Archive for March, 2010

PCC Presentation and L.A. Times Editorial on Book Selection Process

March 29th, 2010

BOOK PRESENTATION AT PASADENA CITY COLLEGE – PCC

Book presentation and signing to take place at Pasadena City College Tuesday, March 30, 12:00 PM

Join us on Tuesday, March 30, 2010 from 12:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m. at the CC Lounge at Pasadena City College (PCC) for my book presentation and discussion.

Address: 1570 E. Colorado Blvd, Pasadena, CA 91106

latimes.com/news/opinion/la-ed-texas28-2010mar28,0,3544668.story

latimes.com
Editorial
Textbook cases
As Texas shows, school book content must not be left to interest groups. California, take note.
March 28, 2010

Oh, those disingenuous Texans. Pretending to bring ideological balance to history textbooks when what they’re really doing is weighting the books so heavily with conservative mores, you’d expect the state’s backpack-laden school children to list to the right.

If the revisions proposed by the conservative faction of the Texas Board of Education are adopted in May, the state’s textbooks will raise the study of the inaugural speech of Confederate President Jefferson Davis to the same level as that of Abraham Lincoln. They will downplay the role of Thomas Jefferson, in part because he coined the phrase “separation of church and state,” and will imply that the Founding Fathers were Christian even though historians have found evidence that not all of them held Christian beliefs. The internment of a relatively small number of people of German and Italian heritage during World War II would be emphasized to make it appear as though there wasn’t a racial component to interning more than 100,000 Japanese Americans. This amounts to just plain disinformation.

Before Californians look down their noses, though, they should consider the rules governing this state’s textbooks. The state regulates the portrayal of genders, minority groups, the elderly and the disabled by requiring proportional representation that also cannot show any group in a negative light. Thus, as education expert Diane Ravitch writes, the elderly must be portrayed as fit and lively even if reality tells us that some cope with illness and disability. Publishers have been discouraged from portraying people in poor countries as poor — because that would stereotype those nations — and told to soften language on AIDS in Africa so as not to reflect badly on that continent.

A veto threat by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger stopped a 2006 bill that would have required textbooks to show a diversity of sexual orientation and include “the contributions of people who are lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender to the total development of California and the United States,” basing choices of important people not solely on their accomplishments but on their sexual orientation.

Each textbook adoption in the state becomes a battle in which religious, ethnic and other groups demand changes so that they are seen in a more positive light. In 2006, a group of Hindus wanted to change social studies books to say that women historically had “different” rights in India, not fewer, despite practices such as child marriage, bride harassment and unequal property rights, and to eliminate certain information about the caste system, even though scholars insisted that the information was correct as written. The state agreed to the changes — until an opposing group took issue. That’s not to mention the time the state rejected a children’s reader because it included “The Little Engine That Could,” a classic story in which the train is portrayed as male — gender stereotyping.

Nor are these the only emotional disputesover textbooks. In 2001, the government of Japan approved a textbook that defended that nation’s actions during World War II and downplayed the 1937 massacre in Nanjing. The textbook drew heated protest from China. Last year, politicians in Japan and South Korea began exploring the possibility of writing a joint history textbook with China to be used in all three nations, but as one Japanese official put it, “The countries have been unable to agree on historical matters.”

In the debate over what the nation’s children should be taught, we all view ourselves as moral purists, the people who want schools to teach facts as well as the skills and ethical values that will enable the next generation to succeed. The problem is that we can’t agree on what those skills and ethical values are, or, for that matter, on which facts are important and sometimes what those facts are.

In California, textbooks might offer repeated lessons on the great diversity of race and religion, but what about diversity of thought? There are elements of the Texas revisions that are obviously ridiculous, but there are others that clearly would bring more balance to education. We wouldn’t object to teaching about modern-day conservative groups such as the Moral Majority, one of the proposed additions. Students should learn about the breadth of opinion in this country. It’s also appropriate for teenagers to debate the value of international treaties, as the Texas board wants them to.

The problem is that these decisions are left in the hands of politicians and appointed board members who often know little about education and less about history. The resulthasn’t been simply a slanting of textbook material but a simultaneous flattening of it. Publishers are so intent on meeting the long list of minutia demanded by states such as California and Texas that they have neglected to produce engaging books. Strange to say, the word “history” has its roots in the Greek word meaning narrative or learning by inquiry. Modern education has removed both.

We agree that textbooks need to be inclusive, unlike earlier versions that depicted white, middle-class people almost exclusively, down to the illustrations of children in elementary math problems. But when attempts to push one viewpoint or another distort the curriculum and reduce its accuracy, all students are harmed.

