The Minnesota Department of Education may include an ethnic studies component in its revised social studies standards now that a ruling Tuesday has settled a long-running debate over whether the agency has that authority.
But there's a caveat.
Chief Judge Jenny Starr co-signed the decision by Administrative Law Judge Eric Lipman, who ruled Tuesday that MDE may adopt the new ethnic studies standard but must also rewrite what he called an "impermissibly vague" rule.
The Education Department "has the statutory authority to adopt the proposed rules," Lipman wrote, adding that the agency "fulfilled all relevant procedural requirements of law or rule, and the proposed rules are needed and reasonable."
Several Republicans and other critics of the new standards had raised concerns since they were first unveiled in 2022. They said the Department of Education missed key procedural steps in drafting them and argued that emphasizing resistance movements would prove divisive. Lipman addressed the two critiques he considered a "genuine dispute" in his decision.
He agreed with one complaint: that a proposed requirement for teachers to "apply lessons from the past in order to eliminate historical and contemporary injustices" is too vague and therefore impossible to implement.
"While obliging new students to use a wider array of sources and methods is amply supported by other parts of the rulemaking record, there is no indication as to how students will 'eliminate historical and contemporary injustices,'" Lipman wrote.
The Department of Education must now decide whether to drop that component of the ethnic studies standard or accept Lipman's suggested revision. He suggested educators could teach about how various groups overcame injustice rather than ask students to offer their own solutions for societal issues.