Close Menu
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Career
  • Sports
  • Climate
  • Science
    • Tech
  • Culture
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
Categories
  • Breaking News (3,071)
  • Business (253)
  • Career (2,620)
  • Climate (172)
  • Culture (2,589)
  • Education (2,734)
  • Finance (143)
  • Health (630)
  • Lifestyle (2,507)
  • Science (2,418)
  • Sports (186)
  • Tech (127)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Hand Picked

Stuttgart’s Stiller remains a hot topic at Liverpool

May 17, 2025

Japan assets saw record inflows in April as investors fled U.S. markets

May 17, 2025

NEW Cooperative Foundation donates to local 4-H clubs | Lifestyle

May 17, 2025

75th Annual Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair Awards Teen Scientists from Around the World More Than $9 Million in 2025 Competition

May 17, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
onlyfacts24
  • Breaking News

    Japan assets saw record inflows in April as investors fled U.S. markets

    May 17, 2025

    Biden admits keeping classified Afghanistan document for posterity in leaked audio

    May 17, 2025

    The US announces first ‘terrorism’ charges for supporting a Mexican cartel | Crime News

    May 17, 2025

    Moody’s lowers U.S. credit rating to ‘Aa1’

    May 16, 2025

    Comey had earlier anti-Trump seashell photo prior to 2024 election

    May 16, 2025
  • Business

    IBMWhat is a Cyberattack?Improve your organization's incident response program, minimize the impact of a breach and experience rapid response to cybersecurity incidents..Dec 16, 2024

    May 16, 2025

    As a Father of Two Sons, I’m Unsure How to Address Toxic Masculinity

    May 15, 2025

    Better Business Bureau travel tips and scam warnings topic for Newsmakers program

    May 8, 2025

    IBMThinkStay ahead with the latest tech news. Weekly insights, research and expert views on AI, security, cloud and more in the Think Newsletter..6 days ago

    May 5, 2025

    Kazakhstan became the topic of a round table in the business center of New York

    May 2, 2025
  • Career

    Christiansburg Middle School Career Investigations Class Starts Community Garden

    May 17, 2025

    Shop class, summer jobs pave the way for construction career – School News Network

    May 17, 2025

    Mountain DemocratCareer Day inspires middle school studentsStudents at Herbert C. Green Middle School met representatives from a variety of professions at the first annual Career Day held May 12 on….3 hours ago

    May 17, 2025

    DVIDS – News – Sailors Spark Student Interest in Healthcare Careers at W.T. Sampson Career Fair

    May 16, 2025

    Texas Workforce Commission (.gov)Governor Abbott, TWC Announce Over $580,700 In Career Training Grants To Three Metroplex Region SchoolsAUSTIN – Governor Greg Abbott today announced three career training grants totaling over $580,700 have been awarded to three schools in the….17 hours ago

    May 16, 2025
  • Sports

    Stuttgart’s Stiller remains a hot topic at Liverpool

    May 17, 2025

    herald-dispatch.comTaylor Kennedy: Mental health is a serious topicDid you know that, according to a 2022 NCAA study, the number of athletes reporting mental health concerns is 1.5 to two times higher than….4 hours ago

    May 16, 2025

    Shedeur Sanders was a topic during Monday’s White House press briefing

    May 16, 2025

    Sports, Nutrition, and Public Health: Analyzing their Interconnected Impacts

    May 16, 2025

    Nikola Topic’s Future is a Serious Concern for OKC

    May 15, 2025
  • Climate

    Environmentalism | Ideology, History, & Types

    May 11, 2025

    Chipko movement | History, Causes, Leaders, Outcomes, & Facts

    May 6, 2025

    What is environmental justice? – Southern Environmental Law Center

    May 6, 2025

    Climate change conversations dismissed as a topic of discussion in upcoming federal election

    May 5, 2025

    Where Labor and the Coalition stand on nature and environment policies this federal election

    May 1, 2025
  • Science
    1. Tech
    2. View All

    Consumer Trends and Industry Impact

    May 13, 2025

    How temperature increase drives energy loss in fuel cells

    May 9, 2025

    Filling Wisconsin’s expected energy gap topic of May 20 Tech Council luncheon in Madison

    May 9, 2025

    AI’s impact on jobs, tech’s touchy topic

    April 20, 2025

    75th Annual Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair Awards Teen Scientists from Around the World More Than $9 Million in 2025 Competition

