Quantcast
breaking news

After Backlash, Changes in Store for CSCOPE

By: Elena Schneider, The Texas Tribune
Updated: February 8, 2013
CSCOPE, a controversial statewide curriculum delivery system that has come under fire from critics for its prescriptive structure and a perceived anti-American bias, will undergo a sweeping review process and ensure better transparency, state Sen. Dan Patrick, R-Houston, announced Friday.

As a result of a Senate hearing last week in which CSCOPE representatives faced tough questions from lawmakers, the Texas Education Service Center Curriculum Collaborative, the state-funded group that designed the system, will review the materials included in the lesson plans and open all future meetings to the public, said Patrick, the chairman of the Senate Education Committee. The group will also post the curriculum content online and eliminate civil and criminal penalties for teachers for releasing lesson plans.

"The future of the program will depend on CSCOPE keeping its commitments they have made and gaining the trust of the Legislature, teachers and parents," Patrick said in a statement Friday.

CSCOPE spokesman Mason Moses said Friday that the system would remain dedicated to "being a trusted resource" and that increased transparency will "create a greater reassurance in the public that [the curriculum] is the highest quality that it possibly can be."

About 70 percent of Texas school districts use the system, which jumped into the national spotlight last November when conservative radio host Glenn Beck criticized a lesson plan that characterized the Boston Tea Party as an act of terrorism from the perspective of the British.

Social studies will be the first subject reviewed. "As was brought up in the hearing, that's been where most of the concerns have been raised," Moses said, "so it was most important to start with that subject."

Texas Tribune donors or members may be quoted or mentioned in our stories, or may be the subject of them. For a complete list of contributors, click here.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2013/02/08/patrick-announces-greater-transparency-curriculum/.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

The town of Colorado City will be saying goodbye to the teenage girl the've spent years looking for on Sunday....

An Alpine man is facing federal charges for allegedly getting drugs in the mail to be sold to other people....

A West Odessa home has been destroyed after an afternoon fire....

The Catholic Diocese of Lubbock is speaking out after an investigation revealed a man claiming to be part of the Diocese was simply using their name to secure clients....

The Texas Thunder Festival has come to the area to raise money for those affected in the West explosion....

Temps will stay in the upper 90's and 100's this weekend with low humidity...

A large police presence at the Purple Sage Condos at Sage and Wadley in Midland Friday morning....

A bill that would require Texas legislators to submit to drug tests and pass the results to the State Ethics Commission was voted out of the Senate Committee on State Affairs on Thursday....

One Direction is going south for their new stadium tour.  Marianne Elisak reports...

...

 
 
Do you believe people will go to prison over the IRS scandal?
 



 
 
 
©1998 - 2013 Permianbasin360.com
Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.
All Rights Reserved