely driven by results on the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness, which lawmakers, educators and families have long criticized. They say the test consumes meaningful instructional time, places too much pressure on students and does not adequately measure how much children are learning. The Legislature earlier this year that will phase out the exam by the 2027-28 academic year and replace it with three shorter tests.

If a campus does not meet state academic standards for five consecutive years, the state can order the closure of the school or appoint a board of managers to run the district. Fort Worth ISD opted to close Leadership Academy at Forest Oak Sixth Grade, but Morath said to the school board that the campus had already reached the threshold for intervention and that the closure 鈥渄id not address the district鈥檚 underlying systemic deficiencies that caused the chronic underperformance.鈥

The state agency鈥檚 ability to take over any district because of one struggling campus has been a point of controversy in Texas that has only grown more intense since the state intervened in Houston.

Morath and state-appointed Superintendent Mike Miles say that takeover was warranted, and they tout improved test scores in the two years since it started. No Houston ISD campuses received an F on the state鈥檚 accountability ratings in the 2024-25 school year, a drastic improvement from the the district had in 2022-23.

But the intervention has also run into strong criticism. Teacher departures have . Thousands of students have . And improved test scores have that the district has accomplished that feat, in part, because of a hyperfocus on testing and moving students into less rigorous math and science classes.

The direction of Fort Worth鈥檚 intervention will also depend heavily on the superintendent Morath chooses to lead it. It鈥檚 unclear exactly when he will make the decision, though the commissioner has noted that he will consider Molinar for the job.

Dorsey-Hollins said she鈥檚 hopeful for the intervention. The parent of two students in the district called on Morath to appoint people who are 鈥渙pen to hearing from the community and actually showing that growth is being made, letting that be the North Star for the takeover and for this change.鈥

鈥淚 feel like this is a possibility of a fresh start for our district,鈥 she said. 鈥淜nowing that we’re going to have an appointed board that is hyper-focused on student achievement, this could change the trajectory for our city and for our kids.鈥

This first appeared on .

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Texas Education Agency Taking Over Fort Worth ISD /article/texas-education-agency-taking-over-fort-worth-isd/ Thu, 23 Oct 2025 15:21:14 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1022332 This article was originally published in

The Texas Education Agency will remove the Fort Worth Independent School District鈥檚 elected board members and may appoint a new superintendent to oversee its operations, Commissioner Mike Morath announced Thursday morning.

The decision to assume control of the North Texas district follows months of speculation about how the state would respond to one of the Fort Worth campuses not meeting Texas鈥 academic accountability standards for five consecutive years. The district closed the sixth-grade campus at the end of the 2023-24 school year, but Morath in the spring that state law still required him to intervene.聽

Dallas鈥 local news station first reported news about the takeover Wednesday evening.聽


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In a statement Wednesday night, the district said it was aware of media reports about state action but would wait for an official announcement before sharing information with families.

鈥淥ur focus remains on our students by providing uninterrupted learning,鈥 the statement read. 鈥淲e are grateful to our educators and staff for their continuous commitment to our students and families.鈥

State takeovers of districts can only be initiated if one of its schools receives a failing grade from the TEA for five consecutive years, and allows the replacement of elected school board members with state appointees. The state can also direct districts to shut down the failing schools rather than replace the school boards with a board of managers.

While Fort Worth ISD shut down Leadership Academy at Forest Oak Sixth Grade before the TEA gave it its fifth F rating, Morath said in a March letter that it would not halt potential state action.

Fort Worth ISD was among school districts at risk of a state takeover, a record number in Texas. Beaumont, Connally, Lake Worth and Wichita Falls independent school districts have all amassed five consecutive failing grades at one or more of its campuses. Morath visited Lake Worth ISD on , where Marilyn Miller Language Academy received five consecutive F ratings.

A state takeover of the North Texas district would be the second largest in the state, and Morath three of its schools in August as the TEA considered a takeover.聽

With the state taking control of Fort Worth ISD, there have been 11 state takeovers of districts in Texas since 2000, including Houston Independent School District, which is the state鈥檚 largest. That takeover began in 2023 and was to 2027 in June.聽

This first appeared on .

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Texas Passed a Bible-Themed Curriculum. But Many Districts Aren’t Using It /article/texas-passed-a-bible-themed-curriculum-but-many-districts-arent-using-it/ Fri, 01 Aug 2025 10:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1018930 This coming school year, the Fairfield, Texas, school district, about halfway between Dallas and Houston, will roll out a new K-5 reading program that includes multiple biblical references. 

But the staff, hoping to avoid debates over families鈥 religious beliefs, has chopped roughly 30 sections out of the curriculum, including a kindergarten lesson on the Golden Rule featuring Jesus鈥 Sermon on the Mount and several excerpts about a Christian prayer the governor of Plymouth Colony said at the first Thanksgiving.  

The district鈥檚 elementary teachers 鈥渨ent through the materials looking for things that may be controversial,鈥 said Superintendent Joe Craig. They didn鈥檛 feel those parts of the curriculum 鈥渨ere in line with what we wanted the lesson to focus on.鈥 

A kindergarten discussion of the Golden Rule, which stems from the Bible and other religious texts, is among the lessons the Fairfield district in Texas removed from the state鈥檚 new K-5 reading program. (Texas Education Agency)

Fairfield鈥檚 process reflects the kind of that many districts have taken toward 鈥 the state-developed materials that prominently feature the Bible and Christianity. With feedback from 300 teachers, Fort Worth, the fifth largest district in the state, adopted the phonics portion of the curriculum, but turned down the units with religious material. Some districts ordered just a few books, likely for , while the Houston and Dallas districts opted to keep what they currently use.

Texas has spent roughly $100 million 鈥 and counting 鈥 to develop and promote its own reading curriculum. But some observers say they wouldn鈥檛 be surprised if districts aren鈥檛 rushing to pick it up, considering the State Board of Education approved it by a one-vote margin. 

鈥淭hey may be reluctant to bring that same controversy into their districts, especially in communities with families of diverse religious backgrounds,鈥 said Eve Myers, a consultant with Strive Public Policy Resources, a political consulting and lobbying firm that is tracking adoption of the program. 鈥淚t鈥檚 potentially a distraction from their focus on the budget, student achievement, school safety and all the other pressing issues they must address.鈥

Texas has over 1,200 districts and about 600 charter schools with elementary grades. Of the state鈥檚 20 largest districts, only Conroe, north of Houston, intends to use the program this fall. A shows that between May and late July, 144 districts and charters, mostly mid-sized or small, ordered the materials. 

State board members have asked for the total number of districts using Bluebonnet. 鈥淭hat’s the question we would all like to know,鈥 said Pam Little, a board member who voted against the reading program last November.  

Other districts could be using the online version of the materials, but whether students would have actual books, and spend less time on screens, was a major debate last year during the board鈥檚 consideration of the program.

State leaders and conservative advocates say the religious content reflects a classical and appropriate way to teach literacy skills along with history and culture. Others like the emphasis on cursive writing and challenging vocabulary. In an interview with 社区黑料 last year, State Commissioner of Education Mike Morath said a phonics-based curriculum that also builds students鈥 background knowledge can help the state recover from in reading skills due to the pandemic.

But the program sparked a statewide debate over whether political leaders are forcing Christianity into public schools. Bluebonnet makes its debut in the classroom at the same time schools will be required, under a new state law, to display the 10 Commandments. Gov. Greg Abbott also signed in June that allows districts to offer a daily, voluntary period of time to pray and read the Bible or other religious texts. Under a similar 2023 law, districts can hire chaplains to volunteer as counselors, but aren鈥檛 participating.  

鈥淭here is definitely a disconnect between the radical far right agenda 鈥 and what school boards who are accountable to local families and students are actually going to do,鈥 said Guthrie Graves-Fitzsimmons, senior director of policy and advocacy at the Interfaith Alliance, a national group that advocates for church-state separation. Texas, he said, is 鈥渢aking away the rights of clergy and parents to lead religious instruction.鈥

The Fort Worth Independent School District adopted just the phonics lessons from the state鈥檚 new Bluebonnet curriculum after consulting with 300 teachers. Those units don鈥檛 include biblical material. (Getty)

鈥楬ard on the teacher鈥

In the 73,000-student Conroe school district, Dayren Carlisle, a curriculum director, said leaders picked Bluebonnet because teachers were previously working with a patchwork of materials. They often spent 鈥渁rduous hours preparing for reading and writing instruction,鈥 she told 社区黑料 in an email. Bluebonnet provides a coherent set of lessons that meet state standards, she said.

But parent Christine Yates advocated against it. 

鈥淚 don’t think religious-based instruction belongs in any type of public school setting,鈥 said Yates, whose children will be in second and fourth grade this fall. Her family doesn鈥檛 attend church and she鈥檚 concerned that the lessons dealing with faith are just 鈥渂orrowing trouble.鈥 

Becky Sherrill, a former Conroe teacher, sympathizes with educators who will have to navigate parent鈥檚 requests to opt their children out of the lessons. It鈥檚 a right that many parents might be more likely to exercise this fall because of a June U.S. Supreme Court opinion in favor of religious families who want their children exempted from hearing stories with LGBTQ themes.

Becky Sherrill, a former Conroe teacher, pulled her children out of the district because of the new Bible-inspired curriculum and a state law requiring schools to post the 10 Commandments in classrooms. (Courtesy of Becky Sherrill)

鈥淚t鈥檚 hard on the teacher. It’s already so hard at Christmas or even with birthdays,鈥 Sherrill said, referring to Jehovah鈥檚 Witnesses she has had as students. 鈥淵ou can’t give some kids cupcakes because they don’t celebrate birthdays.鈥

She鈥檚 already homeschooling her middle school son and has pulled her daughter, a fifth grader, out of the district as well, largely because of Bluebonnet and the 10 Commandments law. 

At a May board meeting, Carlisle explained to the board how teachers will field requests from parents who want to opt their children out of the lessons. 

鈥淚f a parent were to complain about this鈥 we would have to find a completely different text,鈥 she said. 

But that didn鈥檛 sit well with Tiffany Baumann Nelson, one of three , who call themselves Mama Bears, elected in 2022.

鈥淭here is no religion in this curriculum,鈥 she argued. 鈥淭hey’re all historical references, and so in my opinion, there should be no alternative or modifications.鈥

Conroe school board members Tiffany Nelson, left, and Melissa Dungan, attended a February event where Republican Gov. Greg Abbott promoted voucher legislation, which passed in May. Their district is one of the largest in the state to adopt the Bluebonnet curriculum. (Jason Fochtman/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

Whether districts are removing biblical material or parents are opting their children out of the lessons, Little, the state board member, worries students could miss literacy skills they are supposed to learn. 

