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Tuesday, November 04, 2008
Phyllis Schlafly :: Townhall.com Columnist
Teaching "Social Justice" in Schools
by Phyllis Schlafly
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Many voters didn't think it important when it surfaced during the presidential campaign that Barack Obama's friend, the 1960s radical William Ayers, is now a professor of education at the University of Illinois in Chicago. Ayers' preoccupation with inserting his ideas of "social justice" into public school curriculum didn't seem an issue to make tracks in a national election.

Now we find that in the election week, the most respected education journal, Education Week, featured a front-page article on "social-justice teaching." This confirms that accusations about "social-justice teaching" are not inventions of John McCain's partisan consultants, but are matters that vitally concern everyone who cares what the next generation is taught with taxpayers' money.

"Social-justice teaching" is defined in Education Week as "teaching kids to question whoever happens to hold the reins of power at a particular moment. It's about seeing yourself not just as a consumer (of information), but as an actor-critic" in the world around you. This revealing explanation comes from Bill Bigelow, the curriculum editor of a Milwaukee-based organization called Rethinking Schools, which publishes instructional materials relating to issues of race and equity.

Bigelow admits that this is "a subversive act in some respects because it is not always encouraged by the curriculum." Apparently, he intends to provide the encouragement.

In Bigelow's book "Rethinking Columbus," he wrote that he encourages his students to walk in the shoes of groups that have been oppressed or disenfranchised. He assigns students to role-play various oppressed groups in the United States and foreign countries.

"Social-justice" lessons highlight past mistakes in U.S. history rather than our accomplishments and opportunities. Emphasizing problems and injustices rather than achievements is given the highfalutin label "critical pedagogy."

David Horowitz of the California-based David Horowitz Freedom Center says that social-justice teaching is "shorthand for opposition to American traditions of individual justice and free-market economics." He says it teaches students that "American society is an inherently 'oppressive' society that is 'systemically' racist, 'sexist' and 'classist' and thus discriminates institutionally against women, nonwhites, working Americans and the poor."

Sol Stern of the Manhattan Institute describes Ayers as one of the leaders in "bringing radical social-justice teaching into our public school classrooms." Ayers argues in his books and articles that "social-justice teaching" should be injected into various curriculum subjects.

Education Week identifies the "special-interest groups" that promote "social-justice teaching" and provide curricular materials, online resources and "professional development" (i.e., indoctrinating teachers). These groups include an affiliate of the American Educational Research Association, the Cambridge-based Educators for Social Responsibility and the Washington-based Teaching for Change, in addition to Rethinking Schools.

The lobbyists for "social-justice teaching" and "critical pedagogy" sponsor well-attended conferences (no doubt at taxpayers' expense) and publish magazines. Teachers 4 Social Justice attracted 1,000 educators to an October seminar in Berkeley, Calif. Continued...

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About The Author

Phyllis Schlafly is a national leader of the pro-family movement, a nationally syndicated columnist and author of Feminist Fantasies.
 
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well it is education..
"he encourages his students to walk in the shoes "

Which would be a device any good Jesuit would use,

"A soul is not properly formed by the mere accumulation of information. The methodology of Jesuit education was to form a man to train him to think. One of our biggest challenges is to train a young man to think, to analyze. "

Real education is devoted teaching one to to think using logic, not training to one to rationalize a previously chosen position.

Amazing how Catholicism and Protestant positions have reversed since the time of Gustavus Adolphus; once protestants were the rationalists, now they insist that a book of folklore is the inerrant word of -od.



Soliton-The Parental Factor
Homeschooling is finally legal in all 50 states, and I'm sorry you were unable to do so if that's what you wanted to do.

Most of the HS kids here graduate early too.

I think parental motivation is a HUGE factor regardless of educational environment in general. But that's really the root of my arguments. Parents recognizing it is THEIR responsibility (NOT THE GOVERNMENT'S) to see that their children are well educated and are willing to do what it takes (including footing the bill by hiring it done or doing it themselves)will have successful children.

It is the children with parents who are not motivated at all ends of the socioeconomic and ideological spectrum that are at the most vulnerable.

I think if a parent is not poor the parent should take full responsibility (including financial) to see their children educated. I acknowledge that there will probably always be a place for public funding of education for the poor.
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