Above Photo: Paul Hennessy/Anadolu Agency.
Fifteen years ago, Kate Sheppard reported on the propaganda within the most-used government textbook in America.
Now, right-wing fearmongering has once again reared its head in Florida schools.
Florida is fertile ground for the long-standing Republican war on education. Floridaâs Advanced Placement (AP) psychology coursesâââcollege-level courses taught in high schoolsâââwere temporarily banned because of content related to sex and gender, and the stateâs AP African American studies curriculum has removed such topics as Black Lives Matter. The Florida Board of Education even adopted the right-wing misinformation platform PragerU into its curriculum, which downplays slavery and colonialism. This landscape isnât new. Some 15 years ago, Kate Sheppard reported on one widely used textbook littered with factual misrepresentations, making students ââchoose between hard facts and the answers that their official curriculum [deemed] correct.â
In 2008, Kate Sheppard wrote:
âIt is a foolish politician who today opposes environmentalism. And that creates a problem, because not all environmental issues are equally deserving of support. Take the case of global warming.â
This quote might sound like itâs from the conservative Heritage Foundationâs handbook, or a speech by Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.), Congressâ infamous global warming denier. But itâs notâââitâs from the most popular American government textbook in the country, and itâs being taught in hundreds of high schools and colleges.
The lineâââfrom American Government, by conservative scholars James Q. Wilson and John J. DiIulio Jr.âââgoes on to describe the environmental movement as ââentrepreneurial politics.â
Wilson is the Ronald Reagan Professor of Public Policy at Pepperdine University and chairman of the American Enterprise Instituteâs Council of Academic Advisers. DiIulio is a University of Pennsylvania political science professor and former director of the Bush administrationâs faith-based initiatives.
The textbookâs section on global warming continues: âThe earth has become warmer, but is this mostly the result of natural climate changes, or is it heavily influenced by humans putting greenhouse gases into the air?â The science of global warming, the authors conclude, has created a âconflict among elites who often base their arguments on ideology as much as on facts.â
Questions about the bookâs treatment of global warming arose in December, not from the bookâs editors, but from high school senior Matthew LaClair of Kearny, N.J. His Advanced Placement American Government class at Kearny High School uses the textbook, and he noted that it plays into conservative talking points that argue science is still divided on global warming.
ââItâs unfortunate that many of the students will read this stuff, and those who may not be aware of the factual errors are learning misinformation,â says LaClair, 18, who made headlines in 2006 when he recorded a history teacher telling students that theyâd be eternally damned if they didnât accept Christ. In addition he says, it leads ââstudents to think that itâs all those annoying activists who are making this stuff up.â
The book tries to make global warming sound appealing: ââOn the one hand, a warmer globe will cause sea levels to rise, threatening coastal communities; on the other hand, greater warmth will make it easier and cheaper to grow crops and avoid high heating bills.â
Whatâs more, the book repeatedly claims that prayer in public schools is illegal when, in fact, itâs state-sponsored prayer that the Supreme Court deemed unconstitutional. And the book gives the wrong vote count for the 6â3 Supreme Court decision in Lawrence v. Texas, the 2003 ruling that overturned the Texas law that criminalized homosexuality.
Richard Blake, spokesperson for the bookâs publisher, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, refused to provide a specific figure for how many students use the textbooks, saying only it is ââthe most widely used American Government book.â
LaClair took the book to the Center for Inquiry (CFI), a non-partisan think tank in New York that promotes scientific investigation and critical thinking in public life. In April, the center put out a blistering 65-page report on the bookâs errors and biases, and has since launched a campaign to get Houghton Mifflin Harcourt to correct the errors.
âWe thought because this textbook is being used so widely in classrooms across America, that it was very important to address these misperceptions so that our next generation of leaders arenât confused about these issues,â says Derek Araujo, the groupâs executive director.
Friends of the Earth launched a campaign to get the bookâs claims about global warming revised, and two of the worldâs most prominent climate scientists, James Hansen, director of NASAâs Goddard Institute for Space Studies, and Michael MacCracken, chief scientist for climate change programs at the Climate Institute, sent letters to the publisher urging it to correct these misleading statements.
In April, Blake assured the Associated Press that the publisher ââwill be working with the authors to evaluate in detail the criticisms,â and that the problems have been resolved in the 2008 edition.
But some of the same errors remain, including the erroneous Supreme Court vote on the Lawrence v. Texas and most of the erroneous claims about prayer in schools.
Neither DiIulio nor Wilson responded to requests for comment. But on April 27, Wilson wrote an op-ed for the Los Angeles Times in which he called LaClair and CIFâs complaints ââridiculous.â
Blake maintains that the authors were simply trying to convey the ââpoliticsâ of the issue rather than disputing the science. He says a team of editors, copy editors and outside experts review their books. ââWeâre proud of the process that we have,â he says. ââWe believe it is a very even-handed book.â
Meanwhile, students like LaClair are using the book to prepare for exams, and are left to choose between hard facts and the answers that their official curriculum deems correct. LaClairâs class reached the global warming section in May, and the New School-bound senior wasnât sure what he would do on the examâââgive the answers his teacher wants based on the text, or an answer based on current science.
ââItâs a tough call,â says LaClair, ââbecause I would be risking my grade.â
Source: Popularresistance.org