Images via AP.
Ben Crump, famed for being Black Americaâs lawyer, is ready to take legal action over the Florida Education Departmentâs decision to block a college-level high school Black history course.
Crump, whoâs represented countless Black families in civil suits against government entities, announced his intentions Wednesday during a press conference in Tallahassee. And he says that if this lawsuit moves forward, he wonât be alone in taking the state to court; heâll be joined by three students who are also frustrated by the stateâs decision.
âWe are here to give notice to Gov. [Ron] DeSantis that if he does not negotiate with the College Board to allow AP African American studies to be taught in the classrooms across the state of Florida, these three young people will be the lead plaintiffs in a historic lawsuit,â Crump said.
The announcement comes five days after the stateâs education department, which is under the leadership of Republican Gov. Ron DeSantisâ, rejected the College Boardâs curriculum for African American studies for allegedly being historically inaccurate and violating the stateâs laws on what can be taught in classrooms.
DeSantis and the state Department of Education say their decision to reject the curriculum is due to the stateâs recent controversial ban on critical race theory, the rightwing boogeyman which includes teaching historical accountability for systemic racism and LGBTQ history.
âAs submitted, the course is a vehicle for a political agenda that leaves large, ambiguous gaps that can be filled with additional ideological material, which we will not allow,â the department stated in a letter about its decision last week. âAs Governor DeSantis has stated, our classrooms will be a place for education, not indoctrination.â
While the state is calling the course a form of indoctrination, critics like Crump are calling it DeSantisâ latest effort to stamp out factual accounts of Black history from its schools.
âWe remember what Carter G. Woodson, the father of Black history, said: If a race has no history, if a race has no worthwhile traditions that are respected and taught to the youth, it becomes a negligible factor in the thought of the world,â Crump said.
âAre we going to let Gov. DeSantis, or anybody, exterminate Black History from the classrooms of Florida?â
Since taking office in 2019, DeSantis has had a significant impact on what is taught in Floridaâs schools. Both of his major education bills, the so-called Donât Say Gay bill and the Individual Freedom Act, (which was first widely known as the âStop W.O.K.E.â Act), passed with support from conservatives in the state legislature last year.
The College Board, a non-profit body that controls the Advanced Placement program across all states, has since announced that it will go back to the drawing board with the program. The Board tempered concerns over the stateâs rejection of their African American studies course, saying in a statement last week that âpiloting and revising course frameworks is a standard part of any new AP course, and frameworks often change significantly as a result.â
They are set to present their new take on the curriculum on February 1, the first day of Black History Month.
Crump, whoâs represented countless Black families in civil suits against government entities, announced his intentions Wednesday during a press conference in Tallahassee. And he says that if this lawsuit moves forward, he wonât be alone in taking the state to court; heâll be joined by three students who are also frustrated by the stateâs decision.
âWe are here to give notice to Gov. [Ron] DeSantis that if he does not negotiate with the College Board to allow AP African American studies to be taught in the classrooms across the state of Florida, these three young people will be the lead plaintiffs in a historic lawsuit,â Crump said.
The announcement comes five days after the stateâs education department, which is under the leadership of Republican Gov. Ron DeSantisâ, rejected the College Boardâs curriculum for African American studies for allegedly being historically inaccurate and violating the stateâs laws on what can be taught in classrooms.
DeSantis and the state Department of Education say their decision to reject the curriculum is due to the stateâs recent controversial ban on critical race theory, the rightwing boogeyman which includes teaching historical accountability for systemic racism and LGBTQ history.
âAs submitted, the course is a vehicle for a political agenda that leaves large, ambiguous gaps that can be filled with additional ideological material, which we will not allow,â the department stated in a letter about its decision last week. âAs Governor DeSantis has stated, our classrooms will be a place for education, not indoctrination.â
While the state is calling the course a form of indoctrination, critics like Crump are calling it DeSantisâ latest effort to stamp out factual accounts of Black history from its schools.
âWe remember what Carter G. Woodson, the father of Black history, said: If a race has no history, if a race has no worthwhile traditions that are respected and taught to the youth, it becomes a negligible factor in the thought of the world,â Crump said.
âAre we going to let Gov. DeSantis, or anybody, exterminate Black History from the classrooms of Florida?â
Since taking office in 2019, DeSantis has had a significant impact on what is taught in Floridaâs schools. Both of his major education bills, the so-called Donât Say Gay bill and the Individual Freedom Act, (which was first widely known as the âStop W.O.K.E.â Act), passed with support from conservatives in the state legislature last year.
The College Board, a non-profit body that controls the Advanced Placement program across all states, has since announced that it will go back to the drawing board with the program. The Board tempered concerns over the stateâs rejection of their African American studies course, saying in a statement last week that âpiloting and revising course frameworks is a standard part of any new AP course, and frameworks often change significantly as a result.â
They are set to present their new take on the curriculum on February 1, the first day of Black History Month.
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