Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 27
Texas Approves History Overhaul for Millions, Teaching Ancient World to WWII in Grades 3-7
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 27

Texas Approves History Overhaul for Millions, Teaching Ancient World to WWII in Grades 3-7

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 27

Summary

  • Late Friday, the Texas State Board of Education approved a new history model that will move students through time sequentially, starting with ancient history in third grade and reaching World War II by seventh.
  • The overhaul replaces the common split-by-subject approach—Texas history in one grade, U.S. history in another—with Texas, U.S. and world history taught together through each era.
  • Republicans on the board, who hold a 10-5 majority, backed the change alongside conservative groups that argued fragmented lessons had failed and pointed to weak history scores.
  • The shift will affect millions of students in the nation’s second-largest state and sets Texas apart from most states, which still organize elementary and middle-school history by separate subjects or regions.
  • Texas approved the plan alongside a new statewide English book list that emphasizes classic literature and includes Bible excerpts, underscoring a broader curriculum push.

Insights

How will historical sites adapt when Texas completely reorders how students learn history?
With 320,000 teachers to retrain, can this ambitious curriculum reform succeed beyond the pages of policy documents?