    May 17, 2025

    RSV wasn’t as hard on U.S. babies last winter. This may be why

    May 17, 2025

    Science NewsWhat gene makes orange cats orange? Scientists figured it outResearchers found the gene and genetic variation behind orange fur in most domestic cats, solving a decades-long mystery..1 day ago

    May 17, 2025

    New audio tech could let you listen privately without headphones

    May 16, 2025
  • Culture

    New Israeli series ‘Bad Boy’ goes viral – Israel Culture

    May 17, 2025

    Mountain America Credit Union Wins National Recognition for Transforming Workplace Culture — TradingView News

    May 17, 2025

    San Pedro Creek Culture Park fully opens as final phase of the project wraps up

    May 17, 2025

    Embracing fast-food culture: Lianhuanhua as a paradigm of visual narrative news

    May 16, 2025

    Ojai Valley NewsFamily drama and fantasy cowboys take charge in ‘You Got Older’Veritas Theater's first fully staged theatrical production of 2025 is “You Got Older” by Pulitzer Prize-nominated playwright Clare Barron..5 hours ago

    May 16, 2025
  • Health

    Weekly Letter: On the Topic of Health

    May 16, 2025

    Mental health is an important topic for new Springfield city manager

    May 16, 2025

    Strengthening WASH and IPC as major cornerstones of public health

    May 15, 2025

    Medical Surveillance Monthly Report “30th Anniversary” Issue Celebrates a Milestone

    May 14, 2025

    Seventy-eighth World Health Assembly

    May 13, 2025
  • Lifestyle
Contact
onlyfacts24
Home»Education»Conservatives on the Cy-Fair ISD school board escalate fight over textbooks – Houston Public Media
Education

Conservatives on the Cy-Fair ISD school board escalate fight over textbooks – Houston Public Media

April 3, 2025No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Cfisdtexastribpropub 1500x839.jpg
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
CFISD Board Meeting

Danielle Villasana for ProPublica and The Texas Tribune

The Cypress-Fairbanks school board has attracted community protests, including at this meeting in February, for its decisions regarding gender identity, its push for a biblical curriculum and the removal of chapters from state-approved textbooks. Credit: Danielle Villasana for ProPublica and The Texas Tribune

“A Texas school leader says material about diversity in state-approved textbooks violated the law.” was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

This article is co-published with ProPublica, a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up for ProPublica’s Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox as soon as they are published. Also, sign up for The Brief, our daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.


In 2022, conservative groups celebrated a “great victory” over “wokeified” curriculum when the Texas State Board of Education squashed proposed social studies requirements for schools that included teaching kindergartners how Rosa Parks and Cesar Chavez “advocated for positive change.”

Another win came a year later as the state board rejected several textbooks that some Republicans argued could promote a “radical environmental agenda” because they linked climate change to human behavior or presented what conservatives perceived to be a negative portrayal of fossil fuels.

By the time the state board approved science and career-focused textbooks for use in Texas classrooms at the end of 2023, it appeared to be comfortably in sync with conservatives who had won control of local school boards across the state in recent years.

But the Republican-led state education board had not gone far enough for the conservative majority on the school board for Texas’ third-largest school district.

At the tail end of a school board meeting in May of last year, Natalie Blasingame, a board member in suburban Houston’s Cypress-Fairbanks Independent School District, proposed stripping more than a dozen chapters from five textbooks that had been approved by the state board and were recommended by a district committee of teachers and staffers.

The chapters, Blasingame said, were inappropriate for students because they discussed “vaccines and polio,” touched on “topics of depopulation,” had “an agenda out of the United Nations” and included “a perspective that humans are bad.”

RELATED: Cy-Fair ISD’s libraries are frequently closed after trustees cut librarian positions in half

In a less-publicized move, Blasingame, a former bilingual educator, proposed omitting several chapters from a textbook for aspiring educators titled “Teaching.” One of those chapters focuses on how to understand and educate diverse learners and states that it “is up to schools and teachers to help every student feel comfortable, accepted and valued,” and that “when schools view diversity as a positive force, it can enhance learning and prepare students to work effectively in a diverse society.”

Blasingame did not offer additional details about her opposition to the chapters during the meeting. She didn’t have to. The school board voted 6-1 to delete them.

