Under renewed pressure from Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration, the organization responsible for administering Advanced Placement courses said it won’t alter its psychology course to meet the state’s oppressive demands.
In a statement Thursday, College Board shared parts of a letter its representatives sent to DeSantis’ administration saying the group wouldn’t alter its psychology course’s curriculum to remove references to sexual orientation and gender identity. The move follows the Republican administration’s push for College Board to sanitize parts of its AP African American history course. (Read a little more on that pressure campaign in my ReidOut Blog post from late January.)
College Board recently received an inquiry from DeSantis’ administration asking if any of its AP courses would need to be modified to fit new state restrictions on classroom discussions about gender identity and sexual orientation, The Washington Post reported Thursday. The new restrictions expand upon limitations set by an anti-LGBTQ law enacted last year — one critics refer to as the “Don’t Say Gay” law.
College Board wrote in its letter to the DeSantis administration:








