Texas leaders approve Bible stories as required reading in schools

The Texas Board of Education has approved controversial changes to required reading lists for Texas public school students. They now include Bible passages.

The Republican-led board heard fiery debates from supporters and critics all week before making a decision on Friday afternoon.

Texas Curriculum Debate

What we know:

The education board is adopting new standards that will give Christianity a more prominent role and place in elementary schools, with less emphasis on cultural diversity.

The board has already voted 9-5-1 on a proposal with reading lists that includes stories from the Bible. Members are expected to vote later on Friday on a second proposal that completely rewrites the state's social studies curriculum.

The votes follows months of discussion on the board, culminating in hearings every day this week that have featured testimony from nearly 400 experts, teachers, and concerned citizens.

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What's next:

Friday’s changes will take effect for the 2030-31 school year for elementary students. The board will address changes to high school courses at a later time.

Texas reviews curriculum standards across all academic fields every 15 to 20 years. 

Supporters and critics clash over history standards

Controversy frequently accompanies decisions regarding how history and social studies are taught to Texas public school students. 

The current debate impacts the educational guidelines for the state's 5.5 million public school students.

What they're saying:

Supporters argued that Texas public school lessons should accurately reflect the specific historical context of the nation's origin. 

"History must be taught correctly, objectively, and factually, free from revisionist pressures. This proposal puts 'America First' values back into Texas education. It ensures students graduate with an uncompromised, accurate understanding of American exceptionalism, free from revisionist pressures of foreign groups and radical ideologies that seek to undermine Western civilization and subvert our traditional values," a supporter argued.

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The other side:

Democrats and other critics of the revisions claimed the new material heavily emphasizes rote memorization over critical thinking. 

They argued it downplays world cultures, civil rights, and the contributions that people of color have made to U.S. and Texas history. One critic questioned the narrow focus of the curriculum.

"What about those who came here enslaved? What about the indigenous people? We can't forget about them, especially in social studies," a critic argued. "These proposed standards actually defy the Constitution in some ways, highlighting only one group of Americans as the founders who built this country, to the exclusion of others in the past and the present."

The Source: The information in this article comes from a broadcast report by FOX 4's Dan Godwin, as well as testimony and updates from the Texas State Board of Education and the Associated Press.

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