Textbook publisher McGraw-Hill has apologized and agreed to revise a reference to slavery after a Houston-area mom expressed shock that her sonโ€™s book called African slaves โ€œworkers.โ€

Roni Dean-Burren of Pearland, Texas, brought the issue to light last week when she posted to Facebook a photo sent to her by her 9th-grade son of his geography book that had been created for Texasโ€™s new state standards adopted in 2010.

The boy took a photo of a mapโ€™s caption in a chapter titled โ€œPatterns of Immigration,โ€ which read:

โ€œThe Atlantic Slave Trade between the 1500s and the 1800s brought millions of workers from Africa to the southern United States to work on agricultural plantations.โ€

Upon further examination of the book, Dean-Burren discovered that although European indentured servants are described as working for โ€œlittle or no pay,โ€ there was no further mention of black slaves โ€” whose presence in the book was only portrayed as part of โ€œimmigration.โ€

After her Facebook post garner more than a million views, McGraw-Hill said in a subsequent Facebook post that it would update the text in the online version immediately and in the bookโ€™s next printing.

โ€œWe believe we can do better,โ€ it said in the Friday post.

Dean-Burren told CNN Monday that while sheโ€™s thrilled McGraw-Hill has promised revisions and apologized publicly, changing a single caption wonโ€™t compensate for what some educational experts have described as โ€œa wave of ideologically-fueled school standards that downplay the role of race and slavery in shaping America today.โ€

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