By law, the 11-member body, responsible for policy-making decisions affecting K-12 schools in the state, must approve the curriculum by the end of the month, a deadline the legislature already delayed one year. It plans to do so on the third day of its March meeting, which began Tuesday; the meeting will be held virtually and will include a comment period during which members of the public can speak for up to one minute. Jewish organizations are expressing a wide range of opinions about the textbook-length curriculum in its close-to-final form. Most are commending revisions they say transformed the document from one shot-through with “anti-Jewish bias” — in the words of the California Legislative Jewish Caucus in the summer of 2019 — to one that, if not ideal, is at least satisfactory.