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TRENTON, N.J. — Move over black history and LGBTQ history, there’s a new mandate coming to New Jersey’s public schools.
New Jersey lawmakers on Thursday advanced legislation requiring public schools to teach Latino and Hispanic history as part of the state’s social studies curriculum.
The Assembly Budget Committee reported favorably on a Senate Committee Substitute for Senate Bills 2335 and 3096, which directs the State Board of Education to adopt revised New Jersey Student Learning Standards (NJSLS) in Social Studies to include the history and contributions of Latino and Hispanic communities.
Under the measure, school districts would be required to provide instruction on Latino and Hispanic history from kindergarten through 12th grade. The content must be “historically accurate, culturally relevant, community-based, contemporary, and developmentally appropriate,” according to the bill language.
Key Points
- NJ schools would be required to teach Latino and Hispanic history K–12
- Instruction will be part of revised Social Studies standards under NJSLS
- Commissioner of Education will offer sample resources and materials to schools
The Commissioner of Education, in consultation with the Commission on Latino and Hispanic Heritage, will be tasked with providing school districts with sample learning activities and instructional materials to aid in implementation.
Instructional standards developed under the bill would be adopted during the regular NJSLS review cycle, which occurs every five years. The next scheduled review of the social studies standards is set for 2025.
A 2023 report from the Johns Hopkins Institute for Education Policy and UnidosUS found that 87 percent of key topics in Latino history were either omitted entirely or mentioned in just five or fewer sentences across major U.S. history textbooks.