California and Texas have a disproportionate impact on the nation’s textbooks because they are the largest of the two dozen or so states that adopt textbooks statewide. And because of the two states’ complicated micromanagement of what the books can say and illustrate, it is the biggest publishing houses that are best able to work with them — and to sell the resulting books across the country. Schools are left with a lack of variety and little competition in the industry.

Textbook information should be compiled by scholars and written by talented storytellers, not by politicians, interest groups or publishers’ corporate committees. The books should awaken children not just to the diversity of people but the diversity of opinions in our nation. We agree with Ravitch that part of the problem is statewide textbook adoption. If school districts were empowered to pick their own books, allowing a more competitive textbook market to thrive, there would be less opportunity for lobbyists of any stripe to have undue influence over the process. What we should ask of districts is that they produce results — educated young adults — not that they do it according to a rigid formula. Increased competition from smaller publishers would encourage the publication of richer learning materials — the textbook revision that schools need most.

Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

Assasinated 30 years ago, Archbishop Romero deserves sainthood – do you agree?

March 26th, 2010

McClatchy Washington Bureau

Posted on Fri, Mar. 26, 2010

Commentary: Assassinated 30 years ago, Archbishop Romero deserves sainthood
Randy Jurado Ertll | The Progressive Media Project
last updated: March 26, 2010 10:15:58 AM

The pope should make El Salvador’s Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero a saint.

Thirty years ago this week, Romero was gunned down by Salvadoran death squads linked to that country’s military. He gave his life defending the rights of the poor and standing up to the brutality of the powerful.

He was murdered on March 24, 1980. The day before, he had publicly asked the Salvadoran military and National Guard to stop murdering their own brothers and sisters. After his murder came a deluge of more blood, as more than 80,000 Salvadorans were murdered – and tens of thousands tortured – during the following dozen years of civil war. Most of the deaths came at the hands of the Salvadoran military and paramilitary forces, which the U.S. government supported.

For many years, Romero served the wealthy families of El Salvador. He seemed to hide from the cruel injustices that were occurring in his country.

But he had a life-changing experience when he visited a poor village known as “Los Naranjos.” He realized that children were starving and farmworkers were essentially enslaved to work the lands. He saw that they were abused and mistreated. He understood they were not allowed to speak up or to denounce injustices. If they did, then torture, beatings or death would be their fate.

Another turning point for Romero came in 1977, when his friend and fellow priest Rutilio Grande was murdered in cold blood.

And so he started to speak out for the poor and the persecuted. And when the Salvadoran death squads brutally murdered labor advocates, peasant organizers, human rights workers and religious leaders, he denounced these horrors in no uncertain times.

“I would like to make a special appeal to the men of the army, and specifically to the ranks of the National Guard, the police and the military,” he said in his last sermon. “Brothers, you come from our own people. You are killing your own brother peasants when any human order to kill must be subordinate to the law of God, which says, ‘Thou shalt not kill.’ … I implore you, I beg you, I order you in the name of God: Stop the repression.” Thirty years have passed since Romero was murdered but his spirit and legacy are alive and well.

He had to endure many accusations and defamations. He was not a communist archbishop, as he was falsely labeled. At bottom, he was a true man of the cloth.

Millions of Salvadorans revere Romero as a national hero.

The current archbishop of San Salvador, Jose Luis Escobar Alas, announced last month that he had written to Rome to ask that Romero be canonized “as soon as possible” and that the pope declare him as “San Romero de las Americas.” Archbishop Romero did not die in vain. Let’s keep his legacy alive by supporting the efforts to make him a saint. He deserves no less.

ABOUT THE WRITER

Randy Jurado Ertll is the author of the book “Hope in Times of Darkness: A Salvadoran American Experience.”

Pasadena Star-News – PEACE WALK

March 21st, 2010

Community members march for peace in Pasadena
By Brian Day, Staff Writer
Posted: 03/21/2010 12:18:59 AM PDT

Photo Gallery

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Peace Walk
PASADENA – People of all ages and backgrounds took to the streets of Pasadena on Saturday to march in support of peace and unity.

About 75 marchers carried signs and chanted slogans as they walked from the Villa Parke Community Center to Robinson Park.

“What do we want? Peace! When do we want it? Now!” the crowd shouted.

The event was organized by the community organization El Centro De Accion Social Inc. and the group’s executive director, Randy Ertll.

The group began holding a peace march in Pasadena following their event to honor Cesar Chavez four years ago in response to a growing number of homicides in the city, Ertll said.

Both individuals and other community organizations joined in the demonstration Saturday.

