EDUCATION

What Critics Are Missing When Attacking Florida Guidelines for Black History

What’s more important than discussing the benefits of slavery

William Spivey
Momentum
Published in
4 min readAug 2, 2023

--

Excerpt from New York Times, Rosewood, Florida, Negro Massacre Report | Public Domain

For the record, Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida isn't wrong when he describes Florida's Black History curriculum as comprehensive and more inclusive than most other states. The Florida State Academic Standards for Social Studies 2023 provides an in-depth outline that includes far more than I expected. I cross-checked for the things I imagined I'd find missing; the Black Codes, the Slave Codes, the Black Panther Party, the Rosewood Massacre, and Malcolm X. They were all there. Nowhere to be seen, though, were the Compromise of 1877 and the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, which effectively ended Reconstruction and ushered in Jim Crow. There was no mention of Partus Sequitur Ventrum, which dictated that every child born to an enslaved woman was also a slave and that their fathers’ had no responsibility.

The line is there about enslaved people receiving benefits from their training. "Instruction includes how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit." That line has been widely criticized for the underlying assumptions that the enslaved possessed no worthwhile skills when they arrived and that slavery…

--

--

Momentum
Momentum

Published in Momentum

Momentum is a blog that captures and reflects the moment we find ourselves in, one where rampant anti-Black racism is leading to violence, trauma, protest, reflection, sorrow, and more. Momentum doesn’t look away when the news cycle shifts.

William Spivey
William Spivey

Written by William Spivey

I write about politics, history, education, and race. Follow me at williamfspivey.com and support me at https://ko-fi.com/williamfspivey0680