Education

Education Organization Says Well-Known AP History Book Has Over 300 Examples Of Liberal Bias

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Neetu Arnold Contributor
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  • The Education & Research Institute says there are over 300 examples of liberal bias in a well-known high school history textbook.
  • Examples range from abortion, to former President Ronald Reagan, to Prohibition.
  • The critique is part of a larger project led by Dan Oliver, a former member of Reagan’s administration.

An education organization claims there are more than 300 examples of liberal bias — from a partial presentation of abortion to critique of former President Ronald Reagan — in a well-known Advanced Placement (AP) history textbook.

The Education & Research Institute (E&RI) found errors and examples of liberal bias in the latter half of “The American Pageant,” a book that has in its entirety more than 1,000 pages. While this is a popular AP textbook, there are others used depending on a school’s preference.

“We have 300, 400 pages of them,” E&RI president and former Reagan administration member Dan Oliver told The Daily Caller News Foundation in a phone interview. “Every page has a problem.”

There are 38 AP courses available to students in seven subject categories. They allow students to take college-level courses while in high school, according to the College Board. Students can earn college credit if they get an acceptable score as decided by the corresponding college the student attends.

While College Board, which oversees the AP exams, does not require particular textbooks, it can suggest them, but it is up to the teacher to choose a textbook. Teachers submit a syllabus to College Board to approve based on a framework, but it does not require any specific textbooks.

“The American Pageant” in its 16th edition, along with other books, are in a list of example textbooks that “meet the curricular requirements of AP U.S. History,” but is not endorsed by the College Board.

“The list … is not exhaustive and the texts listed should not be regarded as endorsed, authorized, recommended, or approved by the College Board,” the College Board said on its website. “Not using a book from this list does not mean that a course will not receive authorization.”

“We don’t have the numbers yet for the 2018 administration but in 2017, 505,302 students took the AP US History exam,” Director for Media Relations at the College Board Maria Eugenia Alcón-Heraux told TheDCNF in a statement.

The number of students who took at least one AP exam was 1,174,554, according to College Board Class of 2017 data.

Burt Folsom, an economic historian and emeritus professor at Hillsdale College, wrote the online critique of the textbook’s 12th edition, which has since been revised into the latest 16th edition.

“As a strongly biased textbook, it has distorted American history for three generations of students,” Folsom wrote on E&RI’s website.

The textbook was originally written by Stanford University professor Thomas Bailey in 1956, according to E&RI. Stanford professor David Kennedy joined as co-author for the 1979 edition, and after his passing, Harvard University professor Lizabeth Cohen resumed that title.

The online critique highlighted the phrases that were considered either biased, misleading or incorrect and then explained why the passages contained errors. One of the examples cited Reagan as “no intellectual.”

“Though Reagan was no intellectual, he drew on the ideas of a small but influential group of thinkers known as ‘neoconservatives,'” the textbook reads.

Folsom found the phrase to belittle Reagan.

“The textbook repeatedly belittles Reagan in this chapter,” Folsom wrote. “He was ‘no intellectual’ and he listened to neoconservatives. What about FDR? He had a ‘C’ average in college, but the textbook treats him as the wisest of men. Reagan was very successful as president, and perhaps the authors are jealous of his success.”

Another example Folsom points out is that progressives supported a law that would end alcohol sales, and it was not just “crusading churches.

“One of the last peculiar spasms of the progressive reform movement was prohibition, loudly supported by crusading churches and by many women,” the book states.

Former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was also portrayed as a “master politician,” but Folsom argues the former president also increased the national debt by using government subsidies to win voting groups.

The textbook also chooses to present the point of view of a woman who wants an abortion over the right of a child’s life in regard to the 1973 Supreme Court case Roe v. Wade, according to Folsom.

“I do not emphasize minor errors, which understandably creep into most histories,” Folsom wrote on E&RI’s website. “My focus is on the flawed ideas in The American Pageant that mislead students into thinking that the United States is fundamentally corrupt, and that the world is often worse off because America exists and has so much global influence.”

Oliver is responsible for the The American History Book Project, which aims to point out weaknesses in four U.S. history textbooks.

“What they learn is that the government is great, but the private sector is greedy and selfish,” Oliver told TheDCNF about the problem of liberal bias in history textbooks. (RELATED: History IS Bunk — If It’s Not Taught Properly)

Oliver added that the critique for “The American Pageant” might apply for other history textbooks.

“I think the general gist of it would probably apply to many American history textbooks out there,” Oliver said.

E&RI was founded in 1974 and focuses on public policy issues.

“Our goal at Cengage is always to provide an accurate and unbiased narrative of events, while also telling the story of history,” “The American Pageant’s” 16th edition publisher Cengage Learning said in a statement to TheDCNF. “The credentials of the author team for The American Pageant attest to the credibility of academic discourse presented. We take seriously the quality of the scholarship in Pageant, the importance of rigorous updates, and the importance historians place on considering multiple points of view.”

“The Advanced Placement (AP) Program does not develop any textbooks for AP courses or require a particular textbook,” the College Board said in a statement to TheDCNF. “Instead, states, districts, and schools make local decisions about which college textbooks to use for AP courses. The only texts the AP Program requires for AP US History are the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and other such founding documents.”

Cohen did not immediately respond to TheDCNF’s request for comment. She was on a planned sabbatical for the 2018-2019 academic year, according to Harvard.

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