Texas Board of Education and Textbook Massacre
Revisionary: Texas Textbook Massacre Video Analysis Assignment Instructions
You will need to watch the movie: The Revisionary in order to compete the prompt for this assignment topic.
There is a version you can rent or purchase, but it is only available to be purchased and watched in Amazon
for prime members. Option 1.
Option 2. Copy and paste this link to stream the Revisionaries entire documentary free.
https://tubitv.com/movies/54909/the-revisionaries (Links to an external site.)
The Texas Textbook Massacre Showdown
Obtained from PBS official website: http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/films/revisionaries/
In Austin, Texas, 15 people influence what is taught to the next generation of American children. Once every
decade, the highly politicized Texas State Board of Education rewrites the teaching and textbook standards for
its nearly five million schoolchildren. And when it comes to textbooks, what happens in Texas affects the nation
as a whole. Texas is one of the nation's largest textbook markets because it is one of the few where the state
decides what books schools can buy rather than leaving it up to local districts, which means publishers that get
their books approved can count on millions of dollars in sales. Further, publishers craft their standard textbooks
based on the requirements of the biggest buyers. As a result, the Texas board has the power to shape the
textbooks that children around the country read for years to come.
Don McLeroy, a dentist, Sunday school teacher, and avowed young-earth creationist, leads the Religious Right
charge. After briefly serving on his local school board, McLeroy was elected to the Texas State Board of
Education and later appointed chairman. During his time on the board, McLeroy has overseen the adoption of
new science and history curriculum standards, drawing national attention and placing Texas on the front line of
the so-called “culture wars.”
In his last term, McLeroy, aided by Cynthia Dunbar, an attorney from Houston and professor of Law at Jerry
Falwell’s Liberty University, finds himself not only fighting to change what Americans are taught, but also
fighting to retain his seat on the board. Challenged by Kathy Miller, president of the Texas Freedom Network,
and Ron Wetherington, an anthropology professor from Southern Methodist University in Texas, McLeroy faces
his toughest term yet.
The Revisionaries shines a spotlight on the key players affecting U.S. high school textbooks, with characters
representing a wide array of personalities and desires. Some see the board as a stepping-stone to future
political success. Others see it as their ordained quest to preserve the teachings of the Bible. Still others see it
as their duty to ensure that their children, who are in the public schools, have access to the best possible
education that will prepare them to compete for jobs in the global marketplace. In all of this, one thing is
assured, these board members are in the right place at the right time. They have the opportunity to affect a
generation of Americans.
Filmed for over three years, filmmaker Scott Thurman has captured all of the intense debates, vote trading, and
compromises amongst the board members. He shows the back room discussions between the board members
and the experts, and is with them as they make their decisions. But, first and foremost, The Revisionaries is
about people, those few passionate citizens who are fighting to shape the course of American education, and
the future of America with it.
The Filmmaker: Scott Thurman was born in Lubbock, Texas and is an M.F.A. graduate in documentary film
from the University of North Texas. He has worked as a news photographer for four years and has produced
three short films at the University of North Texas including Smokey a short documentary about an Elvis
impersonator that has been selected by film festivals around the U.S. including AFI Dallas, Los Angeles Film
Festival, Hot Springs Doc Festival, and Austin Film Festival among others. Scott originally conceived of a
documentary film about the Texas Board of Education for his thesis project Standing Up to the Experts.
Topic and Issue Overview: Texas is one of the nation's largest textbook markets because it is one of the few
where the state decides what books schools can buy rather than leaving it up to local districts. With the debate
in the US about changing curricula and AP test subjects, it seems appropriate to investigate a bit further into
the debate and its background. “The Revisionaries” is a 2012 documentary meant to provide a look at who
makes the decision that affect the American curriculum and on what grounds they are made. While the film
does provide a good and interesting look at the logic – or illogic – of curriculum decisions, it also makes some
interesting choices of its own, raising the age-old question of what a documentary is meant to do.
“The Revisionaries” follows Don McLeroy, the former head of the Texas state Board of Education, as he head a
curriculum revision first for the Texas science curriculum, and then for the Texas social studies curriculum. In
the case of science, the debate focuses on evolution and how to teach evolution in schools, while the social
studies curriculum debate focuses on a shift towards conservatism and the exclusion of minorities.
The film offers a good look at the thought process behind some of the changes made by the Texas SBOE, and
an excellent look at the politics of it. Its interviews with the Board members make it clear that each of them do
feel they have Texas’ best interests at heart. The interviews with lobbyists and outside parties, too,
demonstrate that, for everyone involved, this is a moral fight where they are the good and righteous
protagonists facing a foe that seeks nothing less than the destruction of Texas’ children. Even while the film
shows some of the more outlandish beliefs of its subjects – McLeroy, for instance, is a Young Earth Creationist
– it still manages to humanise them and not demonise them and their desires.
Including Information from Additional Independent Research, Sources, Citations and Plagiarism: Students who
use additional outside secondary information they obtained—whether summarized or directly quoted ideas,
thoughts, statements, data or information not considered common knowledge to the average person-- from
independent research, must be cited, parenthetically (in-text) and listed on a works cited or bibliography page.
This page does not count towards the minimum length requirement. A student whose critical evaluation
response egregiously (meaning, quantitatively, at least half or more of your submission) includes piece meal
use of information, to construct a response made up of back to back compilations of paraphrased, or otherwise
directly quoted sources’ ideas, data, opinions, etc. –whether properly cited or not—will receive an automatic
zero on this assignment, without opportunity to re-submit.
What about the film surprised you? What baffled you? How w do you explain the political consequences in their
decision making? What did you learn about the existence of the board, as well as qualifications, power,
selection of members, debates, issues, and impact in their successful or failed representation, of those most
impacted by their political chicanery and decisions (whether it be students, learning, publishers, education,
teachers, standards, testing, etc).
What did you already know about Texas public education’s textbook policy making, before viewing the film?
Reflect on this critically by comparatively discussing expectations, reality, and what you learned, both prior to
and after watching the Revisionaries. Focus on identifying and describing your personal connections,
expectations, perspectives, etc. on the subject matter and topic. Discuss personal connection, if any, such as
experiences that explain whether you held a position of ignorance, passion, prior knowledge, what you knew or
thought you knew about the issue and topic of the film.