system. now officials in that state are dismissing that as part of the public school curriculum. correspondent phil keating takes a look from miami. all opposed? no, no. show the motion carries. florida become the latest state to adopt new academic standards for k through 12 public school teachers and what exactly children learn about the history of this country. the hot topic on the agenda was critical race theory. which has become divisive amongst conservatives and liberals, republicans and democrats. and with roundly rejected by the board today. unless you pass this rule, the leftist radical school board members who are just who just want to teach critical race theory to our children, who want to indoctrinate them, they will find a way. the amendment is about racism. it s about not teaching the greedy parts of our history. it s about avoiding the hard conversation for the sake of
On Dec. 29, 1890, an estimated 150 Native Americans were killed in the Wounded Knee Massacre. After that, Native American history stops; no more “notable” events happened afterward. At least, that’s the story you get from U.S. History classes. Even then, I’ve only met one person whose class even got that far, with most classes stopping around the 1830s with the Trail of Tears, as if nearly 200 years of important history had been erased from our history curriculum.
On June 21, 2020, An Act Concerning The Inclusion Of Black And Latino Studies In The Public School Curriculum was passed into law. It was a written order to promote multiperspectivity and to give a voice to minority groups that have been systemically silenced by white-centric curriculums. The bill is a triumph for diversity and representation, but it doesn’t go far enough in ensuring that all silenced minority groups receive proper treatment in our education system. Particularly, this bill lacks coverage of Nativ
policy center or the pen wharton model, that is one of those deals where it s like, you know, talk to the hand, they re not listening to it. okay, so let s say we re going after this child tax credit. because we re looking for ways that we re going to help poor people support themselves. a huge portion of the economy doesn t even know how to file their taxes. you can t learn it in a public school curriculum. you don t learn personal banking and finance in the public school curriculum. if you jack up our deficit, you are going to lose vital programs that help people. so fantastic. you re going to give a hookup here. but are you going to give americans the tools that they re even going to know how to get this, tim? well, i think these questions about what are their goals here and are they actually creating an equitably built tax bill here, and of course they re not, but they re not interested in this. this is an effort to permanently destabilize the way the federal
think we won t really know until january 6th. to rick s point, i think this could bring civics back to public school curriculum. i want to take a leap and think you ve been pleasantly surprised with president-elect trump over the last month, but i want to talk about his response to russian hacking. i mean, there s mounting pressure for this investigation, yet we haven t heard from donald trump in terms of him even acknowledging there s now a bipartisan group calling for an investigation and donald trump still says nothing. i interviewed the vice chair f f his team five times. marcia blackburn, and she wouldn t answer the question. what gives here? my speculation is we ll find out after today he s been counselled that we re going to have the electoral college cast their vote today. that will, remember, he s not the president-elect. he ll be the president-elect tomorrow or sometime later this evening and when he s the president-elect, he ll have been
tell our viewers about it. suggestions. right. i think it s time for us to pull football out of public schools. public school football is only about a third of the football in the united states. schools create unique peer pressures on kids, which divert them into play. and i think that if we moved football out of the schools, into things like pop warner league, we could rebuild the sport, as happened with boxing, college boxing in the 1960s. and then bring it back in when we have concussion management and when we have concussion prevention programs in place. but right now, there s no reason for us to make brain injury a part of the public school curriculum. taking football outside of high schools, marvin washington. i think you and i both know that is not something that s going to go over very well in just about any community in this country.