Reject history textbooks that lie to children about our history.


Reject history textbooks that lie to children about our history.
The Issue
Please sign this petition and comment with your school district, so they know your concern. You can also email or tweet a link to this petition to your district. This is a link to the Texas Education Agency's Complaint Department.
The families and citizens of Texas want the most accurate textbooks available for Texas students to be college and career ready. A majority of the Texas School Board crafted standards that forced textbook publishers to write books that contain glaring inaccuracies and history retold with biased propaganda. The board then voted for inaccurate textbooks over the objections of professional historians, history teachers and professors.
Don't let our school board's mismanagement put our students behind the rest of the nation this school year
"THIS FALL, Texas schools will teach students that Moses played a bigger role in inspiring the Constitution than slavery did in starting the Civil War. The Lone Star State’s new social studies textbooks, deliberately written to play down slavery’s role in Southern history, do not threaten only Texans — they pose a danger to schoolchildren all over the country.
The Texas board of education adopted a revised social studies curriculum in 2010 after a fierce battle. When it came to social studies standards, conservatives championing causes from a focus on the biblical underpinnings of our legal system to a whitewashed picture of race in the United States won out. The guidelines for teaching Civil War history were particularly concerning: They teach that “sectionalism, states’ rights and slavery” — carefully ordered to stress the first two and shrug off the last — caused the conflict. Come August, the first textbooks catering to the changed curriculum will make their way to Texas classrooms.
It is alarming that 150 years after the Civil War’s end children are learning that slavery was, as one Texas board of education member put it in 2010, “a side issue.” No serious scholar agrees. Every additional issue at play in 1861 was secondary to slavery — not the other way around. By distorting history, Texas tells its students a dishonest and damaging story about the United States that prevents children from understanding the country today."
-Washington Post Editorial Board July 6
You can like us on Facebook in order to keep updated on the newly formed Texas Freethought Coalition's coordinated efforts to address this historical illiteracy.
The Issue
Please sign this petition and comment with your school district, so they know your concern. You can also email or tweet a link to this petition to your district. This is a link to the Texas Education Agency's Complaint Department.
The families and citizens of Texas want the most accurate textbooks available for Texas students to be college and career ready. A majority of the Texas School Board crafted standards that forced textbook publishers to write books that contain glaring inaccuracies and history retold with biased propaganda. The board then voted for inaccurate textbooks over the objections of professional historians, history teachers and professors.
Don't let our school board's mismanagement put our students behind the rest of the nation this school year
"THIS FALL, Texas schools will teach students that Moses played a bigger role in inspiring the Constitution than slavery did in starting the Civil War. The Lone Star State’s new social studies textbooks, deliberately written to play down slavery’s role in Southern history, do not threaten only Texans — they pose a danger to schoolchildren all over the country.
The Texas board of education adopted a revised social studies curriculum in 2010 after a fierce battle. When it came to social studies standards, conservatives championing causes from a focus on the biblical underpinnings of our legal system to a whitewashed picture of race in the United States won out. The guidelines for teaching Civil War history were particularly concerning: They teach that “sectionalism, states’ rights and slavery” — carefully ordered to stress the first two and shrug off the last — caused the conflict. Come August, the first textbooks catering to the changed curriculum will make their way to Texas classrooms.
It is alarming that 150 years after the Civil War’s end children are learning that slavery was, as one Texas board of education member put it in 2010, “a side issue.” No serious scholar agrees. Every additional issue at play in 1861 was secondary to slavery — not the other way around. By distorting history, Texas tells its students a dishonest and damaging story about the United States that prevents children from understanding the country today."
-Washington Post Editorial Board July 6
You can like us on Facebook in order to keep updated on the newly formed Texas Freethought Coalition's coordinated efforts to address this historical illiteracy.
Petition Closed
Share this petition
The Decision Makers
Petition Updates
Share this petition
Petition created on July 14, 2015