A8 LOCAL Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, June 9, 2021 Civics requirement to earn diploma is coming By RONALD BOND Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — Implementing the civics requirement voted on by the Oregon House will be a piece of cake at Enterprise High School. That’s because it is already part of the required curriculum for a student to graduate at EHS. The rest of the state will soon be in the same posi- tion after Senate Bill 513 passed the House by a unanimous 60-0 vote Mon- day, May 24. The bill, which earlier passed the senate by a vote of 25-3 and goes into eff ect for the 2025-26 school year, requires that high school graduates in Oregon have at least one semes- ter, or half a credit, of civ- ics among the 24 credits needed to complete high school. Tom Nordtvedt, social studies teacher at EHS, said that standard is already in place. “Civics has been a grad- uation requirement at EHS for years,” he said. “Implementing the new state requirement will be easy for us because we are already doing it.” In fact, he said, EHS will benefi t from the fact that it will be a statewide mandate. “That all students in the state will need to take it will help us out because in the past, when a new stu- dent transfers in, they often have not been required to take it in the school they are coming from. It makes it tricky to work it into their schedule. Now that all stu- dents in the state will take it, we will not have that complication.” The Oregon Capital Bureau reported that Dem- ocratic Rep. Paul Evans, the chief sponsor for the bill, had tried three pre- vious times to get the bill passed, and spoke on its importance. “It is a bill that begins Evans said. Nordtvedt off ered a sim- ilar take in approving the bill’s passage. “I like that they are requiring it statewide because it is important for “I LIKE THAT THEY ARE REQUIRING IT STATEWIDE BECAUSE IT IS IMPORTANT FOR KIDS TO LEARN AND KNOW CIVICS SO THEY CAN BE INFORMED CITIZENS, VOTERS, ETC.” — Tom Nordtvedt, social studies teacher at EHS the process of holding our schools accountable for teaching the next genera- tion of Oregonians how to operate the most complex, complicated and often con- founding form of self-gov- ernance in human history,” kids to learn and know civ- ics so they can be informed citizens, voters, etc.,” he said. Cody Lathrop, a Wal- lowa High School social studies teacher, has been “kind of following” the developments with the bill. While he thinks there could be some good that comes from the bill, he also expressed some con- cern about what ultimately may come with the chang- ing requirement. “As with everything in the standardized world in education, they try to put a square peg in a round hole,” he said. “Some of these requirements, because it is such a fl uid transition and it is going to take a little bit of time, there is going to be some trepidation on my part to see what it entails. ... What kind of standardiza- tion? What kind of teach- ing standards are we going to apply? All our standards are arbitrary and culturally relative to your location.” He said the “nuts and bolts” of the bill will come out in the implementa- tion process in the next few years. Lathrop added he won’t teach a topic that isn’t applicable to his students. He warned, too, that the details may not prove to be as good as they sound on paper. “In everything that the state pushes down, espe- cially with the standardiza- tion, they all sound great, just because they use cer- tain terms,” he said. “When you start actually dissect- ing it, sometimes it maybe even isn’t feasible. It’s a decent bill, something we can look at, but there is always the inevitable. My biggest worry is there is going to be cultural appro- priation or cultural rela- tivity that is going to be mandated. “In my experience in education, any time there is fl owery language, there is usually something ugly underneath. I’m hoping that’s not the case.” NOBLE GIVES US A GLIMPSE OF THE ~James E. Faust Father’s Day is June 20th Advertise your deals for Dads with an ad in next week’s Chieftain! To place an ad contact Jennifer Cooney TODAY! jcooney@ wallowa.com • 541-805-9630 209 NW First St., Enterprise • 541-426-4567 • wallowa.com FIVE St r da d s ƒ find dad a gift he’ll love TRIMMERS BLOWERS CHAIN SAWS STARTING AT STARTING AT STARTING AT 139 $ 99 139 $ 99 * 189 $ 99 ASK ABOUT STIHL * PRESSURE WASHERS *A majority of STIHL gasoline-powered units sold in the United States are built in the United States from domestic and foreign parts and components. Wallowa County Grain Growers 911 South River Street | Enterprise | 541-426-3116 wallowacountygraingrowers.com stihldealers.com All prices are SNW-SRP at participating dealers while supplies last. ©2021 STIHL SNW21-622-146087-2