Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Storyland Will Sparkle for All Visitors With $1 Million City of Fresno Grant

5 hours ago

Ozzy Osbourne, Black Sabbath’s Bat-Biting Frontman, Dies at 76, BBC Reports

10 hours ago

What’s Fresno County Worth? Property Tax Roll Grows by Billions of Dollars

12 hours ago

Fresno County Authorities Seek Help Locating Missing Woman and Infant

12 hours ago
California Universities, Legislature Spar Over Ethnic Studies Requirement
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 5 years ago on
July 22, 2020

Share

SACRAMENTO — Trustees of California State University are expected to vote Wednesday on making ethnic studies a graduation requirement.
If approved, it would be the first change to the school’s general education curriculum in over 40 years and would come amid the national uproar over racism and police brutality.
The 23-campus CSU system is the nation’s largest for four-year public universities.
Meanwhile, the state Legislature is on the verge of passing a bill with its own defined rules for ethnic studies that would overrule school leaders, opening a debate on whether lawmakers should wade into academia.
If the bill is eventually signed by the governor, “everything we’re doing regarding the new proposal is moot,” Douglas Faigin, a trustee on the board, said during hours of discussion at a Tuesday meeting.
Trustees backing California State University’s proposed ethnic studies plan said it allows students to choose from a wider array of ethnic studies topics to fulfill the course requirement than the Legislature’s bill. Trustees said their proposal also spells out that students can take courses on social justice that explore issues such as the criminal justice system and public health disparities.
A committee passed the plan Tuesday and sent it to the full board of trustees. The proposal took six years to develop.
Board members agreed on the need for more ethnic studies, particularly after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis and the national uproar over racism. But many said allowing politicians to dictate university courses crosses a line.
“Government specifying a specific curriculum area is extraordinarily dangerous,” said Timothy White, chancellor of California State University. “Let’s not cross that Rubicon.”

CSU Proposal Would Take Effect in 2023

Assemblywoman Shirley Weber, a San Diego Democrat and former professor, authored the Legislature’s bill.
The Assembly has to review minor amendments after the Senate passed it last month. It also would need the approval of Gov. Gavin Newsom.
The bill would require California State University campuses starting in the 2021-2022 academic year to offer courses on race and ethnicity focusing on Native Americans, African Americans, Asian Americans and Latina and Latino Americans. Students would need to take a three-credit course to graduate.
The university system’s proposal would take effect in the 2023-2023 academic year and offers a greater selection of topics than the Legislature’s bill, which critics said does not include some courses such as Jewish studies. The university’s plan would cost $3 to $4 million while the bill is estimated to need $16 million for implementation.
As chair of the Legislative Black Caucus, Weber wrote to the board to stand down on its proposal. The legislation was prompted, she wrote, because the university was too slow on implementing a requirement after announcing ethnic studies plans almost five years ago.
She noted the California Faculty Association supports her bill. The association, which represents 29,000 faculty members at California State University, has said the university’s proposal is overly broad, allowing classes on social justice when the aim should be teaching students about the experiences of minorities and people of color in the U.S.
Weber wrote that the school’s recommendation “does not respond to the challenges we currently face, has been rejected by the faculty, and is not supported by students.”

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

UP NEXT

NPR’s Top Editor Edith Chapin to Step Down

Storyland Will Sparkle for All Visitors With $1 Million City of Fresno Grant

5 hours ago

Former Madera Charter School Executive Charged With Embezzling Federal Funds

5 hours ago

Trump Announces Trade Deal With Japan, Including 15% Tariff

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump on Tuesday announced a trade deal with Japan that he said will result in Japan investing $550 bill...

4 hours ago

Containers are pictured at an industrial port in Tokyo, Japan, July 2, 2025. (Reuters File)
4 hours ago

Trump Announces Trade Deal With Japan, Including 15% Tariff

American Jews are fracturing over Israel’s war in Gaza, as a generational divide deepens between older Jews who see Israel as essential for Jewish survival and younger Jews who view its actions as a moral crisis incompatible with liberal values. (Shutterstock)
4 hours ago

Why American Jews No Longer Understand One Another

5 hours ago

Visalia DUI Operation Nets 17 Arrests Over Weekend

5 hours ago

Storyland Will Sparkle for All Visitors With $1 Million City of Fresno Grant

A U.S. Justice Department logo or seal showing Justice Department headquarters, known as "Main Justice," is seen behind the podium in the Department's headquarters briefing room before a news conference with the Attorney General in Washington, January 24, 2023. (Reuters File)
5 hours ago

Former Madera Charter School Executive Charged With Embezzling Federal Funds

FUSD Fresno Unified paper shredder gvwire
6 hours ago

Fresno Unified Doesn’t Respond to Public Records Requests. Is District Hiding Something?

AP's members leave the U.S. District Court, on the day a judge hears arguments in the Associated Press' (AP) bid to restore access for its journalists to cover press events aboard Air Force One and at the White House, after the Trump administration barred the news agency for continuing to refer to the Gulf of Mexico in its coverage, in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 27, 2025. (Reuters File)
6 hours ago

US Appeals Court Will Not Lift Limits on Associated Press Access to White House

Artist Rendering of Sack Dame and Arroyo Canal Project Site for San Joaquin River Salmon Restoration Project
6 hours ago

Feds Award $93 Million to Key San Joaquin River Salmon Restoration Project

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend