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Public enemy: bad textbooks

post #1 of 9
Thread Starter 
Education in this country needs reform from top to bottom, starting with the consolidation of text book publishing under Reagan up to Bush...

Quote:
Student flunks government text

By NANCY ZUCKERBROD

The Associated Press

Matthew LaClair questions a widely used textbook.

WASHINGTON — Talk about a civics lesson: A high-school senior has raised questions about political bias in a popular textbook on U.S. government, and legal scholars and top scientists say the teen's criticism is well-founded.

They say "American Government" by conservatives James Wilson and John Dilulio presents a skewed view of topics from global warming to separation of church and state. The publisher now says it will review the book, as will the College Board, which oversees college-level Advanced Placement courses used in high schools.

Matthew LaClair of Kearny, N.J., recently brought his concerns to the attention of the Center for Inquiry, an Amherst, N.Y., think tank that promotes science and which has issued a scathing report about the textbook.

"I just realized from my own knowledge that some of this stuff in the book is just plain wrong," said LaClair, who is using the book as part of an AP government class at Kearny High School.

The textbook is designed for a college audience, but also is widely used in AP American government courses, said Richard Blake, a spokesman for the publisher, Houghton Mifflin. Blake said the company "will be working with the authors to evaluate in detail the criticisms of the Center for Inquiry." Blake said some disputed passages already have been excised from the newest edition of the book.

Both authors are considered conservative. Dilulio, a University of Pennsylvania professor, formerly worked for the Bush administration as director of faith-based initiatives. Wilson is the Ronald Reagan Professor of Public Policy at Pepperdine University. Neither responded immediately to calls seeking comment.

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company

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post #2 of 9
Skewed textbooks? Next you'll tell me their overpriced. The devil you say!
post #3 of 9
The victors write the history.......
post #4 of 9
Yeah, and with these victors, we're all losers.

I don't recall overt bias in the history books I had when I was a kid. At that time, it was really bias by omission . . . leaving out relevant, crucial pieces of information that would allow for an objective view of history (well, as objective as any historical discussion can be).
post #5 of 9
This book just kills me:

post #6 of 9
Quote:
Originally Posted by Johan Brock View Post
This book just kills me:

If that's the same textbook we used in my high school film class (updated edition obviously) it's as shitty as it looks. Mine had Gladiator on the cover though.
post #7 of 9
Thread Starter 
My understanding is that all in-depth analysis of the Constitution has been completely excised from civics textbooks. And that's just the one problem I'm aware of, but as with everything else under Bush, it's not a surprise that text books have been overly slanted to reflect the Bushie worldview. That said, this goes back to Reagan. Everything created after 1981 is suspect.
post #8 of 9
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jakespeare View Post
If that's the same textbook we used in my high school film class (updated edition obviously) it's as shitty as it looks. Mine had Gladiator on the cover though.
I'm still trying to figure out why Spidey is shooting TWO webs from his hand on the cover. Just a weird Photoshop design.

Plus, Last Holiday as an example for Drama. Fucking Last Holiday.
post #9 of 9
Prentice isn't the problem. It's that damn neocon Hall who is at fault.
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