鈥淪ay an East Asian religious parent has decided they don’t want their child to have [a Bible story]. Is that child going to miss skill development?鈥 she asked. Accommodating parents鈥 requests will also be a burden on district staff. 鈥淲hat is the cost involved in the manpower time for these districts to go through and eliminate the religious content? There was no need for the controversy that the religious content is going to start.鈥 

Reviewed it and loved it鈥

The state board narrowly approved the new program last fall after the Texas Education Agency spent roughly $84 million to adapt an existing reading curriculum, from the company Amplify. Renamed Bluebonnet, after the state flower, the Texas version includes highlights of Jesus鈥 ministry and offers an evangelical view of early American history. Lessons for example, include the , an art history unit based on the creation story from Genesis and scriptural references to the motto on the . 

The agency, which would not provide a list of all districts that have ordered the program, paid multiple companies and content experts to craft and review the lessons, including the far-right Texas Public Policy Foundation. Hillsdale College, a Christian school in Michigan, volunteered to work on units related to America鈥檚 founding, and a Christian media company, co-founded by Mike Huckabee, U.S. ambassador to Israel, contributed illustrations. But Texas officials refused to identify who wrote the biblical passages

In response to backlash, officials added more references to Islam and Hinduism and removed some texts that were offensive to Jews, but the final version still references Christianity more than other religions.

鈥淲e reviewed it and loved it,鈥 said Cindi Castilla, president of the Texas Eagle Forum, a conservative organization. She pushed for state board approval of the curriculum last year, saying that there is 鈥渞ichness in biblical literature鈥 and that Bible stories teach children character traits and the origins of the legal system. 

Since then, she examined the final version with retired educators who have experience teaching a classical curriculum and thinks it will strengthen students鈥 cursive and phonics skills. That鈥檚 why Gina Eubank wishes her grandchildren鈥檚 school districts 鈥 Katy, near Houston, and Belton, near Waco 鈥 had adopted the materials. 

鈥淚 watched 鈥 fourth- and sixth-grade honor students write a thank you note and was shocked by what I saw 鈥 the lack of legible handwriting and the horrific spelling,鈥 she said.

鈥楶romote, market and advertise鈥

Districts on the fence about Bluebonnet can reconsider their decision next year. To make it more enticing, lawmakers added financial incentives 鈥 up to $60 per student for districts that use state-approved materials. That was likely one reason why the 27,000-student Lubbock schools adopted it, said Clinton Gill, a former math and science teacher in the district who now works for the Texas State Teachers Association.

At the same time, he thinks district leaders assume students will stand a better chance of performing well on the state test if officials match it up to a curriculum the state developed. Adopting Bluebonnet 鈥渁lso helps the district not have to hire staff to write curriculum when they get it from the state for free.鈥

The per-student bonus isn鈥檛 the only way the state aims to ensure Bluebonnet becomes the preferred choice. In December, the month after the board approved it, the Texas Education Agency quickly made Bluebonnet available to order. Materials from other publishers weren鈥檛 available until May.

鈥淚t seems that Bluebonnet Learning had an advantage,鈥 Little told Morath, the commissioner, during . She said she heard complaints from publishers over the issue.

Morath called the delay a 鈥渙ne-time exacerbated problem鈥 because the state had to add new language to contracts with publishers before making their materials available to districts. While the time lapse should be shorter next year, he said there would always be some gap.

Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath says the Bluebonnet K-5 reading curriculum will improve student performance and that religious material helps to build students鈥 historical and cultural knowledge. (Melissa Phillip/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

In the current , lawmakers authorized Morath to contract with businesses to 鈥減romote, market and advertise鈥 Bluebonnet. A provides $243 million to districts to help with implementation costs, like coaching for teachers. 

Last year鈥檚 budget included $10 million for regional education service centers to do similar work for districts adopting Bluebonnet. The centers are expected to for increasing the number of districts using the materials in their region to stay eligible for future funding. 

Some leaders in the state say that top-down pressure could alter the relationship the centers have traditionally had with school systems in their regions. They help districts, especially smaller ones with fewer central office staff, stay in compliance with state regulations or work on school improvement. 

The service centers have always been a 鈥渉ub of knowledge,鈥 said Martha Salazar-Zamora, superintendent of the Tomball Independent School District, north of Houston. Expecting districts to sell Bluebonnet, she said, 鈥渉as been more of a strategic push.鈥

She doesn鈥檛 doubt that Bluebonnet will boost reading scores for some students, but Tomball is already rated a in the state鈥檚 accountability system.  Another reason why she didn鈥檛 consider the program is because a Spanish version is not yet available. Her district, where about 35% of students are , has a Spanish-English .

鈥淚 love anything that helps kids,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 just don’t think it’s the right tool for every district.鈥

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Mike Huckabee鈥檚 鈥楩aith-Based鈥 Media Company Contributed to New Texas Curriculum /article/mike-huckabees-faith-based-media-company-contributed-to-new-texas-curriculum/ Mon, 18 Nov 2024 11:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=735358 The Texas Education Agency hired a conservative educational publishing company co-founded by former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee to provide biblical content for the state鈥檚 proposed 鈥 a curriculum that has come under criticism for its emphasis on evangelical Christianity.

Espired, a partnership with Florida investor Brad Saft, sells right-leaning , from Fighting Indoctrination and The Truth about Climate Change to an updated guide on this year鈥檚 election, including the against President-elect Donald Trump.  Last week, Trump tapped Huckabee, a Southern Baptist minister who hosts a on a Christian network, to serve as .

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee co-founded a media company that promotes conservative ideals and praises President-elect Donald Trump. (Espired, Everbright Media)

But the company also sells , with animated Old and New Testament stories, like Noah鈥檚 ark and the Resurrection. The series features colorful illustrations drawn in the identical style as those in the Texas curriculum. A kindergarten lesson鈥檚 image of , for example, and two more on the are lifted wholesale from covers of the company鈥檚 books.

The cover of a booklet on King Solomon from eSpired’s 鈥淭he Kids Guide to the Bible” (left), next to an excerpt (right) of the Texas curriculum with the same image.

Saft, a Princeton graduate and , did not answer emails or messages on social media. Chad Gallagher, an eSpired spokesman and former Huckabee adviser, declined to provide more details on how the company contributed to the program, but called eSpired the 鈥渓eading provider of curriculum to states searching for unbiased history鈥 and 鈥渓essons that explain the literary and historical value of the Bible.鈥

Saft and Inspired by Education LLC, an alternate name for the company, were on a list of subcontractors for the curriculum that the Texas Education Agency shared with 社区黑料 in May. Contacted earlier this month, officials did not respond to questions about how much the state paid eSpired or the degree of influence the company had over the lessons.

The connection to Huckabee鈥檚 business venture, also known as EverBright Media, comes as the State Board of Education is set to vote Monday on whether to add the program, called Bluebonnet Learning, to a list of approved reading programs. The state is heavily the program at a time when some districts are . The board鈥檚 blessing means districts would be eligible for extra funding 鈥 up to $60 per student 鈥  if they adopt the program.

鈥淒istricts鈥 hands are tied because they are in desperate need of additional funding, yet the state of Texas is trying to force them to use this curriculum as the only way to get additional funding,鈥 said Clinton Gill, a specialist with the Texas State Teachers Association and a former teacher in Lubbock, one of the districts that piloted an early version of the program. The state, he said, should involve teachers in developing the curriculum, 鈥渘ot some company with a political agenda.鈥

The curriculum has won praise from GOP leaders, classical education proponents and who want the Bible to be more prominent in public schools. But the first draft, unveiled in late May, drew sharp criticism from those who said the authors disregarded other religions and introduced topics of faith more appropriate for church and home.

The state has since corrected many factual errors, but the bias toward Christianity remains, according to several experts. Education Commissioner Mike Morath will need eight board members in favor of Bluebonnet for it to be added to the list, but the vote is expected to be tight. 

鈥淭his is one of the hardest votes I’ve ever had to make in 22 years on the State Board of Education. I have lost sleep over it,鈥 said Republican Pat Hardy, who was defeated in this year鈥檚 election. This week鈥檚 series of meetings are her last on the board. 鈥淚鈥檝e literally heard from hundreds of people on both sides.鈥

Last week, Texas Values, a nonprofit that promotes 鈥渂iblical, Judeo-Christian values鈥 in public policy, held a 鈥 event to promote the curriculum in Allen, Texas, part of Board Member Evelyn Brooks鈥 Fort Worth-area district. She鈥檚 among the conservative Republicans opposed to the program, and has called for more transparency over who wrote the lessons. 

Officials won鈥檛 identify who wrote the biblical material. Because a contract for the work fell under a pandemic disaster declaration, the state waived typical requirements that would have shed light on what those companies did and how much they were paid. 

Mary Elizabeth Castle, government relations director at Texas Values, said the curriculum has been unfairly accused of teaching about faith 鈥渋n a devotional way鈥 and only educates students to 鈥渦nderstand the hundreds of idioms that we use in everyday language that actually come from the Bible.鈥 

Texas Values also of the curriculum to speak at Monday鈥檚 public hearing before the vote.

But opponents see Bluebonnet as part of a GOP-led movement to steer public schools to the right 鈥 one that is expected to accelerate under the incoming Trump administration. More than 15,000 opponents of the Bible-themed lessons have signed , organized by Faithful America, an online network of Christians, with about 200,000 members nationwide. 

鈥淲e’re pushing back on the folks who are ignoring the teachings of Jesus because they are seeking political power for themselves,鈥 said Karli Wallace Thompson, the group鈥檚 digital campaigns director. 鈥淭here’s nothing in the Gospel that tells us we need to go out and force our neighbors to worship the way that we do.鈥

Karli Wallace Thompson, digital campaigns director for Faithful America, stands with a golden calf balloon dressed as President-elect Donald Trump. The organization advocates to protect the separation of church and state. (Faithful America)

鈥楽acred story鈥

The state made noticeable efforts to respond to many of the public鈥檚 concerns, according to biblical scholars who have reviewed the changes. Revisions in include a brief introduction to the prophet Muhammad, who was completely neglected originally, a chart displaying variations on the Golden Rule from six religions and a slightly shorter description of Jesus鈥檚 ministry.

But officials seemed to prioritize accuracy over making the curriculum more religiously balanced, said Mark Chancey, a religious studies professor at Southern Methodist University who has reviewed the newest version.

One change to the K-5 reading curriculum is a chart showing variations on the Golden Rule from multiple faiths. (Bluebonnet Learning)

鈥淪ome of the many embarrassing gaffes and factual errors are now gone,鈥 he said. 

