Ethnic Studies Classes Illegal in Arizona as of Jan. 1
Friday 31 December 2010
by: Lourdes Medrano | The Christian Science Monitor | Report

(Photo: detritus / flickr)
Tucson, Ariz. - A controversial Arizona law targeting ethnic studies in public schools will take effect come midnight.
Like the state’s tough immigration law – which a federal judge put mostly on hold last summer – the new measure that Gov. Jan Brewer signed in May has sparked protests and legal action, as well as concerns about the future of education.
The law bans classes that promote the overthrow of the United States government and resentment toward a race or class of people. Also outlawed are courses designed primarily for students of a particular ethnic group and those that advocate ethnic solidarity rather than treat students as individuals.
In Arizona, critics claim that the law – along with the partially suspended immigration law – threatens to make the state a "new South" of discrimination against minorities. Meanwhile, educators in states such as California worry that the law could become a model for other states to follow.
For his part, Tom Horne, the force behind the Arizona law, says ethnic studies serve to divide rather than unite. “Fundamentally, I think it’s wrong to divide students by race,” says Mr. Horne, the outgoing Arizona schools superintendent, who was elected state attorney general in November.
The program teaches “one-sided propaganda” and is inconsistent with American values, he adds
Horne helped draft the law in response to complaints about a program that teaches Mexican-American history and culture in the Tucson Unified School District, the city’s largest with more than 50,000 students. He plans to announce Monday the district is in violation of the law. It will be his last day in that office.
District Defends Program
Opponents of the law say Horne’s actions are politically motivated, and they point out he has never attended a class to learn first-hand about a program that is offered to all students, not just those of Mexican heritage.
“The state has no business telling the local school board what to teach,” says Roberto Rodriguez, a professor at the University of Arizona and member of the district’s Mexican-American studies advisory board. “The state superintendent is overreaching – meddling, literally.”
Mexican-American studies has evolved over several years and has had “some pretty significant achievement results,” says John Pedicone, the district’s newly-hired superintendent. “It’s done some very important things, we believe, for an underserved population. The students that go through the program seem to do very well.”
Mr. Pedicone says district data shows that about 70 to 75 percent of the students that go through the program go on to college, compared with 20 to 25 percent of a similar demographic group.
Despite the risk of losing state funds, the district plans to keep its program. Officials believe it is in compliance with the law. “The law was created listing the things that a course of studies cannot do, and the district’s position all along has been that this course of studies does not do that,” says Pedicone.
Once Horne declares the district is breaking the new law, school officials have 60 days to present evidence of compliance at a hearing, Pedicone says. The ultimate decision rests with Horne’s successor, John Huppenthal, a Republican senator from the Phoenix area who also has been critical of ethnic studies both at the Tucson district and at the University of Arizona.
Impact Beyond Arizona
The impact of the law is worrisome to educators and students around the state. Teacher representatives at the University of Arizona recently formally stated their opposition to a law they say sends the wrong message to Arizona students.
Concerns over the law also reach beyond the state. In early December, teachers and students attended a discussion and presentation about the Arizona ethnic studies law on the University of California, Los Angeles campus.
“They thought it could have implications in California,” says Shaena Engle, a spokeswoman with UCLA’s Graduate School of Education and Information Studies.
Professor Rodriguez says it’s not the first time such programs have been singled out, but now “it’s being acted upon.” He views the state’s ethnic studies and immigration laws as attacks on all Hispanics and as reasons why some people might refer to Arizona as “the new south.”
All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.



Comments
This forum is moderated by software. Please allow up to 15 minutes for your comments to go live and avoid posting the same comment multiple times.
Who disagrees with
Sat, 01/01/2011 - 13:10 — Roberto (not verified)Who disagrees with part?
"The law bans classes that promote the overthrow of the United States government and resentment toward a race or class of people. Also outlawed are courses designed primarily for students of a particular ethnic group and those that advocate ethnic solidarity rather than treat students as individuals."
So why the nasty title, is this Truthspin? Its not illegal, is just that taxpayers thought such classes are a waste of taxpayer dollars. Anyone can hold their own classes in a local library, although the professor will not collect $100,000 a year for teaching hate.
The Daily Show had a
Sat, 01/01/2011 - 13:15 — Chester (not verified)The Daily Show had a hilarious example of the waste that ethnic studies produce. A UC Davis professor produced a porno flick because he was upset that few Asian men became porn stars. This is really true.