Natalie Blasingame

Credit: Danielle Villasana for ProPublica and The Texas Tribune

Natalie Blasingame, a member of the Cypress-Fairbanks School Board, proposed cutting chapters from five textbooks. Credit: Danielle Villasana for ProPublica and The Texas Tribune

The decision to strip chapters from books that had already won the approval of the state’s conservative board of education represents an escalation in local school boards’ efforts to influence what children in public schools are taught. Through the years, battles over textbooks have played out at the state level, where Republicans hold the majority. But local school boards that are supposed to be nonpartisan had largely avoided such fights — they weighed in on whether some books should be in libraries but rarely intervened so directly into classroom instruction. Cypress-Fairbanks now provides a model for supercharging these efforts at more fine-grained control, said Christopher Kulesza, a scholar at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy.

“One of the things that would concern me is that it’s ideology pushing the educational standards rather than what’s fact,” he said.

RELATED: Cy-Fair ISD’s focus on libraries followed flood of book challenges by two trustees’ inner circles

The board’s actions send a troubling message to students of color, Alissa Sundrani, a junior at Cy-Fair High School, said. “At the point that you’re saying that diversity, or making people feel safe and included, is not in the guidelines or not in the scope of what Texas wants us to be learning, then I think that’s an issue.”

With about 120,000 students, nearly 80% of whom are of Hispanic, Black and Asian descent, Cy-Fair is the largest school district in Texas to be taken over by ideologically driven conservative candidates. Blasingame was among a slate of candidates who were elected through the at-large voting system that ProPublica and The Texas Tribune found has been leveraged by conservative groups seeking to influence what children are taught about race and gender. Supporters say the system, in which voters cast ballots for all candidates districtwide instead of ones who live within specific geographic boundaries, results in broader representation for students, but voting rights advocates argue that it dilutes the power of voters of color.

Cy-Fair ISD Building
A man holds up a phone in camera mode as a group of people in auditorium chairs pose.
First image: Cy-Fair’s administration building. Second image: People gather before a school board meeting. Credit: Danielle Villasana for ProPublica and The Texas Tribune

Blasingame and others campaigned against the teaching of critical race theory, an advanced academic concept that discusses systemic racism. Most of the winning candidates had financial backing from Texans for Educational Freedom, a statewide PAC that sought to build a “stronghold” of school board trustees “committed to fighting Critical Race Theory and other anti-American agendas and curriculums.” The PAC helped elect at least 30 school board candidates across the state between 2021 and 2023, in part because it focused on anti-CRT sentiment, said its founder, Christopher Zook Jr.

“You could literally go out and say, CRT, you know, ‘Stop critical race theory in schools,’ and everyone knew what that means, right?” he said. “The polling showed that that messaging works.”

Shortly before Blasingame and two fellow conservatives won election in 2021, Texas lawmakers passed a landmark law that sought to shape how teachers approach instruction on race and racism. The law, which aimed to ban critical race theory, prohibits the “inculcation” of the notion that someone’s race makes them “inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously.”

Blasingame made no mention of the law when she pushed to remove chapters about teaching a diverse student body, but pointed to it as the reason for her objection in text messages and an interview with ProPublica and the Tribune. Though Blasingame acknowledged that one of the chapters had “very good presentation on learning styles,” she said removing the whole chapter was the only option because administrators said individual lines could not be stricken from the book.

The textbook referred to “cultural humility” and called for aspiring teachers to examine their “unintentional and subtle biases,” concepts that she said “go against” the law. The school board needed to act because the book “slipped through” before the state’s education agency implemented a plan to make sure materials complied with the law, Blasingame said.

Text excerpts:
Blasingame recommended removing several chapters from a textbook called “Teaching.” The chapters included references to “cultural humility” and “unintentional and subtle biases,” which she believes are not permitted under state law, which specifies how topics concerning race can be taught. Credit: Document obtained and sentences enlarged by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune

State Board Chair Aaron Kinsey, who is staunchly anti-CRT, declined to say if he thought the body had allowed textbooks to slip through as Blasingame suggested. Kinsey, however, said in a statement that contracts with approved publishers include requirements that their textbooks comply with all applicable laws. He did not comment on Cy-Fair removing chapters.

