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RNC denounces high-school history exams

Republican National Committee members routinely issue condemnations, but why would they take an interest in high-school students' advanced-placement exams?
Reince Priebus, chairman of the Republican National Committee, speaks on a panel during the 41st annual Conservative Political Action Conference at the Gaylord International Hotel and Conference Center on March 8, 2014 in National Harbor, Maryland.
Reince Priebus, chairman of the Republican National Committee, speaks on a panel during the 41st annual Conservative Political Action Conference at the Gaylord International Hotel and Conference Center on March 8, 2014 in National Harbor, Maryland.
When members of the Republican National Committee gather for regularly scheduled meetings, it's not unusual for the party to vote on assorted resolutions, expressing a formal opinion on major political subjects. Occasionally, these resolutions actually make news.
 
We talked earlier this year, for example, about the RNC's surprising vote criticizing domestic surveillance programs. Last spring, Republican National Committee members also generated headlines with resolutions reiterating the party's staunch opposition to marriage equality, while also condemning "Common Core" education standards.
 
It came as something of a surprise, though, to learn the RNC has also taken an interest in high-school students' advanced-placement exams. Caitlin MacNeal reported yesterday:

The Republican National Committee on Friday denounced the College Board's new framework for the AP U.S. History exam for its "consistently negative view of American history." The committee adopted a resolution during its summer meeting in Chicago condemning the exam's new framework, according to Education Week. In the resolution, the RNC slams the College Board's "radically revisionist view of American history that emphasizes negative aspects of our nation's history while omitting or minimizing positive aspects."

By way of an example, the RNC believes the AP framework portrays early U.S. colonists as "oppressors and exploiters while ignoring the dreamers and innovators who built our country."
In other words, the Republican National Committee wants these advanced-placement classes to put a more positive, more deliberately patriotic spin on history.
 
Where are these concerns even coming from? I'm glad you asked.
 
Right Wing Watch explained yesterday that the RNC's interest didn't just come out of the blue.

The Republican National Committee recently condemned the College Board's AP U.S. History exam framework for its purported anti-American bias, and it comes as no surprise that the resolution is identical to resolutions sponsored by Religious Right groups like Eagle Forum and Concerned Women for America that regularly assert that public schools engage in anti-American brainwashing. Concerned Women for America's Georgia chapter has sponsored a nearly identical resolution, as did Eagle Forum's Alabama affiliate.

Indeed, after the RNC resolution was approved, Concerned Women for America and others wrote to the College Board, arguing that the AP classes should do more to teach high-school students that the United States is a "City upon a Hill."
 
As the Education Week report added, the College Board appears to be taking the complaints seriously: "Troubled by the controversy, College Board President David Coleman released to the public a practice AP U.S. history test. Practice tests are typically only released to certified AP teachers. He also announced that the College Board will issue 'clarifications' about the new framework."