The original first grade American Independence unit, for example, incorrectly described the Liberty Bell as a 鈥渟ymbol designed to celebrate our freedom from being controlled by the British and our freedom to pray,鈥 even though it was cast before the revolution. Now the lesson reads: 鈥淢any people believe the Liberty Bell was designed to celebrate the traditions of religious freedom and self-government in the colony of Pennsylvania.鈥

The on Jesus鈥檚 life and early Christianity no longer says that Christians hid in the catacombs to worship, that scholars have debunked. The unit also excludes the miracle of the disciples鈥 overflowing fishing nets, reducing the lesson on Jesus from eight pages to seven. 

But it still cites Josephus, a first century historian, who reported that Jesus鈥 disciples said that he 鈥渁ppeared to them three days after his crucifixion and that he was alive.鈥 Biblical scholars largely , which they say was probably added by priests during the Middle Ages in an effort to prove that Jesus was the son of God. 

The state eliminated what Texas Jews said was an offensive activity in which students would play dice to mimic how Haman, a Persian functionary in the biblical story of Queen Esther, cast lots to decide when to kill the Jews.  

But while there is somewhat more attention to Judaism in the edited version, the bias toward Christianity is still 鈥渃lear and indisputable,鈥 Chancey said. 

If the board signs off on this version and districts adopt it, elementary school children 鈥渨ill learn the main contours of the Christian sacred story鈥 鈥 from Creation to the work of the Apostle Paul, he said. 鈥淣o other tradition gets similar treatment.鈥

Other modifications acknowledge that Christians have used their faith to justify discrimination and violence throughout history.  A fourth grade lesson originally titled 鈥淚f You Were a Crusader鈥 has been renamed 鈥淭he Journey of a Crusader鈥 and the fact that in addition to capturing Jerusalem from the Muslims, crusaders 鈥渨ere given permission to persecute and kill non-Christians.鈥

A fifth grade lesson now explains that Martin Luther King Jr. directed his 鈥淟etter from Birmingham Jail鈥 to clergymen who supported segregation. 鈥淚t was unfortunately also true that many people of the time supported those laws, including Christians like these clergymen,鈥 the text reads. Critics of the original version said glossing over that point gave students an inaccurate portrayal of the Civil Rights movement.

Critical examinations of some of Christianity鈥檚 darker chapters are a welcome addition to the curriculum, said David Brockman, a religious studies scholar at Rice University who has both versions. But a third grade lesson still says Spanish conquistadors鈥 merely 鈥渟hared鈥 their Christian faith with indigenous tribes and doesn鈥檛 delve into slavery, forced labor and other harsh methods used to convert them.

The updates don鈥檛 鈥渃orrect the overall problem of soft pedaling Christian involvement with violence and oppression in the past,鈥 he said.

Presenting students with America鈥檚 virtues as well as its faults was important to Steve Meeker, a retired middle school world geography teacher from the Montgomery Independent School District, north of Houston, who was hired to review earlier drafts of the curriculum. 

He provided feedback on a second grade unit that discusses how an evangelical religious movement called the Great Awakening  influenced the Founding Fathers鈥 views on slavery. The text quotes a letter in which Thomas Jefferson expressed that he 鈥渁rdently鈥 wanted to see slavery abolished. But while children would learn that George Washington made plans in his will to free his slaves, Meeker feels there鈥檚 still too little attention to the founders鈥 role as slave owners.

Steven Meeker, a retired social studies teacher, worked as a reviewer on the curriculum and pushed for more balance in the sections on slavery. (Courtesy of Steven Meeker)

Jefferson might have wished for the end of slavery, but 鈥渉e certainly didn’t act on it,鈥 Meeker said. 鈥淗e owned more than 600 slaves and is only recorded as having freed ten of them.鈥

Meeker, who also teaches a class at his church on the , appreciates the overall attention to familiarizing students with the Bible. Over his 42 years of teaching, he noticed that students were increasingly puzzled by everyday sayings like 鈥渕y brother鈥檚 keeper鈥 and the 鈥渉andwriting is on the wall.鈥 But he also noted that lessons about Jesus might make non-Christians uncomfortable. 

鈥楨xciting and engaging鈥

Some supporters of the state鈥檚 program are concerned that the intense debate over the biblical material has overshadowed other aspects of the curriculum, which, Morath says, is meant to improve students’ vocabulary and background knowledge. 

The state鈥檚 lessons will give students 鈥済reat exposure鈥 to Texas history with material that reinforces content from science and social studies, said Courtnie Bagley, education director at the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation. The state also hired her to work on lessons about geology and the state鈥檚 oil and gas industry.

鈥淚 could see how engaging and enjoyable it would be for a kid to read in second grade about the and Dolly Madison rescuing all the artifacts in the White House,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hose are exciting and engaging stories.鈥

The second grade lesson on the War of 1812 includes a drawing of Dolly Madison saving artifacts from the 鈥淧resident鈥檚 House,鈥 including a portrait of George Washington. (Bluebonnet Learning)

The state, meanwhile, continues to expend vast resources to get the materials in teachers鈥 hands. According to grant documents, the agency is spending $50 million on printing and another $10 million to train districts how to implement the curriculum. That鈥檚 on top of the $103 million the state has already spent on the program. 

Work on the project began in 2020, when it paid Amplify, a leading curriculum provider, $19 million in federal relief funds for its program. Based on the work of educator E.D. Hirsch, the lessons teach basic reading skills as well as content from art, history and science.

But Morath viewed that purchase as just a starting point and began commissioning lessons, like the one on Queen Esther, based on the Bible.  

In 2022, the agency signed an $84 million contract with Boston-based Public Consulting Group, which includes a . That company then subcontracted with a mix of curriculum developers and experts to modify the program with more Texas-related content and Bible-based lessons.

Espired and Saft, Huckabee鈥檚 business partner, were among them. The company markets primarily to a homeschooling audience, with ads on and . But in the first months of the pandemic, the , under former Gov. Asa Hutchinson, paid $245,000 for its and distributed it to schools.

Gallagher declined to comment on whether the company has completed work for other state education agencies, but said, 鈥淓Spired has many clients for their curriculum development services because parents are generally not satisfied with much of the existing materials and curriculum that has traditionally been available.鈥

Learn Our History, another series of eSpired guides, 鈥渉elps kids learn all about American history from a positive, patriotic and faith-based standpoint,鈥 Huckabee said in a . Like the Texas program, it emphasizes the role of in the nation’s founding.

The company, however, also has some , with several complaints to the about recurring charges for products that parents said they never purchased or guides they never received.

鈥淚鈥檓 a pretty savvy consumer who doesn鈥檛 usually get bamboozled by the fine print,鈥 parent Shannon Ashley after ordering the company鈥檚 COVID guide. 鈥淚 knew I never actually gave them permission to regularly charge my card, and they never actually threw that fine print in there.鈥

An advisory board member for the , which seeks to pass legislation based on 鈥渂iblical principles,鈥 Huckabee has who argue the U.S. was founded as a Christian nation. His 2020 book, , warns of the 鈥渄angers of corruption advocated by liberal politicians.鈥

Before serving as governor from 1996 to 2007, Huckabee was a pastor in Pine Bluff, Arkansas. He ran for president in 2008, but has also led tour groups to Israel, where 鈥淚 have been visiting since 1973 when I was a teenager,鈥 he . Huckabee, who there is 鈥渘o such thing as a West Bank鈥 and has expressed for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, would lead efforts to bring an end to the war in Gaza, Trump said in a .

Mike Huckabee, President-elect Donald Trump鈥檚 choice for ambassador to Israel, hosted a roundtable discussion with Trump in Pennsylvania the week before the election. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

鈥楻ules of the game鈥 

Texas鈥 move to write its own curriculum has also left traditional publishers, like Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and Savvas, wondering how competing against a state agency will affect their business 鈥 and whether districts will drop their materials in favor of a program that comes with strong financial incentives.

鈥淧ublishers have always sought after the Texas market because obviously it’s very large, with over 5 million students,鈥 said Eve Myers, a consultant for HillCo Partners, a lobbying and government relations firm whose clients include publishers. 鈥淭he biggest question is, 鈥榃hat are the rules of the game now?鈥 鈥

Curriculum companies also frequently make their authors available to districts to train teachers and explain the research behind their product, Meyers said. 

But so far, the state has refused to identify the authors who transformed Amplify鈥檚 program into Bluebonnet. And even with the recent edits, some board members, like Brooks, say it鈥檚 too soon to know if it will improve students鈥 reading performance. In a , she blamed 鈥済rassroots leaders who say 鈥榊ou have a Bible story in the curriculum, so it must be good.鈥 鈥 

鈥淭here鈥檚 no time to say how effective it is,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t’s being rewritten and revised in real time.鈥

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Dozens of Texas School Districts Press State to Suspend New Student Data Reporting System /article/dozens-of-texas-school-districts-press-state-to-suspend-new-student-data-reporting-system/ Thu, 19 Sep 2024 14:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=733062 This article was originally published in

A coalition of more than 70 Texas school districts has called on the Texas Education Agency to delay full implementation of a new data reporting system they say has led to thousands of unresolved errors that could pose grave consequences to their funding and accountability.

School district leaders to the agency鈥檚 commissioner, Mike Morath, on Sept. 13 after dozens of them began sharing their concerns with one another about the transition to the new system used to collect student, staff, and financial data, which more than 300 districts piloted last school year. State officials use the information to determine whether schools are meeting performance standards and how much funding they receive each year. The Texas Tribune districts鈥 concerns about the change last week.

In the letter obtained by the Tribune, the superintendents say they have not been able to verify the accuracy of the thousands of data points entering the new system created by . They warn that, based on their experiences during the pilot, the system is not ready to go live. School district leaders also request the agency 鈥渢ake the necessary steps to provide a safety net for districts this year鈥 and delay the implementation until the system is fully vetted.


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鈥淭he unfunded mandate to transition to the Ed-Fi system in the 2024-25 school year when no one is ready has dire consequences for districts in terms of funding, accountability, and reporting,鈥 the letter states.

The Texas Education Agency did not respond to a request for comment on the letter, which offers the first comprehensive look at how widespread the problems with the upgrades are. More school districts have signed onto the letter since it was first sent.

Each of Texas鈥 more than 1,200 school districts is required to to the state, including information on attendance, enrollment, students who receive special education, children experiencing homelessness and the number of kids who have completed a college preparatory course.

The state launched the new system at the start of this school year. The goal was to make it easier for school districts and the state to share data and reduce the amount of manual labor required from school staff. Districts were supportive of the proposed changes.

Before the upgrade, school districts would submit data directly to the state after working with software vendors that would ensure the education agency didn鈥檛 have any problems interpreting the information. Under the new arrangement, the software vendors are now responsible for transmitting the data to the state, a change that school officials say leaves them without a chance to fact-check the information before it goes out.

