has been instrumental in sort of putting out the idea that any discussion of racial inequity is, in fact, "critical race theory." Sort of introducing that terminology to conservative media and then, you know, pushing these laws that a third of states have passed, limiting how race, gender and sexuality are taught. On how right-wing activist Chris Rufo has made social-emotional learning a flashpoint for conservatives "There was one fifth grade math textbook from McGraw-Hill that had sort of a simple fractions question, and then right underneath it said, 'How do you understand your feelings?'" "Some of them were quite awkward," she says. Goldstein says the rejected textbooks addressed social-emotional learning in a variety of ways. Instead, Goldstein theorizes the objections related to the inclusion of topics concerning social-emotional learning. Goldstein and her colleague Stephanie Saul reviewed 21 of the rejected math textbooks and found very little mention of race. New York Times national correspondent Dana Goldstein says Florida officials have given little evidence to back up these claims. Recently, the Florida Department of Education announced that it was rejecting dozens of math textbooks because they incorporated "prohibited topics" or "unsolicited strategies," such as critical race theory. 11.Ä«etween fights over mask mandates and new legislation dictating how history should be taught, schools have become a battleground for America's culture wars.
A teacher walks through an empty classroom at Hazelwood Elementary School in Louisville, Ky., on Jan.