CURRICULA:
In line with her diversity-based platform, Shen advocates for increased inclusivity in curricula. “America is a country of immigrants, right?” she said. “We’re a country of immigrant stories. Yet our curriculum does not reflect that.”
Shen elaborates with her own experience learning about the Chinese Exclusion Act for the first time in AP US History. “It was a very brief mention, maybe a paragraph or a few paragraphs, and then it was just over,” she said. Because classes like this failed to educate her well on important aspects of her heritage, Shen supports reforming curricula in history and English classes to be more inclusive of ethnic stories.
As a supporter of AB331, a bill that would have made an Ethnic Studies class a mandatory graduation requirement for all California high school students, Shen believes that learning about different backgrounds and ethnicities in the context of American education is crucial. Speaking on the first stories of Asian immigration to the US, Shen said, “This is a narrative that is completely missing from our history textbooks, and as a community, that is demographically the way that we are, it’s criminal to me that we’re not learning about our own cultural histories.”
Beyond diversity in class lessons, Shen also believes in investing more into the arts programs, which currently rely heavily on donations. “If we’re saying that the arts should be funded by donations, then we’re saying that the arts are optional, which they should not be,” she said. In terms of health and sexual education, while she “sees [the curriculum] moving in a good direction,” she believes that the curriculum in place needs to be updated further. “One year of health in freshman year of high school is the farthest extent you get with [health and sexual education],” Shen said. “To me, that’s not enough.”