They also say a litany of errors and inaccuracies surfaced during the pilot program. In some instances, thousands of student records 鈥 from enrollment figures to the number of students in certain programs 鈥 did not show up correctly.

鈥淯nderstand the position we’re in as a school district trying to work on this,鈥 said Stephen McCanless, Cleveland school district superintendent, 鈥渁long with all the other requirements and mandates that districts work on for the state and for the federal government during an entire school year.鈥

Still, agency officials expressed confidence this month that districts will have ample time to resolve any errors between now and the fall reporting deadline on Dec. 12. The agency noted that districts have until Jan. 16 鈥 just days after winter break 鈥 to resubmit any data needing corrections. The agency also said it has resolved more than a thousand tickets submitted by school officials reporting problems with the new system.

But, to date, school district officials say their staff don’t know how to solve some errors, nor are they clear on what steps the state has taken to resolve them. And state agency officials have not directly answered what would happen if the problems go beyond the deadlines.

鈥淭he amount of time to investigate even one error can be extremely lengthy,鈥 said Lori Rapp, superintendent of the Lewisville school district, which helped prepare the letter.

Many school districts recently told the Tribune that they are still in support of the system. But they say they need more time.

鈥淭he accuracy of the information is so critical because it has so many implications across the system, with first and foremost being funding,鈥 said Richardson school district Superintendent Tabitha Branum, who also signed the letter. 鈥淚n the previous system, we had tools to help us do that. With this new system, right now, those tools don’t exist.鈥

In addition to their calls to extend the pilot program, school district leaders are also calling for the state to provide more training to ensure their staff are prepared for the transition; to hire an independent firm to conduct an audit of the data submitted in the new system; and to provide transparency on data security with the system upgrade.

鈥淭he potential consequences for the state鈥檚 data accuracy and districts’ financial health,鈥 the letter says, 鈥渁re too large to overlook.鈥

This article originally appeared in at . The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

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Who Wrote Texas鈥檚 Million Dollar, Bible-Infused Curriculum? The State Won鈥檛 Say /article/who-wrote-texass-million-dollar-bible-infused-curriculum-the-state-wont-say/ Thu, 15 Aug 2024 18:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=731412 Almost three months after Texas sparked a firestorm of criticism for a heavily infused with Bible lessons, state education officials still won鈥檛 say who authored the material or how much they were paid.

And because of the pandemic, they say they don鈥檛 have to. 

A state official told 社区黑料 that the work 鈥 an $84 million contract the state signed in March 2022 鈥 falls under a Gov. Greg Abbott issued to speed up delivery of masks, vaccines and other critical supplies during the height of the pandemic. That means the paper trail that typically follows people who contract with the state, including work and payment reports, doesn鈥檛 exist in this case, the official said. 


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Some members of the state board of education, which will vote on the curriculum in November, are accusing education Commissioner Mike Morath and his staff of a lack of transparency.

鈥淚 did not get a lot of my questions answered when it came to who wrote the curriculum,鈥 said Evelyn Brooks, a Republican board member whose district includes the Fort Worth suburbs. She鈥檚 one of at least three members who asked officials at the Texas Education Agency for more details. 鈥淚t’s hard and it shouldn’t be. Someone knows this information.鈥 

I did not get a lot of my questions answered when it came to who wrote the curriculum.

Evelyn Brooks, Texas Board of Education

Morath said the overhaul will bring classical education to over 2 million K-5 students in Texas. The model is designed to strengthen kids’ reading skills while also teaching them culture, art and history, including the Bible鈥檚 influence. Interviewed in early May, the commissioner would only say that 鈥渉undreds of people鈥 worked on the project.

But that doesn鈥檛 satisfy board members who say the curriculum borders on proselytizing and promotes a distinctly evangelical view of American history.

A teacher鈥檚 guide for a third-grade lesson on ancient Rome, for example, devotes eight pages to the life and ministry of Jesus 鈥 presenting many of the events as historical facts, scholars say. But the Islamic prophet Muhammad isn鈥檛 named anywhere. A kindergarten lesson on 鈥淕oldilocks and the Three Bears鈥 draws parallels to Jesus鈥檚 Sermon on the Mount. And an art appreciation lesson walks 5-year-olds through the creation story from the Book of Genesis.

鈥淲ho are the people that sat down in this fancy room and said this is the knowledge that every Texas student should have?鈥 asked Staci Childs, a Democrat who represents the Houston area. She said she understands teaching the importance of religion in American history, but thinks the balance is off. 鈥淚 just don’t think that it’s fair to have that many biblical references in the text in public schools across the state.鈥 

The comments come a day before a Friday deadline for the public to or suggest corrections to the curriculum.

Who are the people that sat down in this fancy room and said this is the knowledge that every Texas student should have?

Staci Childs, Texas Board of Education

Texas won鈥檛 force districts to use the materials, but is offering up to $60 per student 鈥 a total of $540 million 鈥 to any that adopt the program. That鈥檚 an incentive many are unlikely to turn down at a time school systems are and calling for to offset them. 

The controversy is occurring against the backdrop of GOP support for teaching the Bible in several states, including Texas鈥檚 neighbors. A new Louisiana law requires schools to hang the 10 Commandments in classrooms, while Oklahoma state Superintendent Ryan Walters is that educators use the Bible for instruction.

But no state has invested as much time and money as Texas in connecting its curriculum to Judeo-Christian messages.

As 社区黑料 first reported in May, Morath signed a contract for K-5 reading and K-12 math materials with the Boston-based Public Consulting Group. In turn, the organization subcontracted with curriculum writers and experts, including officials at the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation and .

At Hillsdale, Kathleen O鈥橳oole, who leads work with charter schools affiliated with the Christian college, said her team only 鈥渙ffered resources on a few units having to do with early American history.鈥 The college performed the work for free, she said.

The Texas Public Policy Foundation declined to comment on its role. 

The contract Morath signed with the Public Consulting Group requires the company to submit monthly progress reports 鈥渄ocumenting all subcontractor payments.鈥 But when 社区黑料 requested the documents in June under the state鈥檚 , Sherry Mansell, a coordinator in the general counsel鈥檚 office, said the state dropped the requirement because of the governor鈥檚 pandemic emergency order. The absence of those spending reports 鈥渦nderstandably could cause some confusion,鈥 Mansell wrote in an email. In a follow-up, she said the agency is 鈥渆nsuring we receive the goods and services as specified in our contract.鈥

The Public Consulting Group did not respond to phone calls or emails. 

When Mansell said no reports were available, 社区黑料 asked an education agency spokesman to identify who wrote the new lessons and how much they were paid.

He didn鈥檛 respond until asked again Tuesday night. This time, he replied 鈥渁bsolutely鈥 when asked if the public had a right to know the information and emailed a series of zip files containing over 100 pages of Public Consulting Group invoices for the past three years. None of them contained details about the religious lessons鈥 authorship. Reached again Wednesday, the spokesman declined to address the matter further.

Hillsdale College, a conservative Christian college in Michigan, is among the groups that provided expertise on Texas鈥檚 proposed K-5 reading curriculum. (Chris duMond/Getty Images)

鈥楶olitical considerations鈥

If board members are expected to approve the materials in November, Brooks said, they should know who wrote them.

She isn鈥檛 the only Republican on the board with reservations. Pat Hardy, a longtime GOP board member, said the state developed the new materials to placate the far-right wing of the party, which has pushed hard in recent years to expand Christianity鈥檚 presence in public schools. 

鈥淭hey’re going to appeal to the Christian nationalists with their Bible stories. They’re just trying to gather votes,鈥 said Hardy, who to a candidate who accused her of not being conservative enough. Nonetheless, she鈥檒l remain in office for the vote on the curriculum in November. 

The Republican members鈥 views could hold sway on a board where they retain 10 of the 15 seats. Morath needs at least eight members to vote yes on the proposed curriculum for it to pass. 

Other Republicans on the board were less outspoken. Tom Maynard, whose district includes Austin, said there are 鈥渄efinite positives鈥 in the curriculum as well as some needed 鈥渃leanup,鈥 but didn鈥檛 offer specifics. Keven Ellis and L.J. Francis said they would save their comments until after a September meeting when the board will review the materials.

Questions about who wrote the biblical lessons are especially salient 鈥渨hen the curriculum is so shocking,鈥 Democratic Rep. James Talarico, a seminary student and former teacher, told 社区黑料. Talarico has been critical of the materials鈥 minimal attention to other world religions.

Texas Rep. James Talarico (left), a Democrat, asked questions about the proposed K-5 reading materials at a House education committee hearing on Monday, Aug. 12. (Committee on Public Education)

At a House education committee hearing Monday, he grilled Morath about whether 鈥減olitical considerations鈥 influenced the overhaul. Talarico specifically named , vice chair of the board of the Texas Public Policy Foundation and an oil magnate who has donated millions of dollars to conservative candidates 鈥 from Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump to running for the state legislature. 

鈥淚s the Texas Public Policy Foundation an expert in curriculum design?鈥 Talarico asked the commissioner. He also noted that the state unveiled the material four days after the Texas GOP adopted calling for required Bible instruction in public schools. 鈥淎re those two related?鈥 he asked.

Morath dismissed the suggestion. The agency sought expertise from a 鈥減retty broad swath of individuals,鈥 he said. Those included experts in Texas history, which figures prominently in the curriculum. Lessons with engaging stories, including from ancient texts like the Bible, can improve students鈥 vocabulary and comprehension skills, he told the lawmakers. He shared data from Lubbock, one of the districts that piloted early versions of the curriculum, where the percentage of third graders meeting expectations increased from 36% in 2019 to 47% this year. 

Texas education Commissioner Mike Morath says a new K-5 reading curriculum would improve student performance, but some state board members are concerned about who wrote the biblical lessons. (Jon Shapley/Houston Chronicle/Getty Images)

But Talarico questioned whether teachers are adequately trained to respond to student鈥檚 questions about religious topics raised in the curriculum like the Resurrection of Jesus and the Eucharist.

鈥淲hen you’re talking about faith and you’re talking about theology, you’re working with fire,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hese are serious topics. To me, this seems not only reckless, it seems that it could do great harm to students, whether they’re Christian or not.鈥

Republicans on the committee said their constituents have been 鈥渃raving鈥 such lessons. 

Rep. Matt Schaefer rejected Talarico鈥檚 concerns that students of other faiths might feel left out. Other major world religions, like Islam and Hinduism, he said, 鈥渄id not have an equal impact on the founding belief systems of our country.鈥 

Biblical experts who have analyzed the new lessons, however, find inaccuracies and say some of the material is misleading. 

The Texas Freedom Network, which describes itself as a 鈥渨atchdog for monitoring far-right issues,鈥 released an of the curriculum Thursday, saying several lessons give students a distorted view of history.

