

Rather than illuminate, these โGuiding Principlesโ indoctrinate.

By Dr. Alan J. Singer
Professor of Teaching, Learning and Technology
Hofstra University
According to state law, Virginiaโs learning standards are supposed to be reviewed by the state Board of Education at least once every seven years. During 2022, a team including teachers, parents, students, museums, historians, professors, political scientists, economists, and geographers met for months and developed a 402-page draft version for history and social studies. Before it could even be reviewed, the stateโs Board of Education, dominated by appointees of Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin, rejected the draft. Last week they replaced it with their own 52-page statement of โGuiding Principlesโ without the curriculum frameworks, list of instructional resources, and student activities in the original draft. The new rightwing sanitized standards, quickly developed with input from conservative Christian Hillsdale College and the equally conservative Thomas B. Fordham Institute, will now undergo a months-long public review process.
According to the Youngkin BOE, โVirginiaโs History and Social Science standards aim to restore excellence, curiosity and excitement around teaching and learning history. The teaching of history should illuminate insights from the past and inspire current and future generations to lead lives that are informed and inspired by those who walked this journey before them.โ
Critics charge that rather than illuminate, these โGuiding Principlesโ indoctrinate. Youngkin has made clear that under his administration, teachers would not teach and students would not learn about what he considered โinherently divisive concepts.โ In line with this, the โGuiding Principlesโ demand that teachers present students with โfactsโ in โways that do not ascribe guilt to any population in the classroom.โ It insists that teachers present โall of our history in an objective, fair, empathetic, nonjudgmentalโ and specifically orders teachers not to color lessons with their own โpersonal or political bias.โ The โGuiding Principlesโ then lay out the political biases Youngkin and his appointees want to indoctrinate students with.
Meanwhile, conservative groups have rallied in support of the Virginia guidelines, praising them for disproving โthe lie spread by Critical Race Theory supporters.โ According to the Independent Womenโs Forum, an anti-feminist, rightwing group financed by the Koch brothers and the Scaife and Bradley Foundations, โThe message here is that historical evils are not unique to America. The bigger message, though, is about American greatness. The guidelines include โinspirational moments[,] including โฆ the American Revolution, the triumph of Americaโs Greatest Generation in World War II, the Marshall Plan, the civil rights movement,โ and more. The group also praised the fact that Virginiaโs guidelines explicitly invite โinformed engagement by parentsโ who will receive โopen access to all instructional materials utilized in any Virginia public schoolโ and require that a teacher remain an โapolitical and unbiased moderator between students.โ
The Washington Post conducted an independent review of changes to Virginiaโs history and social studies education proposed in the Youngkin standards and concluded that rightwing bias pervades the entire proposed โGuiding Principles.โ What follows draws from the Washington Post analysis.
The existing social studies guidelines for kindergarten call for lessons teaching that โIndigenous People were the first inhabitants of the land that we now call Virginia and the United Statesโ and that โmultiple tribes have always and continue to live in Virginia and the United States today.โ The Youngkin guidelines do not mention Indigenous peoples and delete a suggestion that kindergartners be taught โrespect for diversityโ and learn how to work collaboratively with โpeople of diverse backgrounds, viewpoints and experiences.โ
In third grade, students have been learning about ancient societies in Egypt, Greece, Rome, China and Mali. The Youngkin guidelines drop China and Mali. The fourth grade guidelines currently recommend that students learn about the history of โthe Algonquin, the Siouan and the Iroquoianโ as well as โthe lives of Indigenous People … living in Virginia today.โ In the Youngkin guidelines Indigenous people no longer exist in the current era.
Existing fifth and sixth grade guidelines state that an overarching theme for U.S. history should be โracism,โ defined as โprejudice, discrimination, or antagonism directed against someone of a different race based on the belief that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race.โ The new guidelines do not mention teaching students about racism. In addition, the Youngkin recommendations drop references to the United States as an โimperialist world powerโ and the Womenโs Rights Movement and an examination of Americaโs response to the European Holocaust.
The 8th grade guidelines currently include a section on โResources and the Environmentโ with lessons โexamining the sustainable use and management of resourcesโ as well as instruction on how human growth, development and technology has โdriven changes in energy resource management.โ This is watered down so that students only learn โhow humans influence the environment and are influenced by it.โ
In high school, students were expected to dissect, compare and contrast the concepts of โcolonialism,โ โimperialism,โ โnationalismโ and โracism.โ This will all be dropped if the Youngkin standards are approved. According to the old guidelines, slavery was the root cause of the Civil War. The Youngkin guidelines list slavery as one of the โcultural, economic, and political issues that divided the nation.โ
In the Youngkin guidelines, students are told that the United States has โled the world in political, social and economic thought and actionโ and that Americaโs founders invented the ideas incorporated in the Declaration of Independence; they were not borrowed from British Enlightenment thinkers like John Locke.
Student understanding of the United States Constitution shifts to the right. Previously the writers of the Constitution โbuilt a system designed to evolve over time.โ Students will now be taught that the Constitution is โthe nationโs fundamental and enduring law.โ Economic planning is now denounced as โsocialism or communistโ and students are told it is โincompatible with democracy and individual freedoms.โ
Students learn โoptimism, ideals and imageryโ were best presented by former President Ronald Reagan in his speech describing the United States as a โshining city upon a hill,โ a phrase his speechwriters borrowed from 17th century Puritan sermons. Abraham Lincolnโs Gettysburg Address, John F. Kennedyโs Inaugural Address, and Martin Luther King Jr.โs 1963 โI have a dreamโ speech at the Lincoln Memorial arenโt mentioned.
Virginia students, if the Youngkin guidelines are approved, will learn about โour nationโs exceptional strengths, including individual innovation, moral character, ingenuity and adventureโ and โstudy inspirational moments that have โmade America the worldโs exemplar of freedom, opportunity and democratic ideals.โ All of this will be done, supposedly, without promoting ideology, avoiding indoctrination, and ensuring that students develop critical thinking skills.
Originally published by History News Network, 12.11.2022, reprinted with permission for educational, non-commercial purposes.


