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Do Bible stories belong in K-5 curriculum? Texas board to vote in November

Texas State Board of Education chair Aaron Kinsey (center) speaks to another board member during a meeting in April. The board is considering approving a K-5 curriculum in November that includes biblical stories. Public schools are not required to use the SBOE-approved materials, but will receive extra funding if they do.
Julius Shieh
/
KUT News
Texas State Board of Education chair Aaron Kinsey (center) speaks to another board member during a meeting in April. The board is considering approving a K-5 curriculum in November that includes biblical stories. Public schools are not required to use the SBOE-approved materials, but will receive extra funding if they do.

Kimmie Fink and her husband are raising their children Catholic. Her family attends Mass, and they say grace before meals. But Fink said she was alarmed to learn Texas education officials may approve a state-developed K-5 curriculum that includes Bible stories.

鈥淚 found out about this curriculum and did a little bit of digging," said Fink, who lives in Liberty Hill, a growing suburb north of Austin. "[I] just became really concerned as a public school parent, a former teacher, that this isn鈥檛 something I want in front of my children and that doesn鈥檛 belong in Texas public schools."

Fink was one of about 100 people who shared their perspective on the proposed materials during a public hearing before the Texas State Board of Education last week.

The Republican-controlled board is set to vote in November on whether to approve a slate of instructional materials the Texas Education Agency and other publishers developed. A for public schools, but districts are not required to use them.

鈥淚 worry that we are bribing starving Texas public schools to adopt an unconstitutional, Christian Nationalist curriculum that is designed to indoctrinate students." Rep. James Talarico
Rep. James Talarico

Since the in May, critics have argued the K-5 reading curriculum inappropriately includes biblical narratives. But the agency told KUT in a statement the stories are not meant to advance certain religious beliefs.

鈥淚nstead, it's included for the literary and historical value of the content and its connection to creating a strong background of knowledge for students,鈥 a TEA spokesperson said in an email.

Fink said she thinks the curriculum puts an overwhelming emphasis on Christianity, which could alienate some students.

鈥淚 know very well that the children that Texas schools serve aren鈥檛 all Christian, and not all Christians believe the same thing,鈥 she said.

While Texas public schools don't have to use the materials the SBOE approves, districts that do will receive up to $60 per student. The extra funding is being made available as many districts throughout the state 鈥 from to 鈥 are .

鈥淚 worry that we are bribing starving Texas public schools to adopt an unconstitutional, Christian Nationalist curriculum that is designed to indoctrinate students,鈥 state Rep. James Talarico told KUT.

The Austin-area Democrat, a former public school teacher who is studying to be a minister, said the materials cross the line from 鈥渢eaching to preaching.鈥

鈥淭his new state curriculum that they鈥檙e proposing is preaching," he said. "It is pushing one religious tradition at the expense of all of the others."

The language of the Bible

But Thomas Lindsay, a member of an advisory board that reviewed the materials, disputed the idea that including Bible stories is proselytizing.

鈥淵ou have to draw the line. You cannot proselytize. At the same time, you cannot understand Western civilization and the whole world without understanding those Biblical references,鈥 he said.

Lindsay is the higher education policy director for Next Generation Texas at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a conservative think tank. He also co-authored a textbook on American government. He said introducing students to Bible stories gives them the cultural context to understand concepts and phrases they鈥檒l encounter such as 鈥減rodigal son,鈥 鈥淒avid and Goliath,鈥 鈥済ood samaritan鈥 and 鈥渇orbidden fruit.鈥

"I really think this is primarily a political slam job on what is a very well-intentioned effort." Thomas Lindsay, a member of the SBOE advisory board
Thomas Lindsay, a member of the SBOE advisory board

鈥淲ithout understanding the Bible references that undergird so much of our language and our understanding 鈥 if you don鈥檛 see that that鈥檚 got to be a part of K-12 education, then you really don鈥檛 understand the ingredients of language proficiency,鈥 he said.

Lindsay said he鈥檚 disappointed the conversation around the TEA-developed materials has zeroed in on the Bible stories that are included. Instead, he said, the focus should be on ensuring students have access to grade-level materials in their classrooms.

鈥淚 really think this is primarily a political slam job on what is a very well-intentioned effort,鈥 he said.

A TEA spokesperson also said the agency expects the materials will benefit schools because they are based on research on how students learn to read.

