Insight Remember When • • Flash Point From the pages of the Jewish News from this week 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 and 60 years ago. Farmington Schools adopts international affairs course, despite community objections. DIANA LIEBERMAN StaffWriter semester. Also voting against the half- credit course were trustees Linda Enberg and Jack Inch. Voting for adoption of the course for fall 2003 were trustees Priscilla Brouillette, Gary Sharp, Frank Reid and Cathleen Webb. After the vote, Superintendent C. Robert Maxfield said the district would institute a thorough review of the new course after its first year. liff embers of the Farmington Public Schools board of educa- tion have approved an elective course called "International Affairs," to begin this fall at the dis- trict's three high schools. The class, one of several presented to board trustees by Jerry Fouchey, director of curriculum and staff devel- Left-Leaning Bias? opment, won approval by a 4-3 vote at the June 17 board meeting. Community members who spoke at the 4 1 /,-hour meeting expressed con- Beginning with the Class of 2006, which enters high school this fall, cern that the proposed course is biased Farmington students in its presentation will be required to of political issues. choose one of three They especially half-credit interna- objected to tional studies courses. sources listed as The course approved recommended June 17 is the first to adjuncts — peri- come before the odicals and Web seven-member board. sites they found The other two will left-leaning at focus on sociology best, and anti- and cultural anthro- American or anti- pology. Semitic at worst. As Fouchey "If you approve described it, the this course as out- course encompasses lined here, a new "the study of coun- standard of bias tries and world Robert Stulberg f avors a required will be intro- regions currently American govern ment course for duced into the undergoing signifi- high school senio rs. curriculum," said cant political, eco- Susan Bernstein nomic, social, cultur- Kahn of al or environmental changes." Farmington Hills. The purpose of the international Kahn looked up some of the Web affairs course, Fouchey said, is to sites at random, and found "no site "equip the student with the tools to where our children find reasons to be thoughtfully respond to the changing proud to be an American." events in the world." What she found was typified by the The June 17 vote reflected strenu- Web site AlterNet.com , which ous objections by about a dozen par- includes the following statement: "It ents of students in the district. is time to say in public that the "I would like us to put this aside United States is a fascist state,'" she said. and look a little closer at the Web sites mentioned in the curriculum," said "I do believe there is great value to trustee Pamela Christian, who voted teaching global issues and America's against adopting the international role in the world," she said, adding affairs curriculum for the 2003 fall that "the way the curriculum is cur- rently designed may very well have a negative effect on our students." Community members first heard of the international affairs course at a school district meeting in March about globalization education. "It came up that there was a course being developed that no one had heard of," said Don Cohen of West Bloomfield, former executive director of the Anti- Defamation League Michigan Region. In response to that meeting, Kahn, along with Robert and Linda Stulberg of Farmington Hills, met with Fouchey April 1 to voice their objec- tions to the curriculum. Although Cohen, a member of the school dis- trict's diversity committee, was unable to attend, the others brought along a three-page memo he had written. The memo included sources intend- ed to broaden the discussion and counterbalance the uniformly one- sided opinions Cohen said several parts of the curriculum contained. In addition, it pinpointed parts of the curriculum relating to the Middle East that Cohen said showed a strong anti- Israel bias. For example, Palestine is referenced as a nation, and students are asked to study Jewish settlements and American Jewish influence on the American political process, while terrorism, Islamism and the influence of Arab nations goes unmentioned, he said. Implementation, Evaluation Many of Cohen's suggestions were incorporated in the 37-page version of the course outline before the board, yet he said the course still had the potential, when taught in a real class- room by a real teacher, of carrying out the biases in the original outline because much of the sourcing was still the same. "So, in addition to revising the doc- ument, some concrete actions must be taken to ensure the original mindset will no longer guide its implementa- tion," he said. INSIGHT on page 20 1993 Some 193 acres in Hartland Township goes on the market after Camp Tamarack decides to merge with Camp Maas iii Ortonville in the wake of tight funding and increased township development. 1983 Detroiter Jill Colman Ruskin is ordained a Reform rabbi by Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, Cincinnati. 1973 An oil painting by well-known Michigan artist Max Shaye, com- missioned for the Old Orchard Center at Orchard Lake and Maple roads in West Bloomfield by the center's owners Gilbert and Silverman, will be hung next week. 1963 At the 31st annual convention of B'nai Btith Women, District 6, held in Chicago, Mrs. Alfred E. Lakin of Detroit is elected presi- dent. Rabbi Emanuel Applebaum is elected president of the Jewish Historical Society of Michigan. 1953 As part of a program on Jewish cul- tural and educational activities, the Manischewitz Co. presents to United Hebrew Schools of Detroit copies of My Mission to Israel by Dr. James C. MacDonald, first U.S. ambassador to Israel. Dr. Harold A. Basilius, professor of German and director of the Humanities program at Wayne State University in Detroit, is the Franklin Memorial Professor in Human Relations for 1953-1954. 191ka. Jewish citizens of France who have been naturalized since 1927 are los- ing their national rights, an order that many believe will result in a mass expulsion of Jews. — Compiled by Holly Teasdle, archivist, the Rabbi Leo M Franklin 7/ 4 2003 19