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1776 Unites, a group that says it wants to "shape the American future by drawing on the best of its past," released its first curriculum program this week in part to counter the New York Times ...
Critical race theory has become a hot topic at school board meetings around the country – but similar race-based programs, including the New York Times’ 1619 Project, are also drawing criticism.
1776 Unites offers a school curriculum to tell stories of black success throughout U.S. history, stories that The New York Times’ 1619 Project ignores.
“1776 Unites confronts the realities of slavery and racism in American history while also recognizing them as betrayals of our founding’s highest principles,” said the letter.
A creation of 1776 Unites, an initiative of the Woodson Center focused on reviving American education and culture, the curriculum embraces the “ideas of family, faith, and entrepreneurship that ...
However, Woodson emphasized that “1776 Unites” not meant to be a “debate” with the 1619 Project, but an “inspirational alternative.” “Some of the most well-respected historians in ...
1776 Unites exists to give a platform to those who reject victimhood and instead seek to focus on solutions to our most pressing societal problems. Deseret News.
Robert Woodson, founder of 1776 Unites, supported the idea that our country’s founders conceived this republic “upon a set of virtues and values that would create a truly free society, ...
A group of Black scholars and activists is writing a counter-narrative to The 1619 Project. Can it unite us, or will it intensify the history wars?
Like Team Trump’s project, 1776 Unites is a conservative response to The New York Times’ 1619 Project, which sparked both praise and controversy with its recentering of American history as ...
Trump railed against the 1619 Project directed by The New York Times Magazine shortly after Education Secretary Betsy DeVos praised an alternative take on Black American history, the "1776 Unites ...