鈥淭his includes direct instruction in foundational skills [phonics], building a wide range of background knowledge and vocabulary, providing all students with access to on-grade-level text and ensuring students develop the writing skills necessary to be successful in middle school, high school and beyond,鈥 the spokesperson said in an email.

Lindsay said he appreciates that what鈥檚 included in the K-5 curriculum is transparent.

鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to be a teacher, a student, a Texan, anything. You can find out everything. What they鈥檙e reading, what the teacher activity books are, what the study guides are,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n fact, with each unit they send a letter to the parents saying this is what they鈥檙e going to be studying. So that in itself, I thought was wonderful.鈥

Revisions to the materials

The TEA is in the process of before SBOE members take a final vote in November. Nicholas Keith, the agency鈥檚 associate commissioner of curriculum and instruction, said in a letter to the board last week that many of the comments at the hearing echoed ones submitted during the public comment period over the summer.

鈥淎s a result, a significant number of the concerns shared during the meeting [last] week have already been addressed in the materials,鈥 he wrote.

One of the changes the TEA made was to a second-grade activity about the , who prevented an official in the Persian King鈥檚 court from carrying out a plan to kill Jews. The official, Haman, had chosen when the massacre should happen by 鈥渃asting lots.鈥

The Texas Education Agency has been revising the curriculum it developed based on public comments and that includes removing an activity that Jewish parents and organizations raised concerns about related to the story of Queen Esther.
Texas Education Agency
The Texas Education Agency has been revising the curriculum it developed based on public comments and that includes removing an activity that Jewish parents and organizations raised concerns about related to the story of Queen Esther.

Sharyn Vane, a former Austin ISD parent who is Jewish, was worried about a game of chance related to 鈥渃asting lots鈥 where students were instructed to pick a number and roll dice.

"In the same way we would not reenact Hitler choosing to execute Jews, we would not have impressionable elementary schoolers play games of dice to decide whose fate is in your hands," she said.

Vane said while she is happy the activity was removed, she's still concerned about religious content in the curriculum.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a clear, overt Christian focus," she said, "and I think some folks who might say, 鈥極h, these are just universal values and everyone needs to learn them鈥 鈥 if they鈥檙e universal values, they鈥檙e probably contained in other religious documents as well as other sources."

Age-appropriate lessons

Mark Chancey, a religious studies professor at Southern Methodist University, said while the revisions do address some of the concerns raised by the public, other information left in the materials is problematic.

鈥淲e have to reserve judgment on a lot of these revisions until we see the next product," he said, "but certainly they did not make all of the changes that, in my opinion, they should have."

Chancey said the revisions still do not address the fact that Christianity is highlighted more than other religions.

鈥淚 think Jews, Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus, Buddhists will not see themselves represented much in these lessons," he said. "In some cases they won鈥檛 see themselves represented at all."

Chancey added the state-developed materials introduce religion in ways that are not appropriate for elementary school students.

鈥淢ost people recognize that it is legal and acceptable for public schools to teach about religion and to teach about Christianity and other traditions and to teach about the Bible, but it鈥檚 important to do so in a sensitive, age-appropriate way and that鈥檚 where some of these lessons are lacking,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey seem to be designed to promote religious claims and not just cultural literacy.鈥

Vane said her kids learned about the Bible from a literary perspective when they were in high school, so they could better interpret the books they were reading.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the appropriate time to do that when students have the foundation and maturity and critical thinking skills,鈥 she said.

But Lindsay pushed back on the idea that the Bible stories included are not age appropriate.

鈥淚鈥檒l make my point with a Biblical reference," he said. "Anyone who worries about the K-5 curriculum 鈥 which they can read anytime they want 鈥 read it, because by their fruits you will know them."

Next steps

The SBOE heard nearly 10 hours of testimony during the hearing last week. Afterward, Chair Aaron Kinsey thanked the public for providing feedback on the instructional materials.

鈥淲e encourage all publishers to closely review the feedback provided so we can ensure a robust set of high-quality instructional materials will be available and used in classrooms next year,鈥 he said in a statement.

The next SBOE meeting is in November.

Copyright 2024 KUT 90.5

Becky Fogel is the newscast host and producer for 鈥淭exas Standard.鈥 She came to the show from Science Friday in New York where she produced segments on zombie microbiomes and sneaker technology. She got her start in radio at KWBU-FM in Waco and she鈥檚 happy to be back in the great state of Texas.