This North Carolina teacher writes that recent suggestions by state education leaders to downplay the role of systemic racism in our country is wrong.
Last week, the NC State Board of Education met to discuss social studies curriculum standards, part of a year-long effort to update the social studies standards beyond just saying “diversity” to elevate the experiences of historically oppressed groups.
Theyโll meet again today to finalize those standards.
Last weekโs meeting was an hour and a half of โpatrioticโ pearl clutching and thinking of all issues in terms of a zero-sum game. It should have been a conversation focused on the benefits of incorporating examples of systemic racism to support a commitment to a “more perfect union” – on the eve of Black History month no less.
READ MORE: How History Is Made: After George Floyd, NC Educators Consider a More Inclusive Curriculum
In fact, some of the board members fought against even acknowledging the existence of systemic racism.
Board member Amy White, a non-profit executive from Garner, labeled curriculum standards set to empower students to learn about our countryโs hard truths in history as โanti-American, anti-capitalism and anti-democracy.โ
Some of the most contentious discussion in last weekโs meeting was prompted by the proposals from State Superintendent Catherine Truitt to cancel the word โsystemicโ from its attachment to the terms โracismโ and โdiscrimination,โ and the word โgenderโ from the term โidentityโ in the social studies curriculum standards.
Superintendent Truitt tried to defend her proposal to remove the word โsystemicโ by saying โsystemic racism indicates that our entire system of government and our constitution, as it is written and has been amended, are racist.โ
She argues that by acknowledging that systemic racism exists, we are by default saying our Constitution is racist. Thatโs nonsense.
And yet these state Board of Education members who are so sure of themselves despite their obvious lack of understanding of the Constitution and the Founders want to tell social studies teachers like me how to teach.
By incorporating lessons on โhard truthsโ weโre not villifying our country, weโre empowering students to participate in moving our country toward a โmore perfect unionโ – just as the Founders envisioned.
From the Boardroom to the Classroom
Based on the logic demonstrated at last weekโs Board meeting, I should not teach my students about the amendments to the Constitution because apparently offering improvements by default makes folks feel too โguiltyโ about their original imperfections.
Should I not teach the 13th Amendment that abolished slavery because it would make folks uncomfortable that we acknowledge it existed?
Should I not teach about the 19th Amendment granting women the right to vote because it reminds us of the patriarchal roots of our society?
Saying we need to do things better as we work toward a โmore perfect unionโ is not the same as saying the United States is awful because itโs not perfect.
Step off the see-saw – itโs neither awful nor perfect.
As Iโve started a new semester with a new group of students in my Civics and Economics course, I remind them about the difference between feedback and criticism. Offering suggestions for improvement is not the same as saying they did something terribly, or that theyโre a terrible student.
Saying our country has work to do to continue pursuit of a โmore perfect unionโ is in line with the intent of the Founders, not a betrayal of them.
Would those same folks leading state education policy suggest that North Carolinaโs educators value student pride over academic improvement?
It seems so-called defenders of American pride could use a reminder that even the Founders didnโt think their document was perfect. Thatโs why Article 5 describes the amendment process as one way to change the system as we pursue a โmore perfect union.โ
They were so open to revisions that they designed a process to make them.
Esse Quam Videri: Change systems not semantics
Itโs ironic that the folks most offended by the terms โsystemicโ and โgenderโ in social studies standards donโt take as much issue with the systems in our state that serve as recent examples of discrimination across race and gender.
Standardized tests measure socioeconomic status better than academic achievement. Those test results are used for a school grading system to rate schools A-F. Our state labels communities struggling with poverty but does little to address poverty.
Our state weighs final test scores 80% and but weighs improved academic outcomes only 20% in that calculation instead of 50/50 like many other states. Apparently, North Carolinaโs systemic attempt to diminish credit for improvement is ingrained not only in the Boardโs conversation earlier this week, but in the way it chooses to label schools.
Even the school voucher system supports discrimination by sending public dollars to schools that deny admission to students based on the religious or gender affiliations of students or their families.
And Republican state lawmakers dropped a bill last Thursday to push for expansion of the discriminatory voucher system when they return to session this week.
While the voucher program is already overfunded by $85 million, North Carolinaโs pre-K program fails to serve over half of students who qualify to attend. In North Carolina, it is easier for a family to qualify for an annual private school voucher than it is to qualify for one year of pre-K in our public school system. Thatโs despite growing evidence that the best way to improve childrenโs futures is to offer them a quality early education.
North Carolinaโs schools have waited over two decades for the General Assembly to fulfill its commitment to a โsound basic educationโ for all students. The recommended pathways in the court-ordered report refer specifically to initiatives to support students of color in communities who have faced systemic discrimination. How does one fix those systemic shortfalls if one fails to admit systemic racism exists?
The State Superintendent and Board of Education should use their platforms to help dismantle racist systems. But why should North Carolinians have confidence some of them are up to these tasks if they spend more time debating whether or not systemic racism exists when itโs right under their noses?
The State Board of Education needs the General Assembly to provide funding and policies to improve these systems. Itโs hard to imagine legislative leaders who have racially gerrymandered districts โwith surgical precisionโ or passed a bill targeting the LGBTQ+ community have much interest in fixing systemic inequities in our state.
The most recent attempts to sugarcoat our past and present by denying the existence of systemic racism and discrimination shirks our responsibility as a state to ensure our students understand not only the parts of history we’re proud of, but understand we are still a work in progress as we form a “more perfect union.”
Students are not empowered to engage in this pursuit if the social studies standards address only achievements, and not the ongoing history of our weaknesses and how they can work to help our country and our state move forward to live up to its ideals. Systemic racism is a glaring weakness.
Itโs worth wondering if policymakers who refuse to acknowledge systemic racism and our countryโs continued pursuit of a โmore perfect unionโ are capable of moving our state forward to live up to our ideals.


















