Stephen Silva Brave learned about the rivalry between “cowboys and Indians” and how Christopher Columbus discovered the new world growing up in Texas schools. But his teachers never discussed why the conflict occurred or how Columbus could have discovered the continent when there were already people living on it.
“When I was in school, I don’t think I really thought too much about it, but I knew it wasn’t right,” said Silva Brave, who is Sicangu Lakota and now has two children of his own attending the Grand Prairie school district.
Silva Brave’s grandmother would fill in the gaps with trips to visit family on the Rosebud Reservation and stories about her time in boarding schools and her path to Texas through the Indian Relocation Act.
Stephen Silva Brave poses for a portrait with a photo of his grandmother, Eleanor Silva Brave, at Turner Park in Grand Prairie, Texas, on May 9, 2022. Silva Brave’s efforts to bring more comprehensive Native American studies into the school curriculum was largely influenced by his grandmother, who encouraged Silva Brave to connect with their Sicangu Lakota heritage.(Shelby Tauber / Special Contributor)
He now hopes to share that deeper understanding to students across the state.
Silva Brave is part of a group of advisors creating a new American Indian/Native Studies course, an elective for Texas high schoolers that’s being piloted in Grand Prairie this year. District officials hope the State Board of Education will adopt standards for it, making it easier for all high schools to offer the curriculum.
It’s the latest ethnic studies class that will focus on the history and culture of a group that isn’t usually highlighted in state curriculum thoroughly. The SBOE adopted Mexican American Studies in 2018 and African American Studies not long after, setting the template for similar classes.
The new course comes at a time when Texas is embroiled in a debate over how history should be taught – and from whose perspective. The SBOE is rewriting standards for social studies classes across all grade levels and last year, legislators passed laws that restrict how teachers address current events and subjects like racism.