The ‘divisive’ ban whitewashing Virginia’s classrooms

There’s a recent painting that sums up what’s happening to public education in Virginia: A white man, white paint roller in hand, is covering up Black historical figures—Harriet Tubman, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X—their bodies whitewashed, faces stoic.

The piece by Detroit artist Jonathan Harris, titled “Critical Race Theory,” stuck with Cassandra Newby-Alexander, a professor at Norfolk State University, a Historically Black University, since she first saw it online.

Newby-Alexander is the former co-chair of the African American History Education Commission (AAHEC), a group of educators and historians brought together by former Governor Ralph Northam in August 2019 to recommend changes to add more Black history to Virginia’s K-12 curricula. The state Board of Education implemented their recommendations in the fall of 2021.

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