Murphy says New Jersey will expand AP Black history classes

FILE - President Joe Biden reacts as the 好色tv Governors Association Chair New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy speaks during a dinner reception for governors and their spouses in the State Dining Room of the White House on Feb. 11, 2023, in Washington. Murphy said Tuesday, Feb. 14, that his administration is expanding Advanced Placement African American Studies courses next year from one school to 26 in New Jersey after Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis blocked the course from being taught in public schools in Florida. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) 鈥 Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy said Tuesday that his administration is expanding Advanced Placement African American Studies courses next year from one school to 26 in New Jersey after Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis blocked the course from being taught in public schools in Florida.

Murphy's move comes about a month after the administration of DeSantis, a potential presidential candidate, declared without citing any evidence that the course violates state law and isn't historically accurate.

Murphy cited Florida as he unveiled the course expansion Tuesday during a visit to a Newark high school alongside state education officials and Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, saying DeSantis is prioritizing 鈥減olitical culture wars鈥 over academics.

"New Jersey will proudly teach our kids that Black History is American History," Murphy said in a statement. 鈥淲hile the DeSantis Administration stated that AP African American Studies 鈥榮ignificantly lacks educational value鈥, New Jersey will stand on the side of teaching our full history.鈥

A message seeking comment was left with DeSantis' spokespeople.

The courses have begun in 60 schools nationwide as part of a two-year pilot phase and are set to expand to hundreds next year.

Florida's move over the courses.

DeSantis said the course seeks to push an agenda and violates the Stop WOKE Act he signed last year, which prohibits instruction that defines people as necessarily oppressed or privileged based on their race.

Critics say DeSantis is sending a message that Black history doesn't count in Florida.

The College Board, which administers the Advanced Placement program, this month, which show that topics including Black Lives Matter, slavery reparations and queer life are not part of the course's exam, but are still included as potential research topics, along with 鈥淏lack conservatism.鈥 The board said course revisions were mostly complete before DeSantis objected.

Newark Schools Superintendent Roger Leon embraced the expansion. Six schools in his district will teach the course in the 2023-2024 school year.

鈥淭he study of African American History, as a discrete field, is important to gaining a deeper, fuller understanding of United States History," Leon said.

New Jersey's statewide learning standards already required some diversity education in lessons, requirements that were expanded in 2021 under a .

Murphy also targeted DeSantis during his January , criticizing his comments that Florida is where 鈥渨oke goes to die.鈥

As for Murphy's own presidential ambitions, he has said he'll back President Joe Biden if he runs for reelection, leaving open the possibility he could consider running if not.

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