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IN ARIZONA—GOV’T REACHES INTO CLASSROOMS AND FORCES SCHOOLS TO REMOVE BOOKS FOR RACIAL/ETHNIC CONTENT (602 hits)

NEW YORK TIMES, March 19, 2012 — Ana Verdugo is a fan of Matt de la Peña’s young adult novels; she read his “Mexican WhiteBoy” in two days.

Like the lead character, Danny, Ana is a Mexican-American whose family does not have much, is being raised by her mother and has a father who spent time in jail.

Like Sofia, the lead female character, Ana, a high school junior, is hoping to go to community college, where she wants to study accounting. “Most books I read, I don’t know the people,” Ana said. “This book is the truth.”

Last fall, she had the idea of inviting Mr. de la Peña to Tucson High. “I didn’t think he’d say yes,” she recalled, “but maybe he would.”

For the next several months, Ana and the school librarian, Amy Rusk, worked to raise $1,000 for his speaking fee. It was not easy — their most successful bake sale netted only $124.

Still, on Tuesday morning at 8:30, Mr. de la Peña walked into the Tucson High library, although there was a surprising plot twist.

On Jan. 1, after a new state law targeting Mexican-American studies courses that are perceived as antiwhite was upheld, it became illegal to teach “Mexican WhiteBoy” in Tucson’s classrooms. State officials cited the book as containing “critical race theory,” a violation under a provision that prohibits lessons “promoting racial resentment.”

For those who have read the book, like Ana, it is hard to figure. In “Mexican WhiteBoy,” the hero’s hope is to become a pitcher on his school’s baseball team.

The novel’s story is pretty much the American dream.

Andrew LeFevre, a state spokesman, said that while the Education Department had found the Mexican-American studies program out of compliance with the law, it was the Tucson district’s job to decide how to enforce the ruling. “I think the district said: ‘Let’s be safe and collect this material. We don’t want a teacher from Mexican-American studies to use it in an inappropriate fashion.’ ” he said.

The conflict dates to 2006 when Dolores Huerta, a labor activist, gave a speech at Tucson High, telling students “Republicans hate Latinos.”

Tom Horne, the state education superintendent at the time and a Republican, sent his deputy to the high school to convey their concerns. But students saw the visit as an attack on free speech, and 200 walked out in protest.

Ka-boom. Mr. Horne accused the district’s Mexican-American studies program of using an antiwhite curriculum to foster social activism. At the time, the program served 1,400 of 53,000 students in the Tucson district, which is 60 percent Latino.

In 2010, after several attempts, the Republican-controlled Legislature and the Republican governor passed a law prohibiting classes that advocate overthrowing the government, are designed for students of one ethnic group or advocate ethnic solidarity instead of treating pupils as individuals. The state wanted Tucson’s Mexican-American studies program disbanded.

When Tucson officials resisted, the attorney general’s office issued subpoenas. Investigators obtained textbooks, PowerPoint presentations, teachers’ college theses, exam prompts, poems and lyrics from hip-hop songs.

Class lessons were singled out over apparent political bias, among them “From Cortes to Bush: 500 Years of Internalized Oppression.” Seven texts were ordered removed from all classrooms, including “Chicano! The History of the Mexican-American Civil Rights Movement” by F. Arturo Rosales and “Pedagogy of the Oppressed” by Paulo Freire.

“Mexican WhiteBoy” fell into a category of books that could no longer be taught but could be used by students for leisure reading. To get an independent assessment of the program, the state hired a consultant, for $110,000, to conduct an audit.

The audit found that while some aspects of the program needed changing, it was doing a good job. It noted that students who took Mexican-American studies were more likely to attend college, and that the program helped close the achievement gap. The state ignored the audit, calling it flawed.

John Huppenthal, the new state superintendent, told a reporter that he was fighting a war. “When we encountered this situation, we did what Hannibal did to the Romans,” he said. “This is the eternal battle, the eternal battle of all time, the forces of collectivism against the forces of individuality.”

In January, facing a $15 million penalty from the state for failure to comply, the Tucson resistors threw down their arms. Administrators went from room to room, collecting hundreds of copies of the seven textbooks.

Mr. de la Peña’s visit, which began in October as a literary event, had political implications by March, although little he said was directly political.

Mostly, he told the 300 students his story of reluctant reader to successful writer. He explained that, half-Mexican, half-white, he had grown up speaking no Spanish; too white for Mexican kids, too brown for whites.

He got to college because he could play basketball. His hope was to play professionally until, in one of his college games, he guarded Steve Nash. (Nash: 36 points, 4 assists; de la Peña: 3 points, 1 assist, 8 turnovers.)

He told them that if they were serious about writing, they had to be ready to accept lots of failure. He once wrote a poem for a girl he liked, but after reading it, she never spoke to him again. His goal as a writer, he said, “is to give grace and dignity to people from the other side of the tracks.”

“If you are Mexican-American, embrace it,” he said. “If the classes are offered, take them; if not, try to get them back.”

Mr. de la Peña donated his fee to buy 240 copies of his books, which he gave to the students. “I want to give back what was taken away,” he told Samantha Neville, a reporter for the school newspaper, The Cactus Chronicle.

As for Ana, this may have been the greatest day of her life. Having finished all four of Mr. de la Peña’s novels, she is now reading “The Lucky One” by Nicholas Sparks, about a Marine’s search for a mysterious woman in a tattered photo he finds, who turns out to be strong but vulnerable.

“It’s not the same,” Ana said. “I don’t know anybody like that.”
Posted By: Richard Kigel
Monday, March 19th 2012 at 12:09PM
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Facing a $15 million penalty from the state of Arizona, Tucson educators were forced to comply. School administrators marched from room to room in classrooms all over the city collecting hundreds of copies of banned textbooks.

How's that for government intrusion and overreach!


Monday, March 19th 2012 at 12:10PM
Richard Kigel
Actually it was a long-running debate amongst the Arizona Board of Education, not the legislature, and Arizona, like Texas has had a great effect on school textbooks for a long time, mostly because they buy more of them than other US states.

Monday, March 19th 2012 at 12:43PM
Siebra Muhammad
Sounds like Fahrenheit 451 to me. I keep saying that fictional themes will become reality eventually. The Giver was another one.
Monday, March 19th 2012 at 1:17PM
Thomasena Martin-Johnson
Thomasena--good call--exactly like Farenheit 451. Spoken like a true college professor!!!

In any case it is another instance of massive government intrusion, making decisions in areas where government has no business. It is a mystery to me how some of these same conservatives who holler about getting the government off our backs and out of our lives can make laws that are so intrusive they force government into doctors offices and classrooms.


Monday, March 19th 2012 at 1:39PM
Richard Kigel
Sounds to me like using Rev. J.W's teaching our African and African-American history and pride in the Mother land being used against BHO to disqualify him as being a legal American president. (nup/ smile)


Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
...Not to mention their mission to get rid of teachers like you and Thomasena who are there to try and help us to put our natural brain powers to work doing more than allowing others to do our thinking thus preventing us from learning from more then one, two or even three different objective rescources for us as good for us and not just being satisfied with one subjective resource. (nup/smile)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
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