Las Vegas Sun

April 19, 2024

EDITORIAL:

Setting the record straight on critical race theory in education

Bravo to the Clark County School District for putting the focus where it belongs in the national discussion about critical race theory — on the need for young Americans to know the good, the bad and the in-between about our nation’s history when it comes to racial issues.

Following a recent school board meeting that got out of hand over the issue, CCSD relayed a statement to the community Wednesday supporting classroom instruction on matters of race and their impact on American history and society. The statement was issued by Council of the Great City Schools, an educational advocacy organization that includes CCSD and 76 other large urban school districts in the U.S.

It’s a well-reasoned and well-written perspective on the matter, authored by CGCS Executive Director Michael Casserly. We believe it’s worth republishing in its entirety, and we strongly encourage everyone in our community to read it.

Before we do, though, we would like to reiterate our support for CCSD’s stance on the issue.

For our children to understand how we got to our current place on racial relations, and to avoid making the mistakes of our past and to forge a better future, it’s vital to give them an unblinking and objective view of the role that race played in our history and how it continues to shape our society.

As Casserly intimates, the whitewashed curriculum favored by the political right wing is not only misleading but dangerous. To wallpaper over racist attitudes among the nation’s founders and influential leaders, ignore how white privilege and racism disadvantaged Americans of color, and downplay the evils of slavery is to cheat our children our of a comprehensive understanding of their country and leave them with mistaken notions about our progress toward equality.

Those in a panic about students learning the history of our nation’s struggle with race issues are very much like Holocaust deniers — it’s a bigoted effort to expunge history of crimes in order to deny an entire people key parts of their story and identity.

Unfortunately, the far right has politicized this issue and used it as an opportunity to fearmonger. More unfortunate yet, some Americans have taken the bait — including the parents who, during a discussion at the recent CCSD board meeting about the district’s anti-racism policy, disrupted the meeting with rants about critical race theory (CRT).

Let’s set the facts straight.

No, critical race theory is not about scapegoating white kids for the nation’s problems or forcing them into thinking they’re racists. It’s about enlightening American children of all ethnicities, and giving them the understanding they need to keep our nation moving forward toward equality and fairness for all populations.

Again, we think Casserly states the case well. Here is his statement, in its entirety.

Statement by Michael Casserly, executive director of Council of the Great City Schools

While the arc of history may bend toward justice, the unfolding story of social change is often a series of fits and starts, a steady volley of progress and pushback. In the wake of the George Floyd killing a year ago, America embarked on a new chapter of introspection and dialogue around race and society. The pushback was inevitable, and it has come in the form of opposition to the teaching of critical race theory. Never mind that elementary and secondary schools do not, for the most part, teach critical race theory; there is political advantage to be had. Critics and some state legislatures have now bundled nearly every discussion involving race and equity under this heading and cast it as divisive, unpatriotic and un-American. In fact, our schools have a moral and patriotic obligation to teach a balanced and comprehensive history of our nation, including events that others have hidden or conveniently avoided.

Education, by definition, should equip us with all the facts and information we need to form our own opinions and perspective. All the facts, not some of the facts. Not just the facts that make us proud. Otherwise, it is just indoctrination. The complete, unabridged story of American history is one of triumph and of tragedy, of great ingenuity and immense injustice, and we need to talk about both. That means that when we talk about race and our history, we need to not only celebrate the contributions of African Americans to music, sports, cuisine, language and literature, medicine, and business throughout the years, but also to explore the attitudes that led to hundreds of lynchings that occurred up to modern times. We need to highlight the contributions of Hispanic Americans to the agriculture, art and aerospace industries, but include the study of the Melendez case (a precursor to Brown vs. Board of Education) and the systematic seizure of acreage and property from Mexican American landowners in Texas in the early 20th century. We need to cover the contributions of the Navajo code talkers to winning World War II, and the horrors of the Trail of Tears and the systematic murder of the Osage for oil head rights. And it is as important to study the contributions of Chinese Americans to building the Transcontinental Railroad as understanding the racism behind the Chinese Exclusion Act. Our history is also not complete without an understanding of both the contributions of and oppression of peoples of differing faiths, gender orientations, disabilities and languages.

If our history makes some people uncomfortable, then so be it. If some people need to be reminded that everyone was born equal and that no one is superior to anyone else, then let’s remind them. If some people are surprised to learn that our culture and institutions, including our own schools, have advantaged some and disadvantaged others, then it’s about time. This is not an unfortunate byproduct — this is the purpose of education. And it is perhaps the most patriotic act possible. Because if we believe that our children are heirs to a great nation that is striving to be better and more equitable, then we need to make sure that they understand both the history of that nation, and the important role they will play in determining its future. In our quest for a more perfect union, a great nation is not afraid of or threatened by this history or the discussion of it. On the contrary, it is our ongoing dialogue and steady — if not smooth — progress toward justice and equality that makes us great.