Some community members said Saturday they were left uneasy by the March 7 shooting death of 17-year-old Pasadena resident Abraham Rodriguez on Tremont Street, just east of Fair Oaks Avenue. No arrests have been made in the case, the first homicide reported in Pasadena this year.

Carmen Fregoe, 39, of Pasadena said she didn’t want to see another homicide in her city.

“I’m sick and tired of hearing about a kid dying in the street,” she said. “Do not be afraid to walk these streets.”

Dan Mack, 49, of Monrovia said he felt obligated to do what he can to create a safe community for children.

“I have children of my own,” he said, “and I want them to grow up safe, so I’m trying to stop the madness now.”
Mack added he believed that events such as the peace march set a good example for impressionable youths.

“Either we set an example, or someone else will,” he said.

Rebecca Pratt, 40, of Pasadena marched with her 3-month-old daughter, Zariyah, in a stroller.

“This is awesome,” she said of the march. “There’s a good diversity out here.”

Julie Guerrero, 16, of Pasadena said she is a teen mom and doesn’t want her son to grow up with violence.

“We need peace in Pasadena,” she said. “I want to see change in the streets. I don’t want my son being brought down by these negative people.”

Ertll said the goal of the march was to keep people focused on fighting violence.

“We shouldn’t come together only in times of crisis,” he said. “We need to work for peace every day.”

brian.day@sgvn.com

POSITIVE FEEDBACK/COMMENTS REGARDING BOOK – ONE PER WEEK

March 17th, 2010

“I’ve been plugging your book whenever I can – it’s a great book Randy, you should be proud! You make me proud to be Salvadoran through your words, insights and honesty; your book does give us all hope!”

Ricardo Salinas, from CULTURE CLASH

GOING TO PASADENA CITY COLLEGE – PCC BOOK PRESENTATION

March 10th, 2010

Join me on Tuesday, March 30, 2010 from 12:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m. at the CC Lounge at Pasadena City College (PCC) for my book presentation and discussion.

This is an awesome opportunity to speak to great students.

Hope you can join me.

Just Incredible – Please read the L.A. Times story and comment

March 3rd, 2010

The following is a story that I just read and decided to post on my blog from the L.A. Times.  What a disappointment about LAUSD teachers doing this…but it does not surprise me…since many teachers and people in general have many prejudices and continue to stereotype African American and Latino community members.  For example, if you write a book about the Salvadoran American – many automatically assume that the author has been a gang banger or a drug addict.  How ignorant.  This has occured to me – uninformed and insentive individuals perceived Salvadoran American youth as being GANG BANGERS.  How sad about how we are perceived as a community.  Please read the following story and post a comment if you like:

 

3 L.A. teachers suspended over Black History Month celebration of Simpson, Rodman, RuPaul March 3, 2010 | 6:30 pm Three teachers at a South Los Angeles elementary school have been suspended for allegedly encouraging students to celebrate O.J. Simpson, Dennis Rodman and RuPaul for Black History Month, officials said Wednesday. Children at Wadsworth Avenue Elementary School were carrying pictures of the men at a parade Friday on the school playground, said Los Angeles Unified School District spokeswoman Gayle Pollard-Terry. She said Supt. Ramon C. Cortines learned about the incident Tuesday and had the teachers, who are white, pulled from their classrooms pending an investigation. The suspension is without pay for the first three days. “The superintendent believes there are better choices,” she said. Other students were carrying pictures of President Obama and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. The teachers have not been identified and could not be reached for comment. District officials did not provide details about what the teachers did, saying the investigation was still ongoing. .Some community leaders aren’t satisfied with the suspensions and are calling for the dismissal of the instructors, who teach 1st, 2nd and 4th grade. “I just can’t fathom what these teachers were thinking of except to make a mockery of African American history,” said Leon Jenkins, president of the Los Angeles branch of the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People. L. C. “Chris” Strudwick-Turner of the Los Angeles Urban League likened the episode to a series of racially provocative incidents at UC San Diego, where a Feb. 15 off-campus party mocked Black History Month. “These kinds of things build on each other,” she said. “When something like that happens in [San Diego] and there is no immediate consequence, that emboldens others. That’s why I was glad that LAUSD took them out of the classroom right away.” Pollard-Terry said Simpson, Rodman and RuPaul were included on a list of prominent African Americans approved by the school for study during Black History Month. She said the three teacher were believed to have suggested at least some of those names for the list. Strudwick-Turner said the Urban League has been told by people who attended the parade that the teachers had been asked to instruct their classes on a notable African American and that they had Simpson, Rodman and RuPaul. The district had dispatched a human relations and ethnic diversity team Wednesday to help the school prepare lessons that are “more appropriate for Black History Month,” she added. –Alexandra Zavis