Current:Home > InvestSurpassing:Climate change in Texas science textbooks causes divisions on state’s education board -Capitatum
Surpassing:Climate change in Texas science textbooks causes divisions on state’s education board
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-07 18:13:31
AUSTIN,Surpassing Texas (AP) — How science textbooks in Texas address climate change is at the center of a key vote expected Friday after some Republican education officials criticized books for being too negative toward fossil fuels in America’s biggest oil and gas state.
The issue of which textbooks to approve has led to new divisions on the Texas State Board of Education, which over the years has faced other heated curriculum battles surrounding how evolution and U.S. history is taught to the more than 5 million students.
Science standards adopted by the board’s conservative majority in 2021 do not mention creationism as an alternative to evolution. Those standards also describe human factors as contributors to climate change.
But some Republicans on the 15-member board this week waved off current textbook options as too negative toward fossil fuels and for failing to include alternatives to evolution. One of Texas’ regulators of the oil and gas industry, Republican Wayne Christian, has urged the board to “choose books that promote the importance of fossil fuels for energy promotion.”
Texas has more than 1,000 school districts and none are obligated to use textbooks approved by the board. Still, the endorsements carry weight.
“Members of the board are clearly motivated to take some of these textbooks off of the approved list because of their personal and ideological beliefs regarding evolution and climate change,” said Glenn Branch, deputy director of the National Center on Science Education.
Friday’s vote will decide whether the proposed textbooks meet the standards set in 2021. Branch said multiple books comply with the regulations set then by the board and follow the consensus of the scientific community.
Scientists overwhelmingly agree that heat-trapping gases released from the combustion of fossil fuels are pushing up global temperatures, upending weather patterns and endangering animal species.
Aaron Kinsey, a Republican board member and executive of an oil field services company in West Texas, criticized photos in some textbooks as negatively portraying the oil and gas industry during a discussion of the materials this week.
“The selection of certain images can make things appear worse than they are, and I believe there was bias,” Kinsey said, according to Hearst Newspapers.
“You want to see children smiling in oil fields?” said Democrat Aicha Davis, another board member. “I don’t know what you want.”
In a letter Thursday, the National Science Teaching Association, which is made up of 35,000 science educators across the U.S., urged the board not to “allow misguided objections to evolution and climate change impede the adoption of science textbooks in Texas.”
How many textbooks the board could reject depends on the grade level and publisher, said Emily Witt, a spokeswoman for the Texas Freedom Network, a left-leaning watchdog of the board. She said their organization had identified only two textbooks that would not meet the standards set in 2021.
veryGood! (91377)
Related
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Three people shot to death in tiny South Dakota town; former mayor charged
- Louisiana police searching for 2 escaped prisoners after 4 slipped through fence
- Hundreds mourn gang killings of a Haitian mission director and a young American couple
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Kathie Lee Gifford recalls Howard Stern asking for forgiveness after feud
- OpenAI CEO Sam Altman joins Giving Pledge, focusing his money on tech that ‘helps create abundance’
- Environmental study allows Gulf of Maine offshore wind research lease to advance
- American news website Axios laying off dozens of employees
- UC student workers expand strike to two more campuses as they demand amnesty for protestors
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Why Gypsy Rose Blanchard Doesn't Want to Be Treated Like a Celebrity
- A working group that emerged from a tragedy sets out to reform child welfare services
- Nicole Brown Simpson's sisters remember 'adventurous' spirit before meeting O.J. Simpson
- Small twin
- North Carolina audit finds misuse of university-issued credit cards
- Mayorkas says some migrants try to game the U.S. asylum system
- Air Force unveils photos of B-21 Raider in flight as nuclear stealth bomber moves closer to deployment
Recommendation
3 years after the NFL added a 17th game, the push for an 18th gets stronger
Paris' famous Champs-Elysees turned into a mass picnic blanket for an unusual meal
Ryan Phillippe gives shout-out to ex-wife Reese Witherspoon in throwback photo: 'We were hot'
Two ex-FBI officials who traded anti-Trump texts close to settlement over alleged privacy violations
How breaking emerged from battles in the burning Bronx to the Paris Olympics stage
Isabella Strahan Celebrates 19th Birthday Belatedly After Being Unconscious Due to Brain Cancer Surgery
Two escaped Louisiana inmates found in dumpster behind Dollar General, two others still at large
15-year-old boy stabbed after large fight breaks out on NJ boardwalk over Memorial Day Weekend