In a completely unsurprising decision, the Florida Board of Education approved a few revisions to the stateβs standards for teaching Black history by watering down slavery as something βbeneficialβ to our enslaved ancestors.
The board published their Social Studies standards and benchmarks βwith clarificationsβ for 2024. To add a little razzle dazzle, the document begins with a quote from Frederick Douglass:
Suggested Reading
βTo deny education to any people is one of the greatest crimes against human nature...β
Well, if thatβs the case, itβs certainly hypocritical to follow Gov. Ron βslavery wasnβt that badβ DeSantisβ lead on how to teach Black history given the ways heβs tried to dilute it to avoid βwhite guilt.β
According to the standards, the board approved for students to learn that out of the 400 years of forced labor, inhumane living conditions, senseless violence and psychological abuse, somehow βslaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.β
Yβall act like they had a choice.
Aside from the βbenefitsβ of slavery, there was also a clarification regarding lessons on white mob-led riots such as the Ocoee massacre in 1920 and Tulsa massacre in 1921, which the board characterized as βacts of violence perpetrated against and by African Americans.β
What do you mean by African Americans? Did the Black residents of Tulsa wake up one day and decide to burn their own city down? Weβre not the only ones asking questions: A teachers union had some feedback for the board in a meeting Wednesday night.
βThat is a concern, as well as making sure that our students have a complete and honest history around both the African American experience and all experiences in our country,β said Florida Education Association President Andrew Spar via Orlando Weekly.
This is the latest development since the College Board rejected the AP African American Studies course pitched last year because it was βcontrary to Florida lawβ (or more like contrary to DeSantisβ war against woke-ism).
On behalf of the teacherβs union, Spar urged the board to reconsider the language by talking with teachers about the standards despite the assertion the standards were crafted with input from educators, per Orlando Weeklyβs report.
Now, students must go another year learning their ancestors somehow benefited from being sold and slain.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.