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/wed-november-19-2003/they-so-horny-
Arizona has always been a
Sat, 01/01/2011 - 13:57 — Anonymous (not verified)Arizona has always been a racist place. Twenty years ago my Italian American wife and I were treated with contempt in the state; she was dark and we got treated like trash most places except by Latinos.
That they should legislate ignorance is no surprise there has to to a replacement for the Deep South and by choice Arizona appears to live up to it's White Only past. Avoid it.
"The law bans classes that
Sat, 01/01/2011 - 14:27 — Anonymous (not verified)"The law bans classes that promote... resentment toward a race or class of people."
Doesn't that mean most business school and sunday school classes are now in violation of the law?
The daily Show does do this
Sat, 01/01/2011 - 14:30 — fep (not verified)The daily Show does do this sort of ill-advised thing.
Almost anything has bad examples to produce. It is when they effect us on a national basis in some way it is important.
This trend towards banning progress in our country.
The last two NY governors were horrible, does this mean we should have no more governors anymore, or perhaps, have better ones. The last was removed, the current one had no chance of re-election. No need for laws. Or to prove governorships are a waste of time.
Stewart tries to balance the establishment right of center activities with random examples of crap from the left.
I bet opponents to Nazis had some real fools. No doubt. If they were used to bolster the Nazis, well, figure it out...
Isn't this how Nazi Germany
Sat, 01/01/2011 - 14:40 — Anonymous (not verified)Isn't this how Nazi Germany started, targeting the Jews and how Italy and Japan followed suite. This is outright discrimination and manipulation of human civility and rights. Taking this path can only lead to suffering and we have all been down that path. Who elects these people to office...those that fear and fear creates hate and distrust. We have been warned about fear and yet we still succumb to it by electing those that promote power over others through these means. If you believe in democracy then you believe in the melting pot and you believe in diversity and a land for all. Evidently Arizona's leaders believe in power of one class over another--their own.
I think that ethnic and
Sat, 01/01/2011 - 19:59 — Anonymous (not verified)I think that ethnic and women's studies should be integrated into curricula that all students are REQUIRED to take, and not be ghettoized.
The classes that I have taken in both women's and Mexican studies have been also one-sided, some towards Aztlan and Chicano ideology and also fairly uncritical towards the major social problems in Mexico while being critical of the major social problems in the US.
I think that if taught in classes that everyone has to take, the debate would be broader, and more meaningful for all because it would include all points of view, instead of preaching to the converted. Non hispanics could learn a lot, and hispanics wouold have to justify their sense of entitlement and what they want in terms of everyone's rights and the resources available in the US.
I do not think that the studies should be scrapped, but the current structure is negative. We need education for this century, not tired old liberal and conservative paradigms and enmities.
The whole idea of ethnic
Sat, 01/01/2011 - 21:56 — WH (not verified)The whole idea of ethnic studies has been flawed from the start. If these programs were truly integrative and encompassing of the rich tapestry of civilizations various ethnic groups, all well and good.
Almost universally, they have been forums for aggrandizement, highly biased at that, of some minority group's wonderful but discriminated against cultural contributions to the world.
When these classes teach, in addition to the cultural history of minorities, the cultural history of the dominant, western European derived culture of the US, and maybe even the aspects of that culture that caused minorities to brave all sorts of hurdles to join it, then there will be relevance.
Until then, ethnic studies will remain a political vehicle only, the irritant they are to certain groups and the otherwise irrelevant stepchild they are.
AZ is so blatantly racist
Mon, 01/03/2011 - 17:31 — Eilish (not verified)AZ is so blatantly racist these days that all I dream about is moving back to Colorado where the people are definitely purple.
I was home in Denver for the holidays and my eldest son mentioned there were some very high-paying temp jobs in his field in Phoenix. I couldn't help staring - I asked "Do you not know what is going on in AZ politically?" I turned to his elegant wife with the Masters degree in business and said "Cintra, I know you're 3rd generation legal but you are Hispanic. You will not be treated well in AZ, you will not be given career opportunities befitting your education and experience, not to mention you'll hate the heat and the old, bigoted white people."
Although that ended the discussion abruptly, my son didn't look too upset. He grew up in Az and really did dislike the heat.