Cy-Fair appears to have taken one of the state’s most aggressive approaches to enforcing the law, which does not address what is in textbooks but rather how educators approach teaching, said Paige Duggins-Clay, the chief legal analyst for the Intercultural Development Research Agency, a San Antonio-based nonprofit that advocates for equal educational opportunity.

“It definitely feels like Cy-Fair is seeking to test the boundaries of the law,” Duggins-Clay said. “And I think in a district like Cy-Fair, because it is so diverse, that is actively hurting a lot of young people who are ultimately paying the cost and bearing the burden of these really bad policies.”

The law’s vagueness has drawn criticism from conservative groups who say it allows school districts to skirt its prohibitions. Last month, Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against the Coppell school district in North Texas and accused administrators of illegally teaching “woke and hateful” CRT curriculum. The suit points to a secret recording of an administrator saying that the district will do what’s right for students “despite what our state standards say.” The lawsuit does not provide examples of curriculum that it alleges violates state law on how to teach race. In a letter to parents, Superintendent Brad Hunt said that the district was following state standards and would “continue to fully comply with applicable state and federal laws.”

Teachers and progressive groups have also argued that the law leaves too much open to interpretation, which causes educators to self-censor and could be used to target anything that mentions race.

Blasingame disputes the critique. A longtime administrator and teacher whose family emigrated from South Africa when she was 9 years old, she said she embraces diversity in schools.

“Diversity is people and I love people,” she said. “That’s what I’m called to do, first as a Christian and then as an educator.”

But she said she opposes teaching about systemic racism and state-sanctioned efforts to promote diversity, equity and inclusion, saying that they overemphasize the importance of skin color.

“They seed hate and teach students that they are starting off behind and have unconquerable disadvantages that they will suffer all their lives,” Blasingame said. “Not only does this teach hate among people, but how could you love a country where this is true?”

The assertion that teaching diversity turns students of color into victims is simply wrong, educators and students told the news organizations. Instead, they said, such discussions make them feel safe and accepted.

One educator who uses the “Teaching” textbook said the board members’ decision to remove chapters related to diversity has been painful for students.

“I don’t know what their true intentions are, but to my students, what they are seeing is that unless you fit into the mold and you are like them, you are not valued,” said the teacher, who did not want to be named because she feared losing her job. “There were several who said it made them not want to teach anymore because they felt so unsupported.”

The board’s interpretation of the state’s law on the teaching of race has stifled important classroom discussions, said Sundrani, the student in the district. Her AP English class, a seminar about the novel “Huckleberry Finn,” steered clear of what she thinks are badly needed conversations about race, slavery and how that history impacts people today.

“There were topics that we just couldn’t discuss,” she said.

Disclosure: Rice University and Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.


This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/04/02/texas-cypress-fairbanks-removed-textbook-chapters/.

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

WIU Students Raising Funds for Annual Special Education Advocacy Summit

May 17, 2025

West Virginia officials strip Tyler County Board of Education of authority over school system | News, Sports, Jobs

May 17, 2025

Latifah Phillips, a current Lowell administrator, was chosen as interim superintendent of Pittsfield Public Schools | Central Berkshires

May 16, 2025

WS/FCS facing deadline for financial corrective action plan

May 16, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest Posts

Stuttgart’s Stiller remains a hot topic at Liverpool

May 17, 2025

Japan assets saw record inflows in April as investors fled U.S. markets

May 17, 2025

NEW Cooperative Foundation donates to local 4-H clubs | Lifestyle

May 17, 2025

75th Annual Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair Awards Teen Scientists from Around the World More Than $9 Million in 2025 Competition

May 17, 2025
News
  • Breaking News (3,071)
  • Business (253)
  • Career (2,620)
  • Climate (172)
  • Culture (2,589)
  • Education (2,734)
  • Finance (143)
  • Health (630)
  • Lifestyle (2,507)
  • Science (2,418)
  • Sports (186)
  • Tech (127)
  • Uncategorized (1)

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from onlyfacts24.

Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from ONlyfacts24.

News
  • Breaking News (3,071)
  • Business (253)
  • Career (2,620)
  • Climate (172)
  • Culture (2,589)
  • Education (2,734)
  • Finance (143)
  • Health (630)
  • Lifestyle (2,507)
  • Science (2,418)
  • Sports (186)
  • Tech (127)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Facebook Instagram TikTok
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
© 2025 Designed by onlyfacts24

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.