The authors of the curriculum 鈥渟muggled鈥 in lengthy passages on Christianity when a sentence or two would have been sufficient, David R. Brockman, a religious studies scholar at Rice University and the report鈥檚 lead author, said in an interview. He pointed, for example, to a reading from the Book of Matthew on the Last Supper as part of a fifth grade study of Leonardo da Vinci鈥檚 painting.

鈥淚 really wanted to keep an open mind,鈥 he said, adding that the emphasis on the Bible makes sense when teaching students about Western civilization, but doesn鈥檛 help them learn to live in a diverse society. 鈥淎re they looking purely backward or are they looking forward? Texas students are not going to be living in 1787.鈥

Mark Chancey, a religious studies professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, said he submitted over 80 comments to the state. Some focus on a second grade lesson about , which talks about her faith in God, prayer and protecting the Jewish people鈥檚 freedom to worship.

The curriculum authors edited biblical material 鈥渢o their liking to make it more religious,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he Book of Esther never mentions God, prayer or worship 鈥 not even once.鈥 

His analysis of at least four other lessons that include Bible verses showed the authors exclusively relied on the New International Version of the text, a he called a 鈥渄istinctively evangelical translation鈥 that was 鈥渕ade by evangelical scholars for evangelical Christians.鈥

A spokesman for the education agency did not address specific criticisms but said officials would examine potential inaccuracies revealed in the comments.

鈥榃ill it teach students to read?鈥

Pam Little, another Republican board member, said her constituents are split 鈥渁bout 50-50鈥 over the significance of the biblical material. Some conservative parents, she said, are upset 鈥渂ecause they don’t feel like public schools are the place to teach Christianity.鈥

Will it teach students to read? For some reason, we seem to be having problems in Texas with that.

Pam Little, Texas Board of Education

But others, she said, are more concerned with whether the lessons will improve student performance. This year鈥檚 elementary test scores show there鈥檚 still a long way to go. The results were , with declines in third and fifth grade and an increase in fourth. 

The real question is 鈥淲ill it teach students to read?鈥 Little said. 鈥淔or some reason, we seem to be having problems in Texas with that.鈥

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New Curriculum Sparks Texas-Sized Controversy Over Christianity in the Classroom /article/bible-infused-curriculum-sparks-texas-sized-controversy-over-christianity-in-the-classroom/ Fri, 07 Jun 2024 19:26:45 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=728057 The day before he unveiled a massive new laden with Bible stories, Texas education Commissioner Mike Morath sat down with a Democratic lawmaker at the state capitol.

Rep. James Talarico had concerns.

The third-term legislator from Round Rock, near Austin, pointed Morath to a lesson on the Sermon on the Mount 鈥 Jesus鈥檚 instruction to 鈥渄o unto others as you would have done unto you.鈥

The text makes only passing reference to similar messages in and , and never mentions that taught a version of the Golden Rule 600 years earlier. 

Texas Rep. James Talarico, a Democrat and seminary student, is concerned about the Judeo-Christian emphasis in the state鈥檚 proposed K-5 reading curriculum. (Astrida Valigorsky/Getty Images)

鈥淚 think it’s pretty egregious and will shock a lot of Texans,鈥 Talarico said of the curriculum.

If it seems strange that four paragraphs about an ancient text in for kindergartners arouses such passions, welcome to the latest Texas-sized controversy about Christianity in the classroom.

Talarico is not just a Democrat in a deeply red state, but a former middle school English teacher and a seminary student studying to be a Presbyterian minister. Morath, he said, agreed the new material doesn鈥檛 grant 鈥渆qual time鈥 to other religions. 鈥淚 thought that was a fundamental flaw in this curriculum. He did not.鈥

As parents, academics and activists begin to pore over the thousands of pages the education department released, Morath鈥檚 acknowledgement sheds light on the state鈥檚 approach. 

The new curriculum is based on the increasingly popular notion of 鈥渃lassical education,鈥 which stresses the primacy of the Judeo-Christian tradition in shaping Western literature and U.S. history. As 社区黑料 first reported last week, the project won praise from conservatives and parents who want students to get more rigorous reading material. Connecting coursework to ancient texts, including the Bible, offers students a cultural vocabulary they鈥檒l need to tackle more complex assignments in middle and high school, Morath said.

He downplayed the religious material as a 鈥渟mall piece鈥 of the curriculum, and called the biblical lessons

But a review by 社区黑料 shows that biblical figures and stories are central to multiple lessons across the 62 K-5 units. The curriculum not only gives short shrift to other religions 鈥 Muhammad appears to have escaped mention, despite his role in shaping a faith practiced by half a million Texans 鈥 but scholars who have examined the material say it offers a decidedly Christian interpretation of history, particularly the story of America鈥檚 founding and civil rights struggles.  

A third grade lesson on ancient Rome summarizes the life story of Jesus, from his birth to his resurrection. (Texas Education Agency)

A textual guide for a third-grade unit on recommends teachers play 鈥淪ilent Night鈥 or 鈥淎way in the Manger鈥 as they begin a lesson on the life of Jesus 鈥 from his birth and ministry to Crucifixion and Resurrection. In addition to a smattering of New Testament vocabulary (鈥渕essiah,鈥 鈥渄isciple鈥) students get what appears to be a factual account from Josephus, a first century historian, on Christ鈥檚 death: Jesus鈥檚 disciples reported that he 鈥渁ppeared to them three days after his crucifixion and that he was alive.鈥

But scholars overwhelmingly the authenticity of this account, which they say was likely added by medieval clerics more than a thousand years later in an attempt to prove Christ鈥檚 deity.

鈥淭o use this as historical proof, which is exactly how it is presented in this lesson, is quite unwarranted and specious,鈥 said L. Michael White, a biblical scholar at the University of Texas-Austin.

In keeping with classical education鈥檚 focus on religious allusions, that lesson sets the stage for a fifth grade study of C.S. Lewis鈥檚 The celebrated fantasy tells the story of four siblings who evacuate to the English countryside during World War II. They emerge through a magical armoire to encounter Aslan, a noble lion who later sacrifices himself for one of the children and returns from the dead. 

A scene from an adaptation of C.S. Lewis鈥檚 fantasy novel, 鈥淭he Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.鈥 A fifth grade lesson in Texas鈥檚 new curriculum calls the story a 鈥渂iblical allegory.鈥 (Don Smith/Radio Times/Getty Images)

The teacher鈥檚 guide calls it a 鈥渂iblical allegory.鈥 

鈥淓xplain how the Old Testament of the Bible had many prophecies about a future savior that are written as fulfilled in the New Testament by Jesus,鈥 the note says. 鈥淭here are also prophecies in the New Testament by Jesus. There are prophecies in the Bible about a future where Jesus returns to the world to make wrong right.鈥

Those instructions alarm one prominent education figure. In the early 1990s, Sandy Kress helped develop an accountability system for Texas schools that inspired No Child Left Behind, the landmark federal education law. Kress, who is Jewish, later advised George W. Bush when the former governor became president.

鈥淚 would argue this is teaching Christianity,鈥 said Kress. His school reform days behind him, Kress now teaches and funds projects that encourage between Christians and Jews.

Sandy Kress, a former Bush administration adviser, hopes to see some changes in the state鈥檚 new reading program before it鈥檚 approved. (Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP)

Morath鈥檚 staff called on Kress for guidance on the curriculum last year, and on his advice, recruited his rabbi to review earlier drafts of the material. Kress told 社区黑料 that he wants further revisions and is hopeful the state will consider them.

鈥淐an Christians do this in a way that is respectful of other faiths 鈥 without feeling the need to prove Christian doctrine? That’s the test for them,鈥 Kress said. 鈥淲hether they pass the test or not will prove whether this is an honorable exercise and whether it would be able to survive a constitutional challenge.鈥

State officials declined to comment on their dealings with Kress and Talarico. In a statement, Morath said the biblical material in the curriculum 鈥渄oes not include religious lessons as one would find in a religious school.鈥 He added that the content reflects 鈥渧arious religious traditions鈥 and that 鈥渟tudents will learn about aspects of most major world religions.鈥

But in response to criticism, education officials promised to add 鈥渓anguage from the First Amendment鈥 on the need for a clear separation between church and state to its lessons on American history.

The public has to comment on the proposed curriculum, which goes to the state Board of Education for approval in November. The stakes are high. If adopted, the curriculum would instantly become not only the nation鈥檚 largest classical education model, but the biggest infusion of Judeo-Christian teachings into the public education system in decades. The state is encouraging districts to adopt the material by offering incentives of up to $60 per student.

Texas education Commissioner Mike Morath (Melissa Phillip/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

To Morath, the new curriculum offers schools their best chance at raising reading scores in a state that saw during the pandemic. In addition to phonics-based instruction in the early grades, the curriculum draws from history, science and the arts to boost students鈥 knowledge of the world. While the biblical material has drawn the most attention, there are many units that have no religious references and highlight famous Texans, like civil rights leader and Black-Native American aviator . Students learn best, Morath said, when they get early and repeated exposure to a subject.

鈥淲hen you’re designing elementary reading materials, you have to pick topics and stick with them for a few weeks,鈥 he told 社区黑料. In districts that have piloted some of the material over the past three years, 鈥渢he vocabulary complexity is night and day different鈥 than some of the more simplistic reading lessons teachers used before, he said.

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush Texas on offering districts 鈥渞ich content based on the science of reading and not outdated practices,鈥 while and classical education advocates brushed off concerns that the materials have too many biblical references.  

The Texas curriculum 鈥渟trikes me as a rather mild step in the right direction,鈥 said John Peterson, a humanities professor at the University of Dallas. For years, he said, 鈥渁nything passingly biblical [has been] treated as a form of pornography, something filthy and shameful, and only to be consumed in private.鈥

鈥榋ero reference points鈥

Jeremy Tate knows firsthand how difficult it can be to engage students who lack a basic knowledge of the Bible. When he taught Geoffrey Chaucer鈥檚 The Canterbury Tales to 10th graders in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, they had 鈥渮ero reference points鈥 for the collection of stories told by medieval pilgrims on their way to Canterbury Cathedral.

Some students didn鈥檛 have any knowledge of the Bible, let alone 鈥渁nything about a pilgrimage, a relic or any of the language that was so much a part of the vernacular,鈥 said Tate, now CEO of the , an alternative college entrance exam.

He鈥檚 concerned, however, about the classical movement being 鈥減olitically hijacked鈥 by Republicans trying to appeal to conservative Christians.

鈥淚n some ways, it’s an impossible battle,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e’re living through a moment where very few people can think outside of political categories.鈥

As if to underscore that point, the new curriculum arrived just four days after the state鈥檚 Republican party unified behind calling for mandatory 鈥渋nstruction on the Bible, servant leadership, and Christian self-governance.鈥 Delegates also want students to study an from Thomas Jefferson that use to argue that church-state separation is a myth. 

