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Wisconsin GOP Chair Pressures Schools About Obama Textbook Mention

A BUZZFLASH NEWS ANALYSIS
by Christine Bowman

First, there was Sarah Palin questioning the Wasilla Library's holdings. Now a GOP state chair wants textbooks rewritten to omit Barack Obama. And the publisher, Houghton Mifflin, sees nothing wrong with that.

The Chicago Tribune briefly reported on the controversy in Thursday's editions:

[Excerpt]

Barack Obama's inclusion in an 8th-grade textbook has GOP officials seeing red in Wisconsin.

The state Republican Party chairman has accused the Racine school district of bolstering Obama's campaign by selecting a book that includes excerpts from the Democrat's 1995 autobiography "Dreams from My Father" and his keynote address at the 2004 Democratic National Convention.

"These are [impressionable] kids," said Wisconsin GOP Chairman Reince Priebus. "Using taxpayers' dollars to promote one candidate over the other is an abuse of power."

Obama book excerpt in school textbook assailed (Chicago Tribune)

Who is abusing his power here really? Who is playing politics with America's kids?

Reince Priebus and John McCain

RPW Chairman Reince Priebus and Senator John McCain

A little background may be in order here. There is a long-standing tradition of right-wing conservatives influencing what material will be or won't be included in America's textbooks. It goes back to the 1970s and earlier, when Texas and California conservatives positioned themselves on state textbook selection committees to wield their influence on textbook publishers. Because those two states buy so many books, approving only a few choices for use statewide, they could literally tell publishers what they could and couldn't say in schoolbooks used across the entire nation. Publishers bowed to the pressure because they felt they couldn't afford to lose the monolithic California and Texas business.

The difference here is that a party chair -- not a person elected or appointed to review and make textbook purchases, but a Republican with a strictly partisan agenda -- now wants to tell a publisher and a school district what to teach or not to teach -- in the middle of a heated national election, no less. And the publisher, long since conditioned to accept "correction," just says, "Sure, whatever you say!"

Whether you like it or not, Mr. Priebus, Barack Obama is a significant figure in American history. Like it or not, Mr. Priebus, the keynote address Obama delivered in 2004 was historic and merits study. Like it or not, Mr. Priebus, your job as Republican party chair for Wisconsin does not call for intimidation of school districts and book publishers.

As for Houghton Mifflin? Their knee-jerk cave-in is ridiculous.

Again, from the Tribune's report:

The Obama excerpt appears in an optional chapter in a unit about diversity. In it, he writes about feeling out of place in his Hawaiian classroom because he didn't look like his classmates.

Publisher Houghton Mifflin Co. has said the excerpt was chosen in 2005, before Obama announced his White House bid. ...

Dangerous stuff in Reince Priebus' opinion. Wisconsin eighth graders mustn't be allowed to read about a teenager "feeling out of place," at least not if the teen was racially mixed and later rose to national prominence. What kind of signal does that send?

Isn't it more dangerous that a Republican Party chair, self-appointed as arbiter of educational correctness, has persuaded a weak-kneed publisher to censor what American students will read for years to come?

How do these guys intend to portray President Barack Obama in textbooks if the Democrat wins? Will they just decide again to leave him out?

A BUZZFLASH NEWS ANALYSIS




Dumbing Down

Actually, the dumbing down of the children started a lot earlier than Reagan. After WW II, a new method of teaching reading was introduced across the nation called the Look-Say method. Recall the infamous Dick and Jane series? It replaced a strong phonics teaching curiculum with one that depended on repetative memorization of whole words. About 45% of the population cannot learn to read well or at all without a strong phonics base, i.e. sounding out the letters and syllables. Whether this was deliberate for the purpose of disrupting our children's educations is hard to say. But as the decades went by, it is possible to see that there was no successful attempt to correct the error. There was a method that was used successfully in the New Zealand schools which was adopted in the '80s with a revision. They dropped the strong phonics portion. In the 1960s, new textbooks were first dumbed down. I experienced buying classic literature in the store that was abridged. What a bargain, I thought with my extremely tight budget. Only later did I realize that the abridgement throughout the texts was to take all the life out of the stories by wholesale elimination of descriptive words and phrases which could have expanded my child's vocabulary. Jefferson knew that education was the path to democracy. This is why the founding of the University of Virginia was the only thing he wanted on his tombstone. Pat Williams

This Isn't Fresh News

The Republican agenda since the rise of Reagan has been to dumb down the population through the corruption of educational materials. By 1984, Sec. of the Interior James Watt was busily inserting his proboscis into educational realms over which he should have had no influence. He proved to be on to something, or else we wouldn't have gotten stuck with morals hypocrite William J. Bennett as Sec. of Education. Add in W's No Child Left Edjimikated, and it's impossible to misunderestimate the effect the conservative agenda has had in making Americans more ignorant.

book burning

rob walker I'm a European and people who want to alter, censor, remove or burn books make us nervous. USA a 'free' country? Only up to a point, I'm afraid.

Racine School district

Here's the website of the Racine WI school district.
http://www.racine.k12.wi.us/
There's a "contact us" link on the top of the page and it
takes one to the address, telephone number, and email address of
the school district.

Colleen Clark
Cambridge, MA

Houghton Mifflin

Houghton Mifflin
222 Berkeley St.
Boston, MA 02116
617 351-5000
http://www.hmco.com/divisions/school_division.html

So Houghton Mifflin has promised to "remove" this section?
What if Obama is elected president?
Should textbooks not mention presidents because they belong to political
parties???

Anyway, "Dreams from My Father" is a great American story, no matter what
your politics.

I hope the Racine school board holds its ground.

Colleen Clark
Cambridge, MA

Wait Just A Minute

Wait just a damned minute. These fools don't want excerpts of a historic speech included in a textbook, but they want "creation science" included as part of science courses. If religious beliefs are acceptable then parts of a speech who will go down in history as an outstanding human being should be included. I'm so sick of these religious freakazoids trying to shove their personal beliefs down everyone else's throats.

Obama mention (textbook censorship)

Dear Goddess above! This really, really beats all, and I thought the day before yesterday had done that (drugstore opening right here in northern Virginia with no contraceptives of any kind purveyed). Can we get hold of the school board's e-mail address or telephone number and also that of Houghton-Mifflin and PROTEST? With the right addresses or telephone numbers, I'll be first in line to protest. D. M. Read Author of Layoffs http://www.layoffsbook.com

I'll join you Moongoddess

If enough of us call and/or email we can change this!