Current:Home > MyGroup pushes back against state's controversial Black history curriculum change -Quantum Capital Pro
Group pushes back against state's controversial Black history curriculum change
Surpassing View
Date:2025-04-08 06:20:30
After Florida's governor and education department rolled out a controversial updated curriculum regarding Black history lessons, many students, parents, educators and elected officials raised their voices over how slavery was being presented.
The new curriculum included instruction for middle school students that "slaves developed skills which, in some instances, can be applied for their personal benefit."
"That's mean," Marvin Dunn, a professor at Florida International University, told ABC News. "That's mean to say that to Black people that there was some advantage, some positive benefit to being enslaved. They weren't even considered to be persons. So how could they have personal benefits?"
Dunn and other educators have banded together with parents and students and formed a non-profit coalition, the Miami Center for Racial Justice, to protest Florida's new curriculum and raise awareness for the Black history that they say is being erased from classrooms.
MORE: Harris blasts Florida's history standards' claim slavery included 'benefit' to Black Americans
The group has held rallies and teaching tours at Florida's historical sites to counter some of the misconceptions they say are now being taught.
One of the tours was in Rosewood, Florida, where a Black community once prospered until a white mob destroyed it in 1923.
"People need to walk in the places where these things happened so that they become meaningful to them, so that you carry the experience beyond just the academic histories, not just facts," Dunn said. "If you only teach history as facts, you're really teaching a catalog, not really emotion."
MORE: Biden campaign admonishes DeSantis' culture war fights as a 'contrived political stunt'
Gov. Ron DeSantis has defended the curriculum while campaigning for president, particularly the notion that slavery benefited Black Americans.
"They’re probably going to show that some of the folks that eventually parlayed, you know, being a blacksmith into things later in life," DeSantis said during a news conference in July.
The governor further defended the curriculum changes in an interview with Fox News in August contending the curriculum's wording lets teachers show "how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit."
"That particular passage wasn’t saying that slavery was a benefit. It was saying there was resourcefulness, and people acquired skills in spite of slavery, not because of it," he said.
Juana Jones, a Miami middle school teacher and parent, however, told ABC News she was concerned about this major change to teaching slavery.
"I do believe that kids should know the truth about how this nation came about, and then they can form their own opinions afterwards," Jones said. "There's a level of trauma, and I do believe that everyone should know the truth in middle school [and] high school."
Dunn warned that the country is not far away from a period of severe anti-race violence, and the only way to solve this problem is to educate people about the truth.
"It's important to know history, to not repeat history. It's important to note so that we don't do it again," he said.
veryGood! (33)
Related
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Supreme Court declines appeal from Derek Chauvin in murder of George Floyd
- Julianna Margulies: My non-Jewish friends, your silence on antisemitism is loud
- Olympian Tara Lipinski Reflects on Isolating Journey With Pregnancy Loss, IVF Before Welcoming Daughter
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Rosalynn Carter’s tiny hometown mourns a global figure who made many contributions at home
- A new study says the global toll of lead exposure is even worse than we thought
- 2-year-old injured after firing gun he pulled from his mother's purse inside Ohio Walmart
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- The messy human drama behind OpenAI
Ranking
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- 'The price of admission for us is constant hate:' Why a Holocaust survivor quit TikTok
- California Highway Patrol officer fatally shoots man walking on freeway, prompting investigation
- Stocks and your 401(k) may surge now that Fed rate hikes seem to be over, history shows
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Why Taylor Swift's Music Is Temporarily Banned From Philadelphia Radio Station
- CEO of Fortnite game maker casts Google as a ‘crooked’ bully in testimony during Android app trial
- Attentive Energy investing $10.6M in supply chain, startups to help New Jersey offshore wind
Recommendation
Could your smelly farts help science?
New York City’s ban on police chokeholds, diaphragm compression upheld by state’s high court
Supreme Court declines appeal from Derek Chauvin in murder of George Floyd
4-year-old girl in Texas shot by grandpa accidentally in stable condition: Authorities
The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
Video shows elk charge at Colorado couple: 'Felt like we were in an Indiana Jones film'
When and where to watch the 2023 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, plus who's performing
Precious water: As more of the world thirsts, luxury water becoming fashionable among the elite