鈥楥ultural heritage鈥

That approach contrasts with Morath鈥檚 more measured admonitions to those who reviewed the materials. The commissioner鈥檚 charge to a 10-member advisory board at their first meeting last summer was to 鈥渕ake sure we were on the side of literature as opposed to a worshipful treatment of that material,鈥 said Marvin McNeese Jr., an adviser who teaches at the College of Biblical Studies in Houston, an orthodox school that he said takes a 鈥渢raditional interpretation of the Bible.鈥

All the stories that I read directly explain something that students may very well come across. I mean, we have laws named Good Samaritan laws.

Marvin McNeese Jr., College of Biblical Studies

The volunteers included some recognizable names, like former GOP presidential candidate Dr. Ben Carson, who served as a cabinet member during the Trump administration, and Danica McKellar, and mathematician who has been outspoken about her faith.

McNeese said he spent about 40 hours between August and February reviewing lessons and doesn鈥檛 see a problem with its Judeo-Christian emphasis. 

鈥淚t’s because of our own cultural heritage,鈥 he said. 鈥淎ll the stories that I read directly explain something that students may very well come across. I mean, we have laws named Good Samaritan laws.鈥

A first grade storytelling unit includes a lesson on the parable of the prodigal son. (Texas Education Agency)

Under federal law, schools can teach the Bible as literature, but not in a devotional way. Mandatory Bible readings and prayer were common in many public schools until a series of in the early 1960s ended those practices. The court, however, allows voluntary prayer and under its current conservative majority has increasingly tilted in favor of religious expression. 

Conflicts about biblical material in public school have recently erupted over Bible verses in a Florida and in an that posted a New Testament verse on a hallway wall. But experts say the scope of Texas鈥檚 undertaking increases the potential for trouble.   

The Bible references in the new curriculum start in kindergarten, when children draw pictures inspired by the creation story in the Book of Genesis. By fifth grade, students studying poetry ponder what King David meant in Psalm 23 when he wrote, 鈥淭he Lord is my shepherd.鈥 In between are familiar Bible stories about the wisdom of King Solomon, the prodigal son and Paul鈥檚 conversion to Christianity on the road to Damascus.

A Nathaniel Currier lithograph depicting Noah鈥檚 Ark is one of the Genesis-related pieces of art kindergartners study in a newly proposed Texas curriculum. (Texas Education Agency)

The Texas lessons frequently say 鈥渁ccording to the Bible鈥 or 鈥渁s the Bible explains,鈥 but Mark Chancey, a religious studies professor at Southern Methodist University, dismissed those as 鈥渕eager efforts鈥 at objectivity. 鈥淭he literalistic way they present Bible stories encourages very young children to simply take them at face value,鈥 he said. 

He pointed to a fifth grade lesson on Leonardo da Vinci鈥檚 鈥淟ast Supper鈥 in which teachers read a passage from the Book of Matthew for added context. Students, he said, are bound to be left with questions. 

“How did Jesus know someone would betray him? What does Jesus mean when [the teacher] says the bread is his body and the cup is his blood?” Chancey asked. 鈥淚s the teacher ready to explain all the different versions of Eucharistic theology found in different forms of Christianity?鈥

The literalistic way they present Bible stories encourages very young children to simply take them at face value.

Mark Chancey, Southern Methodist University

Many of those teachers have probably never received training on how to discuss religion in a public school classroom, said Kate Soules, founder and director of the Religion and Education Collaborative, which focuses on how schools talk about matters of faith. Teachers might be better off focusing on the literary value of Lewis鈥檚 鈥淐hronicles of Narnia鈥 than prompting students to think Aslan, the lion, represents Jesus, she said. Teachers could 鈥渧ery quickly end up in violation of the First Amendment.鈥

The tone and focus is a concerted departure from the curriculum Amplify, a leading publisher, offered the state in 2020 under a $19 million contract. In over 40 pages, that version gives to Christianity, Islam and Judaism. A separate unit features on Hinduism, Buddhism and Confucianism.

The state, however, rejected those sections, said Amplify officials, who later balked when Texas asked for additional biblical content. As 社区黑料 previously reported, the company opted not to bid on a contract for the next phase of the project. 

Amplify鈥檚 Core Knowledge Language Arts program teaches first graders about three major world religions. Texas opted not to use the lesson. (Amplify)

Experts say the current curriculum is notable not only for its emphasis on Christianity, but for what it omits. 

A first grade lesson on American independence, Chancey said, paints an idealistic picture of religious liberty by asserting different denominations 鈥渢hrived in the colonies.鈥 In reality, pilgrims were often intolerant of . 

The program devotes ample space to the evangelism of the colonists during a period of religious revival known as the Great Awakening. But 社区黑料鈥檚 review found no material on the considerable influence of thinkers from the Enlightenment, a concurrent intellectual movement that inspired the writings of early American thinkers on individual rights and church-state separation. 

鈥楤oth sides of that debate鈥

That stained glass lens extends to the Civil Rights era. In both second and fifth grade, the text emphasizes the Christian faith of Black leaders as key to the movement to end segregation. But there鈥檚 no mention of who used the Bible to justify racism and Jim Crow laws, like Henry Lyon Jr., who that God 鈥渟tarted separation of the races.鈥

鈥淚f you just portray that religious leaders were against segregation, that’s extremely misleading,鈥 Chancey said. 鈥淵ou had religious leaders on both sides of that debate.鈥 

An assignment on points fifth graders to Martin Luther King Jr.鈥檚 biblical allusions, including the persecution of early Christians and Jews who refused to worship false idols. But it ignores King’s intended audience 鈥 “white moderate” preachers “who have never felt the stinging darts of segregation.” 

鈥淒r. King鈥檚 focus was the incompatibility of racial segregation with Judeo-Christian values and the Christian faith,鈥 said Raymond Pierce, president and CEO of the Southern Education Foundation, a nonprofit focused on equity. 

Raymond Pierce, president and CEO of the Southern Education Foundation, suggested that a lesson on the Book of Daniel doesn鈥檛 communicate the main point of Martin Luther King Jr.鈥檚 鈥楲etter from Birmingham Jail.鈥 (Southern Education Foundation)

Pierce has a divinity degree, leads a Sunday school class and teaches political theology at Duke University. His family tree extends back through the founding of the Black Pentecostal Church in the early 1900s. 鈥淚t does not get much more fundamental than that,鈥 he quipped.

But he’s also a civil rights attorney. In reviewing excerpts from the curriculum for 社区黑料, Pierce found himself turning to to Virginia lawmakers in 1785. Madison wrote that while Christians fought for their own religious liberty, they could not 鈥渄eny an equal freedom to those whose minds have not yet yielded to the evidence which has convinced us.鈥 

Those who support the Texas curriculum are 鈥減ushing a warped version of Judeo-Christian principles,鈥 Pierce said. 鈥淚t is quite troubling that these supporters either intentionally or naively want to bring divisive issues within the Christian Church into our public schools.鈥   

To share tips on Texas鈥檚 proposed reading curriculum, contact Linda Jacobson at lrjacobson@proton.me.

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Exclusive: Texas Seeks to Inject Bible Stories into Elementary School Reading /article/exclusive-texas-seeks-to-inject-bible-stories-into-elementary-school-reading-program/ Wed, 29 May 2024 13:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=727612 Texas elementary school students would get a significant dose of Bible knowledge with their reading instruction under a sweeping curriculum unveiled Wednesday. 

From the story of Queen Esther 鈥 who convinced her husband, the Persian king, to spare the Jews 鈥 to the depiction of Christ’s last supper, the material is designed to draw connections between classroom content and religious texts.

鈥淚f you’re reading classic works of American literature, there are often religious allusions in that literature,鈥 state education Commissioner Mike Morath told 社区黑料. 鈥淎ny changes being made are to reinforce the kind of background knowledge on these seminal works of the American cultural experience.鈥 

Texas education Commissioner Mike Morath said students need some context from the Bible to 鈥渨restle鈥 with ideas in 鈥済reat works of literature.鈥 (Melissa Phillip/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

With the potential to reach over 2 million K鈥5 students in the nation鈥檚 second-largest state, the update marks a big step in a movement embraced by conservatives to root young people鈥檚 education in what they consider traditional values. But it鈥檚 bound to raise questions about the potential for religious indoctrination in a state that has been a battleground for such disputes. Last year, for example, Texas passed a law allowing to work as school counselors.

鈥淚t is reasonable to devote some attention to [the Bible], and state education standards across the nation often require such attention,鈥 said Mark Chancey, a religious studies professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. 鈥淭he problem, of course, is that sometimes the legitimate reason of cultural literacy is used as a smokescreen to hide religious and ideological agendas.鈥

In an interview with a Christian talk show, GOP , who describes himself as a 鈥,鈥 praised the curriculum changes, saying they will 鈥済et us back to teaching, not necessarily the Bible per se, but the stories from the Bible.鈥

The release comes four days after the state Republican party calling on the legislature and the state Board of Education to require instruction on the Bible. Texas education department officials declined to comment on the platform and have emphasized that the new curriculum includes material from other faiths.

While largely hidden from public view, the redesign sparked behind-the-scenes debate long before its release. When a leading curriculum publisher balked at the state鈥檚 request to infuse its offerings with biblical content, Texas officials turned to other vendors. They include conservative Christian in Michigan and the right-leaning Texas Public Policy Foundation, which an unsuccessful to require the 10 Commandments in every classroom, according to a list obtained by 社区黑料.

Republican Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick told a Christian radio show that the state is working on a curriculum that will add 鈥渟tories from the Bible.鈥 (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

鈥楪reat works of literature鈥

Going far beyond typical reading and writing fundamentals, the new lessons draw on history, science and the arts 鈥 鈥渨hat many people call this classical model of education,鈥 Morath said.

To understand 鈥,鈥 a book about a Jewish family hiding in Denmark during World War II, he said students should understand more about 鈥淛ewish cultural practices鈥 and 鈥渢he vilification of this ethnic minority.鈥 

A unit on 鈥淔ighting for a Cause,鈥 one of several that officials shared with 社区黑料, includes the Old Testament story of Esther and how she and her cousin Mordecai 鈥渇ought for what they knew was right and made a difference that not only affected the Jews of Persia but also Jewish people today.鈥

The mentions range in size from a page on Esther to a few paragraphs about Samuel Adams at the Continental Congress. His plea to fellow delegates to pray together, despite religious differences, is offered as a first-grade vocabulary lesson on the word 鈥渃ompromise.鈥 

Fifth graders are asked to read Martin Luther King Jr.鈥檚 鈥.鈥 Written after his 1963 arrest for leading a , King compared his act of civil disobedience to the 鈥渞efusal of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego to obey the laws of Nebuchadnezzar鈥 in the Book of Daniel.

