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Texas state school board approves mandated reading list including Bible passages

By Thomson Reuters Jun 26, 2026 | 4:49 PM

June 26 (Reuters) – The Texas Board of Education on Friday approved mandated reading lists for public school children that include passages from the Bible – the ​latest effort by leaders there to infuse the ‌education system with conservative and religious ideals.

The Republican-dominated board, in a 9-5 vote with one member absent and not voting, approved the reading lists for over 5 million public school students beginning in ‌2030.

Texas ​had already mandated that the ⁠Bible’s Ten Commandments be ⁠displayed in all public schools, a decision that was upheld by a federal appeals court earlier this year, following on the heels of other Republican-led states seeking ​to infuse public education with Christian teachings.

Critics say these decisions are at odds with the Constitution’s “establishment clause,” ⁠long understood by courts as ⁠separating church and state. Supporters say the ​measures restore basic Judeo-Christian teachings to school systems, which many ​have said are historically significant.

The required reading list ‌is wide-ranging and includes mostly non-Biblical and classical texts, such as Aesop’s fables, tales about Native Americans, and a children’s versions of Don Quixote. Critics have noted ⁠that much of the list comprises texts written by white male authors, in a state with a majority of Latino and ⁠Black students.

Rachel ‌Laser, the head of the advocacy group ⁠Americans United for Separation of Church and ​State, ‌said in a written statement that the ​Texas board ⁠of education’s decision sought to “misuse public schools to impose one narrow set of religious beliefs and indoctrinate a new generation of Americans in the lie that America is a Christian country.”

(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Colorado; Editing ​by David Gregorio)