Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Tuesday, January 31, 2006
Texas State Board of Educations Asks AG To Permit Them To Review Textbooks
According to the Dallas Morning News yesterday, two members of the Texas State Board of Education have asked Texas Republican Attorney General Greg Abbott to reconsider a 1996 Attorney General's Opinion (Opinion No. DM-424). That opinion said that said the Board had no authority to screen school textbooks other than for factual errors. The Board members would like to be able to prescribe general textbook content standards. (Full text of 1/6/06 request for new AG opinion.) A bill passed by the legislature in 1995 took away the Board's authority to review textbooks, and several attempts since then to change the law have been rejected by the state legislature. Social conservatives would like to restore the board's authority to review the way in which books present issues like evolution, birth control and sexual abstinence, and interpretations of history. Texas requirements often impact the version of textbooks that are marketed throughout the country.