Caption: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., third from right, walked to a press conference in Birmingham, Alabama, on May 15, 1963, about a month after he was arrested for a demonstration against racism and wrote 鈥淟etter from a Birmingham Jail.鈥 (Bettmann/Contributor)

鈥淚f you don’t know who Nebuchadnezzar is, you don’t know what [King鈥檚] talking about,鈥 Morath said. 鈥淗ow do you make sure that you can unlock in the minds of our kids their ability to wrestle with 鈥 ideas that have surfaced in great works of literature?鈥 

Not just literature, but art. A lesson on 鈥淭he Last Supper,鈥 da Vinci鈥檚 Renaissance masterpiece, points fifth graders to the New Testament. 

鈥淭he Bible explains that Jesus knew that after this meal, he would be arrested, put on trial, and killed,鈥 the text reads. 鈥淟et鈥檚 read the story in the book of Matthew to see for ourselves what unfolded during the supper.鈥

Curriculum revisions include details on Leonardo da Vinci鈥檚 15th century masterpiece, 鈥淭he Last Supper.鈥 (Wikimedia)

While drawing parallels to religious texts, Morath said the lessons would respect bright lines regarding the separation of church and state.

鈥淭his is still a curriculum for public school and we’ve designed it to be appropriate in that setting,鈥 he said. 

New religious-related material in a proposed Texas elementary school reading program includes Old Testament references to the Liberty Bell, an exploration of the meaning of the Jewish holiday Purim and the story of Christ’s last supper. (Texas Education Agency)

The role of Amplify

The redesign builds on a $19 million m delivered during the pandemic by Amplify, a based in New York.

Roughly 400 districts have used their materials since 2021. Some teachers give them high marks for building students鈥 and comprehension. But not everyone has been pleased. Last year, Morath who decried its emphasis on and minimal attention to Christianity.

鈥淭here’s one mention of Jesus, that he was a teacher a couple thousand years ago,鈥 said Jamie Haynes, who runs a on 鈥渃oncerning鈥 curriculum and library books. 鈥淭he only other time we can find God, our God 鈥 the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob 鈥 is in the American unit.鈥 

State education Commissioner Mike Morath met last year with conservative parents concerned about lessons in the state鈥檚 reading curriculum, which is based largely on Amplify鈥檚 Core Knowledge Language Arts. (Captured from YouTube)

The issue of how 鈥 and whether 鈥 to incorporate religious content was fraught long before the curriculum reached school districts.

State officials asked Amplify to provide a lesson on the story of Esther and suggested a unit on Exodus, said Alexandra Walsh, the company鈥檚 chief product officer.

While it had previously tweaked its curriculum for other states, Walsh said the company had never been asked to add biblical material. And when it suggested inserting content from other world religions, the state rejected the idea, said Amplify spokeswoman Kristine Frech.

鈥淭here was not much appetite for a variety of wisdom texts,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here was much more of an appetite for the tie to traditional Christian texts.鈥

The company opted against bidding on a contract to provide additional revisions. In a statement, Texas education officials dismissed Amplify鈥檚 charge that they turned down material from other religions as 鈥渃ompletely false鈥 and stressed that the finished product “includes representation from multiple faiths.鈥 But the state declined to specify how many of the new lessons have religious themes or derive from Judeo-Christian sources.

Caption: J. Robert Oppenheimer, right, who played a leading role in developing the atomic bomb, looked at a photo of the explosion over Nagasaki, Japan. (Bettmann/Contributor)

In an interview with 社区黑料, Morath pointed to a World War II lesson that focuses on J. Robert Oppenheimer鈥檚 upon witnessing the explosion of the first atomic bomb in Los Alamos: 鈥淣ow, I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.鈥 The words, featured prominently in the recent Oscar-winning film, derive from the Bhagavad Gita, a Hindu scripture.   

Kindergarteners studying the Golden Rule would learn that the idea comes from the 鈥淐hristian Bible,鈥 according to the text, but that similar principles can be found in the 鈥渁ncient books鈥 of Islam and Hinduism. Another section on the Renaissance highlights Muslim settlers in Spain and their contributions to philosophy, poetry and astronomy.

鈥楤iblical literacy鈥

After Amplify bowed out, the state an $84 million contract to the Boston-based Public Consulting Group to revise the curriculum.

For the reading program, the company worked closely with several authors who specialize in , including its role in westward expansion and launching the national space program, according to a list of vendors provided by the state.

But it also leaned on conservative organizations steeped in the culture wars. Contracts went to two officials at the Texas Public Policy Foundation: Courtnie Bagley, the think tank鈥檚 education director, and Thomas Lindsay, a higher education director and vocal opponent of . The foundation, which called the 10 Commandments bill an 鈥渋mportant step in bringing faith-based values back to the forefront of our society,鈥 declined to comment on their contributions. Public Consulting Group officials also did not respond to questions. 

Hillsdale, another vendor, is a major player in advancing classical education. It authored the , a civics and history model that emphasizes American exceptionalism and is a favorite of conservatives opposed to lessons on institutional racism. When the Florida Department of Education dozens of math textbooks in 2020, citing content influenced by critical race theory, a analysis showed two Hillsdale representatives objected to the proposed materials.

The state did not respond to questions on the role Hilldale and the Texas Public Policy Foundation played in the new curriculum. Hillsdale officials said they provided their feedback free of charge. 

鈥淗illsdale never profits from its work in K-12, nor does it accept one penny from federal, state or local taxpayers,鈥 said spokeswoman Emily Davis. She added, 鈥淩eligion is taught for the sake of cultural literacy, not to promote a particular religion.鈥 

Originally the province of well-heeled private or parochial schools, classical education has blossomed in recent years both as a response to pandemic lockdowns and what some parents view as progressive trends in traditional public schools. The philosophy is rooted in the liberal arts and historical texts, with a sharp focus on the Greek and Roman foundations of Western civilization.

They're going to need to have some biblical literacy, if only to interpret John Milton, or Dante or Shakespeare.

Robert Jackson, Flagler College

The movement entertains healthy debate about the role of religion, but most practitioners agree that giving students a strong body of knowledge requires the use of primary sources, including the Bible.

鈥淭hey’re going to need to have some biblical literacy, if only to interpret John Milton, or Dante or Shakespeare,鈥 said Robert Jackson, a senior research fellow with the at Florida鈥檚 Flagler College.

鈥楧evotional in nature鈥

In Texas, the proposed changes would go far beyond any previous attempt to inject biblical content into its classrooms.

A allows school districts to offer high school electives on the Bible. Demand has been extremely low, however. According to the Texas Education Agency, just over 1,200 of the state鈥檚 1.7 million took the course this year.

But even with their limited scope and popularity, the courses offer ample fodder for skeptics. Writing for the Texas Freedom Network, a religious liberty and civil rights organization, Chancey, the Southern Methodist professor, the courses to be 鈥渆xplicitly devotional in nature.鈥 Despite requirements for teachers to complete special training and maintain 鈥渞eligious neutrality,鈥 Chancey wrote that the Protestant Bible was the preferred text in these courses, while Catholic, Hebrew and Eastern Orthodox Bibles were 鈥減resented as deviations from the norm.鈥 In several districts, the courses were taught by local ministers.

Sometimes the legitimate reason of cultural literacy is used as a smokescreen to hide religious and ideological agendas.

Mark Chancey, Southern Methodist University

The state is now working with a much larger canvas: not a mere elective, but an entire elementary reading curriculum, with a potential audience of millions of students.

Officials are quick to point out that adoption of the new program is voluntary. But a potential $60 per-student it is offering for participation may make it difficult for school systems to refuse.

The updated materials are now open for public review and are scheduled to go before the state Board of Education for approval this fall. Aicha Davis, a Democrat on the Republican-led board, predicted 鈥渢hey would totally support something like that.鈥

鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 surprise me that this is happening,鈥 she said.

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鈥榃e Stole 5 Years from Kids鈥: A Houston Board Member on Looming State Takeover /article/we-stole-5-years-from-kids-a-houston-board-member-on-looming-state-takeover/ Wed, 26 Apr 2023 14:00:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=707950 Even for a school system that had been racked by dysfunction for a decade, the Houston Independent School District Board of Trustees meeting of April 24, 2018, was a spectacle. The clock was running out on a timeline, set by a state law, requiring district leaders to choose from a menu of strategies to fix a handful of schools that had long failed their communities. If the board did not pick one, the Texas commissioner of education would take over. 

There was an eleventh-hour proposal on that night鈥檚 agenda, but no vote took place. Instead, the meeting dissolved into a fracas, as trustees screamed at one another, members of the audience screamed at the board and police wrestled people out of the room. The board adjourned without addressing the looming deadline.

It was the fourth month in office for newly elected trustee Sue Deigaard, a longtime education advocate and the parent of two Houston ISD graduates. Now, almost exactly five years later, as the state appoints a board of managers to take over the sprawling school system, her feelings are 鈥 complicated.


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The law in question 鈥 which Deigaard, like most Texans, refers to by its legislative file number, House Bill 1842 鈥 was the brainchild of a Houston-area lawmaker frustrated by years of district inattention to the impoverished schools in his portion of the city. In 2015, a bipartisan majority voted to require the state to step in and take over when a district has had one or more 鈥淔鈥 schools for five years. 

Lawmakers later amended the law to let districts stave off state intervention by closing the schools or giving control of them to a nonprofit partner such as a university, city government or charter school network. 

Because they can provoke vociferous opposition, school closures are among the most difficult decisions an elected board can make. And the prospect of charter school partnerships was anathema to the district鈥檚 teachers union. As Deigaard notes in this 74 Interview, the result was that small but impassioned groups of people shouted down every proposal for a local solution.

A few months after the Houston board adjourned without taking any action to head off sanctions, Texas officials announced they were investigating complaints that board members 鈥 not including Deigaard 鈥 had engaged in irregularities involving contracts and that a majority had violated state law by meeting in secret to work out a plan to replace interim Superintendent Grenita Latham. The results of the investigation also justified a state takeover, Texas Education Agency Commissioner Mike Morath said.

In 2019, the board sued the agency, claiming it had no authority to install a board of managers. In January 2023, the state Supreme Court lifted an injunction that had stopped Morath from moving forward. Dominated by new members, the Houston board voted to stop pursuing the lawsuit. Many of those who had opposed the changes were quick to claim that the ensuing takeover, which is slated to take place June 1, was a politicized move against a blue-city district by a Republican governor bent on privatization.

