Search This Blog

Friday, January 2, 2026

Minnesota To Mandate K–12 Ethnic Studies Instruction In 2026

 by Aaron Gifford via The Epoch Times,

In the coming weeks, school boards across the Land of 10,000 Lakes state will decide on curricula to meet ethnic studies mandates for the 2026–2027 academic year.

There appear to be limited alternatives to the free instructional materials developed with taxpayer dollars and endorsed by the state teachers’ union.

That curriculum instructs 6th graders to learn the 13 guiding principles of the Black Lives Matter movement; 7th graders on how protesters have breached federal buildings; and higher schoolers to “identify plans of action that people have used to resist, refuse, and create alternatives to oppressive systems,” according to the materials developed by the University of Minnesota’s Center for Race, Indigeneity, Disability, Gender and Sexuality Studies (RIDGS).

“Students will be able to explain how race is socially constructed and how that social construction has been used to oppress people of color, specifically in relation to Jim Crow, segregation, and racial covenants,” reads the description for the 11th and 12th-grade Jim Crow of the North course.

The Center of the American Experiment, a Minnesota-based education policy organization that opposes partisan and race-based curricula, is helping districts find politically neutral alternatives that it says are more like traditional social studies and history electives and less like social justice advocacy guidance.

“The words ethnic studies have been hijacked,” Catrin Wigfall, a policy fellow with the center, told The Epoch Times.

“But boards [of education] have more power in this than they might think.”

Additionally, state laws allow parents to review a curriculum and opt their child out of any instruction they find objectionable, in which case the school is required to provide alternative materials, Wigfall said.

The Minnesota Department of Education defines ethnic studies as an interdisciplinary area of instruction that “analyzes how race and racism have been and continue to be social, cultural, and political forces, and the connection of race to the stratification of other groups.”

The state law requires public schools to incorporate ethnic studies lessons in mandatory social studies courses across all grade levels, in addition to offering a stand-alone ethnic studies elective course for high school juniors and seniors.

In 2023, the Minnesota Department of Education stipulated that the ethnic studies context is expected to be embedded in other subject areas, including math, physical education, and health, as courses are periodically revised.

The Center of the American Experiment argues that those standards habituate angry, inaccurate, and “identity-first” ideological and political perspectives.

By definition, ethnic studies should focus on global histories, cultures, and religions, but the instruction pushed in Minnesota schools forces a polarizing and narrow political worldview, Wigfall said.

“It’s been a bait and switch campaign,” she said.

The center endorses the American Experience curriculum by the Foundation Against Tolerance and Racism, which Johns Hopkins has approved as a model for ethnic studies instruction, as a suitable alternative to the University of Minnesota’s instructional materials.

In addition, the 1776 Unites free curriculum focuses on historical stories that “celebrate black excellence, reject victimhood culture, and showcase African-Americans who have prospered by embracing America’s founding ideals,” according to its website.

Wigfall said her organization will work with school districts to navigate curriculum choices and the timetable for meeting state requirements across various subject areas.

The center isn’t advocating litigation over the mandate, but local education leaders, under federal Title VI provisions, have legal recourse if they are forced to foster a hostile learning environment under state requirements.

“It will be interesting to see what the rollout looks like,” she said. “When you emphasize tribalism, what does that do to knowledge development?”

Minnesota isn’t the only place grappling with debates surrounding ethnic studies mandates.

The California Department of Education strongly recommends the curricula, but has yet to require them.

The Defending Education parents’ organization recently reported that K–12 districts in 22 states spent more than $17.5 million since 2017 on “liberated” ethnic studies instruction.

Mitch Siegler, founder of the THINC Foundation, which promotes K–12 curriculum transparency and is closely monitoring California’s moves, said his situation is similar to Minnesota’s in that consultants and content creators focusing on such ethnic studies collaborate with districts and teacher unions to “promote the only game in town.”

THINC is developing alternative materials that emphasize civics and American history.

“Warts and all,” Siegler said in an email response to The Epoch Times. “And which teaches students to debate complex issues and disagree in an agreeable fashion. That’s a far cry from the ideological approach which the ‘liberated’ consultants advocate for.”

The Epoch Times reached out to the Minnesota Department of Education and the University of Minnesota’s Center for Race, Indigeneity, Disability, Gender, and Sexuality Studies.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/minnesota-mandate-k-12-ethnic-studies-instruction-2026

'Deadline Expires for SDF as Damascus Cuts Ties'

 The process surrounding the integration of the terror group SDF into Syria’s state structure has reached a breaking point after a key year-end deadline expired. Syrian authorities have cut contact with the organization after it failed to meet its obligations under a formal agreement, according to statements from Ankara and regional sources. The move marks a shift from managed dialogue to open pressure, with direct implications for Syria’s territorial integrity and regional security.

The deadline stemmed from an eight-article agreement signed on 10 March 2025 between the Syrian government and the terror group SDF. The accord required the group to integrate into the Syrian Arab Army and state institutions by 31 December. Turkish officials say the organization took no concrete steps to comply, leading Damascus to suspend all engagement once the deadline passed.

Ankara Sets Firm Red Lines

Türkiye responded with clear and coordinated warnings, emphasizing that the agreement must be implemented fully and without delay. Defence Minister Yaşar Güler said on 31 December that the terror group SDF must fulfill all its commitments for the process to succeed. He stated that “no terrorist organization, including PKK, YPG and SDF, will be allowed to continue activities or create a fait accompli in the region.”

The same message was reiterated during the Defence Ministry’s year-end briefing. Officials said Türkiye would support any initiative by the Syrian government aimed at preserving unity and territorial integrity. They noted that the terror group SDF continues to raise demands for decentralization and federal structures while avoiding concrete integration steps, a stance Ankara views as incompatible with the March agreement.

Political Pressure Intensifies

Warnings toward the terror group SDF increased sharply in the final week of December. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the Foreign Ministry, and the Defence Ministry all stressed that the 10 March agreement must be enforced. Turkish officials said the issue dominated contacts held in Syria on 22 December, underscoring Ankara’s determination to keep the process on track.

Domestic political actors echoed this line. Nationalist Movement Party leader Devlet Bahçeli said it was in everyone’s interest for the terror group SDF to comply with the agreement and become part of Syria, rather than act as a proxy structure serving external agendas. His remarks reflected broader concerns in Ankara over foreign influence in northeastern Syria.

Energy Stakes and U.S. Signals

The stalled integration also carries economic implications. MHP deputy leader Fethi Yıldız pointed out that the terror group SDF controls wide areas in northeastern Syria that include oil and gas fields. He noted that Articles 4 and 5 of the March agreement cover these resources, describing them as strategically critical for Türkiye.

President Erdoğan has previously said full implementation of the deal would “upend the calculations of hostile actors.” Turkish officials also say recent statements by U.S. Central Command commander General Brad Cooper suggest Washington is moving closer to the positions of Ankara and Damascus. If sustained, that alignment could further narrow the terror group SDF’s room for maneuver as diplomatic and political pressure builds.

https://clashreport.com/world/articles/deadline-expires-for-sdf-as-damascus-cuts-ties-9z1wqwsq6pk