Article Introduction by Commissioner of Education Earl James McGrath, What to Do About 'Dangerous' Textbooks
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OCR Page 1 of 3INTRODUCTION
I welcome the opportunity to comment on Dr. Edward N. Saveth's
valuable contribution to the problem of textbook selection.
The intense and widespread attacks on textbooks, to which
Dr. Saveth calls attention in the following pages, do indeed represent
a threat to the American system of education. This onslaught is all
the more serious since it cannot be dissociated from other current
attacks upon the public schools.
Thus, much more is involved than the question of whether this
or that book is used in a particular school. We need to look at the
present controversy from the perspective of the age-old fight for
freedom of expression and freedom to learn. Shall the minds of men
be shackled? This question will be answered in local communities
in large measure by the way in which ci tizens and school personnel
deal with such issues as textbook selection. These issues can be
solved-end I feel strongly about this-only within our historic
decentralized pattern of State and local control of education.
Since the public schools belong to the people, all members of
the public are entitled to voice opinions and convictions. The
American tradition of free discussion calls for study and exploration
by school boards, civic groups, interested citizens, school adminis-
trative and instructional staffs, and even by students themselves.
*By Earl James McGrath, U. S. Commissioner of Education, Federal
Security Agency, Washington, D. C., to article "What To Do About
'Dangerous I Textbooks" by Edward N. Saveth, reprinted from
Commentary, February 1952.
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