Deigaard will stay on after Morath appoints the nine-member board of managers, though she will be stripped of her official powers. current board members will be asked to serve as advisers to the appointees. The state will eventually return control to elected board members.  

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Set the stage for us. You ran for a seat on a school board that had been embroiled in one high-profile controversy after another for years. You must have both a titanium spine and a vision for transformation in Houston ISD.

I wanted to try to take the politics out of it. I wanted to transform what our public education system looks like. We have a system that was created in the middle of the 20th century, in a very different time societally, economically. That system was not designed to be effective and equitable for all kids. It was intentionally designed not to. And all we keep doing is trying to tinker around the edges 鈥 in a time where our society and our economy are incredibly different. 

It’s not like I entered the lion’s den having never visited before. I had been going to board meetings. I knew who the players were. I knew we were coming through this tumultuous time. I knew we were still transitioning to a new superintendent. 

Of the nine board members, three of us were new that January. Six weeks after we were sworn in, new superintendent Richard Carranza announced he was leaving to go to New York. In June, we rejected a proposed budget in the hopes that the [district] administration would bring us back something better. They didn鈥檛. We ended up voting to adopt the exact same proposal. We were going to have our own district form of government shutdown, because we wouldn’t be able to pay the bills. 

At that point, it was just chaos. 

House Bill 1842 was looming. Houston ISD leaders knew, starting in the spring of 2015, that we were at risk of sanctions in the fall of 2018. In 2017, the legislature had passed a policy giving districts two options to avoid those sanctions: improve the campus in question or close it. By 2018, we had a third option, and that was to find a partner. 

A lot of districts around the state, like San Antonio, saw the writing on the wall and took action. Dr. Grenita Lathan, our chief academic officer at the time, had a very well thought-out plan how to address our chronically underperforming campuses 鈥 not just the ones that were going to trigger sanctions, but the ones that were on the runway coming up to the trigger point. 

There were community meetings to help impacted schools understand what the recommendations were going to be, but they basically got shut down by a small, vocal community of people who didn’t like whatever the recommendation was for a given school. They didn’t want their school consolidated. They didn’t want to close it, didn’t want to partner. So none of it ever happened.

We were eventually presented with a potential partner for the schools that were going to trigger sanctions later that year. We never voted on it. The meeting got out of control. People were arrested. We made . And we did nothing. We were the only district in the state, to my knowledge, that did nothing. 

I remember talking, when we first triggered the law in 2019, to somebody who had testified in favor of House Bill 1842 in 2015. He said, “Well, we never imagined that this would happen in HISD.” I said, “Because you thought they鈥檇 give us a path out?” And he said, “No, because I thought you guys would do what you needed to do to avoid it.”

We had the opportunity, and we didn’t. We interfered with the leaders that we entrusted to bring us good recommendations. We shut it down.

Do you think the things Lathan proposed would have made a difference?

If the board had supported Grenita despite the noise, and if there were real and meaningful community engagement. Grenita and her team could have worked with these communities: 鈥淗ey, we’re going to do a closure, or a restart. What do you want school to look like? What are your hopes and dreams for your children?鈥 I think if the board had stood behind her on that, our story today would be very, very different. Student achievement would have increased. And I don’t think we would be in a position where we’d have a board of managers coming in. 

When the board decided not to endorse the plan that the interim superintendent brought forward, was there an alternate plan? 

You’re presuming nine people, plus at that point in time a superintendent, were all having constructive conversations together about a plan? I don’t think you should make that presumption. 

I was actually called the day [after the fractious April 2018 meeting] by somebody else who asked whether, if they come back next week with a partnership with another organization, would I support it? I said, I’m not going to vote for that. There needs to be a bigger, more comprehensive student-centered plan here.

This is about improving the learning outcomes for students in a way that is equitable. My objective wasn’t to save the board.

Between 2018 and now, were there more efforts to come up with an improvement plan, or was the idea to just wait for the suit to work its way through the courts?

We’ve had a lot of inconsistency in administrative leadership. We had a longstanding superintendent, Terry Grier, who left two years before I got on the board. We had an interim for a few months. We had Richard Carranza. We had Grenita as interim superintendent for 3陆 years after that. We have all the battles between different factions of the board, including the ] and appointed somebody else one day, triggering a special accreditation investigation with the state. We came finally to the other side of that and hired Millard House, who’s now been here for a year and a half. At this point, me and Elizabeth Santos are the senior board members, and we’ve only been here for five years. 

So you don’t have a lot of continuity. Which in one way was good, because in 2020, when we had four new board members and I was board chair, I’m like, we’re going to double down on governance and build a foundation and figure out where we’re trying to go so that when we hire somebody to take us there, we’ve got a plan. 

We have board members who wanted to see large-scale, systemic changes in our incredibly large, diverse and complex system. Who can see the opportunities that exist, can see where inequities exist. Your board and your superintendent don’t have to agree on everything, right? I actually think you have to have diversity of thought. But you have to have everybody centered around a core set of beliefs and values on where you’re trying to go. And we have that on paper. But I don’t feel that we’ve ever as a board been partners in that work, and certainly not our superintendent.

We just got stuck. We’re grounded in this governance model, but we weren’t seeing things come from the administration that were really challenging the status quo of what an education system can and should look like for children 鈥 and almost a quarter of a way through the 21st century. 

There’s some irony there. You had an interim superintendent who had put deep thought into systemic change and a board that wouldn’t sign off. And then you ended up with a board that wanted change but an administration that wouldn’t advance a plan. When the Texas Supreme Court decided to lift the injunction, the board had the option of continuing with the suit, as unlikely as victory seemed. But you voted not to do that. 

I’m going to say this for me, because I don’t want to speak for my colleagues on this. There’s a saying: When the elephants fight, the grass suffers. We have been in an adversarial relationship with our state agency in some ways since before I was on the board, before we even triggered 1842.

I think there was a realization that we were unlikely to win. We could either move forward in a collaborative, student-centered way or we could continue to fight. For me personally, I made a commitment to always put students first. I don’t believe that the outcome would change if we persist in this legal battle. It prolongs a period of instability for our kids.

What matters most is, how do we make sure kids are learning and growing with the least amount of disruption we possibly could have? I’ve always believed that with all of what our district has gone through in the past five years, there has to be something better for kids on the other side of it all. And how do we get to that better other side as quickly and harmlessly as we possibly can? If it’s even possible.

If the appointed board of managers and new superintendent are going to succeed, they鈥檙e going to need community support. And at the moment, there’s still a lot of shrieking.

Our public school system belongs to the public. We want the kids who have been left behind for far too long to no longer be left behind. That is a shared value between our current district governance team of 10, our board and superintendent, and our state [education] agency and therefore, presumably, . That’s a shared value.

The divergence is going to be how that is achieved. On a Saturday afternoon, not at rush hour, it takes an hour to drive from one side of Houston ISD to the other. When you go from east to west, you’re going from oil and gas plants, the shipping channel with tankers coming in and out and all of that, to the west side. That’s also oil and gas 鈥 but in shining office buildings. 

If this group can come in, understand the diversity of need and build true partnership and collaboration with communities in their pursuit of systemic changes, I think they’ll be successful. If they come in thinking they have all the answers and they’re just going to put all these things in place, nothing’s going to really be different for kids. 

It’s all about making decisions with families. That’s where the magic can happen. And we haven’t done that.

What happens to you now? You’re still an elected board member, but you don’t have any power as of June 1. Do you have ceremonial duties? 

I don’t know. I think so. Keep in mind our state agency has overseen the transition to a board of managers in other districts before. But we’re the biggest. This is not something that one new superintendent and nine appointed board members are going to be able to do on their own as quickly as they’re going to need to ramp up. They’re going to need help being introduced to the community as something other than, you know, agents of a conspiracy. 

When you have an elected board, you have people 鈥 especially if they’re viable to win 鈥 who have relationships and roots in a community. And who build more through the campaign process, through the different civic clubs they visit with, the doors they knock on and all of that. As you build these relationships, you build an understanding of the fabric of the community. 

The board of managers, they’re going from 0 to 100 while skipping that process. I think there could be value in taking a second tier of candidates [for the board of managers who do not get appointed] and creating some kind of community council that helps support that appointed board.

I do believe in democratically elected governance of public systems and public dollars. But I also know that at least in our state, long before HB 1842 came into existence, there was a process supported by both Republicans and Democrats. As a school board, you have independence from other governmental entities. But if, in cases of financial impropriety, legal malfeasance and student performance, if you’re not serving kids well, if you are engaging in behaviors that create a risk to children, then there’s going to be intervention. To make sure that kids are learning and growing and that the dollars that you were trusted with are actually being spent on the children’s learning and growth.

I don’t know that there’s an easier right thing in that equation. It’s an imperfect democracy. We’ve known that since it started over 200 years ago. It’s all about how you just keep striving for something better within those values. 

Don’t let me push you off a cliff here, but I want to know how this feels. 

Back up before we get to that, because you’re going to lose me after that. We’re so big. We’re not a suburban district with a bunch of giant one-size-fits-all schools. We know one-size-fits-all doesn’t work for all kids and it doesn’t work for all families. 

We also know that money matters, but money not spent effectively doesn’t change outcomes. The unfortunate thing about the [COVID recovery] dollars is we’re probably going to learn that in a really harsh way in the coming years. How we chose to spend it actually either made a difference for kids or didn’t. 

But we’re stuck in this conversation where it’s just about more money. We need to evolve to new school design. That doesn’t mean there isn’t room for traditional models for students for whom that works, but in a district like ours, with the number of buildings and students we have, there is absolutely room to try things out and to scale what we know works. That was always my vision. 

One of the most poignant stories from my early days of being on the board 鈥 I have all these kids鈥 faces in my head from visiting schools 鈥 was this little second-grader eagerly raising his hand in class. But he didn’t even have a teacher of record, he had a long-term sub. Is he going to be okay? 

I was visiting our disciplinary alternative education program, and I asked the school leader, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 your biggest challenge?鈥 He said, 鈥淭he kids are here for a certain number of days, so the first challenge we have is some kids start to self-sabotage so they don’t have to go back to their home school. The other challenge is kids that get back to their home school and self-sabotage so they can come back.鈥

That’s kids telling us what they need, and we’re not listening. The families who have left our system for charter schools, private schools, to homeschool, they’ve done it because we’re not giving them something they want and need for their kids. And until we start talking to families in a real way, we’re not going to be able to build a holistic system that meets the needs of all kids, and we’re going to keep leaving kids behind. 

So how do I feel? Angry that I couldn’t achieve that. Disappointed that I couldn’t achieve that. We stole five years from kids. Five years where we could have given all our focus to the needs of students without the distraction of a lawsuit and all the impediments that instability has brought to our system. We should all be angry about that.

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