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  1. #1
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    CA Education to Latinos: Sorry, We forgot That You Exist!

    It's impossible to ignore them....they destroyed the CA school system! How about a textbook on the decline and fall of California's school system due to the invasion of millions of illiterate illegal aliens. We could write volumes on the ill effects of the invasion!

    California Education to Latinos: Sorry, We Forgot That You Exist! By Duane E. Campbell
    Professor of Education
    California State University Sacramento

    After 20 years of using a California History-Social Science Framework which is ahistorical and misses the significant contributions of Mexicans, Latinos, and Asian to U.S. and California history, the State Board of Education will hold hearings on whether the current framework should be revised. I hope that you have an opinion.

    California has the largest population of any state, with more than 6,286,000 students in school in 2006 California students make up more than 11 percent of the United States total. California, along with some 16 other states, adopts textbooks for the entire state instead of district by district. This makes the California adoption the largest single textbook sale in the nation. Succeeding in market is an important goal for textbook publishers. Many publishers write and edit their books in a targeted attempt to win control of the large and lucrative California and Texas markets. In an effort to increase their profits, publishers promote and try to sell throughout the nation books developed in California and Texas.

    The election of 1982 began 16 years of conservative, Republican control of the California governorship. Governors appoint the members of the State Board of Education. The conservative control changed the history–social science, language, and reading curricula and textbooks for the state, and influenced textbook decisions throughout the United States.

    The 1987 draft of the History-Social Science Framework (a guide for teachers and textbook selection still in use today ) excluded an accurate history of Latino and Native American settlement of the Southwest and did not cover the substantial Asian history in the West (see Almaguer, 1994). By electing to concentrate on a melting pot, consensus point of view, the History-Social Science Framework assumed that telling the history of European immigrants adequately explains the experiences of Mexicans, Native Americans, and Asians.

    The Framework does not describe the displacement and destruction of Native American, Mexican, and Mexican American communities from 1850 to 1930 throughout the Southwest, including in Los Angeles and San Diego. The authors—among them, educational historian Diane Ravitch—failed to note that the present mosaic of Southwest culture was created by the subjugation and domination of previously existing groups, both Native American and Mexican American.

    The California document won the praise of conservative reform advocates around the nation. Honig and Ravitch and numerous funded advocacy organizations such as the Brookings Institute cited it in their writings and speeches as a positive example of the kind of multiculturalism they supported.

    In California, committees and the State Board of Education select texbooks for all the students in public schools. The U.S. history books submitted for the 1990 California adoption, and readopted in 1998 and 2005, were required to be based on the Framework. The 1987- 2005 document expanded African American, Native American, and women’s history coverage but were totally inadequate in their coverage of Latinos and Asians—both significant population groups in the development of history of the West. The only significant change between the 1985 and the 2005 adopted Framework was the addition of a new cover, a cover letter, and a photo of Cesar Chavez. Latinos make up 48.1 percent of California’s student population and Asians make up 8.1 %. Coverage of Native Americans in fourth-grade books was embarrassingly Euro-centric. The books do not accurately describe the interactive and interdependent nature of the African, European, Native American, Latino, and Asian communities. (For a detailed analysis of this curriculum conflict, see Cornbleth & Waugh, 1995. For an opposing view, see Gitlin, 1995.) Above Excerpt from Choosing Democracy: a practical guide to multicultural education. (2004)

    Focus group: Friday, May, 9, 2008, Sacramento. An agenda for the focus group meetings are posted at the CDE Web site at http://www.cde.ca.gov/ci/hs/cf/.

    Duane Campbell is a Professor of Education at Cal State University Sacramento and blogs at Choosing Democracy on major issues facing our democracy with a focus on public schooling.

    Posted on May 06, 2008
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    http://www.californiaprogressreport.com ... duc_3.html

  2. #2
    Senior Member lccat's Avatar
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    The ILLEGALS and Anchor Babies in the Texas School System are so illiterate that “ourâ€

  3. #3
    Senior Member alamb's Avatar
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    Si, Nueva America Latina!

  4. #4
    Senior Member Gogo's Avatar
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    If they adopt new books with leanings toward the Reconquista movement it will be VERY interesting to see what happens if the students tear out those sections of their books like the Hispanics tore out the American flag from their social studies books here recently. Let's see if there is discrimination in the way its handled. I smell a lawsuit coming.
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  5. #5
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    UH OH look out Calif, Texas etc. La Raza is going to start rewriting south west history and western History and I guarantee you it won't be the truth...Our kids will be taught how evil their race is and how everybody but the Europeans built America....bad news hope people watch this one.
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  6. #6
    Senior Member lccat's Avatar
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  7. #7
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    Ya well someone needs to tell them to come back and complain in at least 100 years....20 gets you crap, nil, nothing.

    This country was already built by the time you got here...you don't have to agree with us on how it was done, that is irrelevant, harvesting fruit and veggies does not qualify for building a Nation.......

    It is about building once great schools, colleges, hospitals, passing laws, building a civil society, fighting for fair wages, insurance, retirements. innovation, science etc.

    Take a look at the 3rd world nations invading our country, if you could not fix your country you certainly did not come here and build this one...left to most of these people the last 250 years, we would be no different from the country they came from.
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  8. #8
    Senior Member legalatina's Avatar
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    They are just damning themselves .....they are making generations of functionally illiterate anchor babies....I bet none of these kids could answer even the most simple Fifht grade level questions (from regular, non-invaded schools or school districts) regarding American civics, American history, math, language arts, science etc. They are condemning these kids to low-paying jobs and poverty.

  9. #9
    Senior Member miguelina's Avatar
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    It would be interesting to note how they plan to do this since "latinos" come from many countries. This is going to open a huge Pandora's box and infighting between people of each country. Someone from Peru isn't going to care or want to hear about the contributions of Mexicans.
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  10. #10
    Senior Member butterbean's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by miguelina
    It would be interesting to note how they plan to do this since "latinos" come from many countries. This is going to open a huge Pandora's box and infighting between people of each country. Someone from Peru isn't going to care or want to hear about the contributions of Mexicans.
    Thats so true. Everyone thinks that all Latinos/Hispanics are all the same, yet they come from many different countries. Not all of them share the same cultures and values.
    RIP Butterbean! We miss you and hope you are well in heaven.-- Your ALIPAC friends

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