Falconer November/December 2023 Issue

Page 1

Vol. 49, Issue 3, 24 pages

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

constructing a c ur

There’s a lot of openness to this graduation requirement that is very complex and is very unique to how we adopt [the requirement in schools].” Bryan Marcus

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ASSOCIATE SUPERINTENDENT OF EDUCATIONAL AND STUDENT SERVICES

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um PHOTO HUNT/FALCONER PHOTOBY BYCAROLINE ANNA OPALSKY/FALCONER

CREATING A CLASS: As SDUHSD staff works to implement a new Ethnic Studies requirement in accordance with California law, they face some debate over which department this class belongs in. Both the Social Sciences and English department Chairs have attended meetings to determine what this new course will entail when it becomes mandatory for the class of 2030.

SDUHSD explores future of Ethnic Studies requirement Ellie Koff

ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR

California State Governor Gavin Newsom signed Assembly Bill 101 into law in Oct. 2021, mandating that students, beginning with the graduating class of 2030, take a semester of an Ethnic Studies class in high school. This new requirement aims to introduce high school students to the “interdisciplinary study” of histories and cultures underrepresented in traditional U.S. and World History courses, according to California 100, a policy research collaboration by the University of California and Stanford University. California is currently the only state that has made Ethnic Studies a graduation requirement. Now, California school districts are determining how to implement this requirement within the next year; chief among these conversations in SDUHSD is which department this requirement

will be housed in. SDUHSD board members met with English and Social Sciences Chairs to discuss how the district will meet this standard, according to Associate Superintendent of Educational and Student Services Bryan Marcus. “There’s a lot of openness to this graduation requirement that is very complex and is very unique to how we adopt [the requirement in schools],” Marcus said. “It could be in a math class, it could be in an English class, it could be in a social science class.” Due to this, the way an Ethnic Studies course looks at one high school could be different from the way it looks at another; however, both will meet the state standards. In the Sweetwater Union School District, plans for this requirement include a stand-alone Ethnic Studies course, according to SUHSD Board Member Nicholas Segura.

“They are thinking about starting in ninth grade because there is no history requirement,” Segura said. SUHSD is considering offering the class as a mandatory elective for students by the 2024-25 school year. This means that students would take a year-long course, such as the AfricanAmerican or Chicano Studies elective already in place on some SUHSD campuses, to meet the Ethnic Studies course requirement. The San Diego Unified School District also has courses that would meet the Ethnic Studies requirement already in place, according to their website. SDUHSD currently plans to

create a new curriculum to meet this requirement, with a pilot model projected to be offered in the 2024-2025 school year, according to Marcus. “My guess is that [the requirement] will be integrated into a current course rather than a stand-alone course because that creates some pretty significant master schedule implications,” TPHS Principal Rob Coppo said. “There seems to be some logic in embedding it into English. You don’t have a freshman social science class.” The other option considered was to implement the requirement into a continued on A2

Now, California school districts are determining how to implement this requirement within the next year; chief among these conversations in SDUHSD is which department this requirement will be housed in.


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Falconer November/December 2023 Issue by TPHS Falconer - Issuu