The real vocation
of some people entrusted with delivering primary and secondary education is to
validate this proposition: The three R’s — formerly reading, ’riting and
’rithmetic — now are racism, reproduction and recycling. Especially racism.
Consider Wisconsin’s Department of Public Instruction. It evidently considers
“instruction” synonymous with “propaganda,” which in the patois of
progressivism is called “consciousness-raising.”
Wisconsin’s DPI,
in collaboration with the Orwellian-named federal program VISTA (Volunteers in
Service to America; the “volunteers” are paid), urged white students to wear
white wristbands “as a reminder about your privilege, and as a personal
commitment to explain why you wear the wristband.” A flyer that was on the DPI
Web site and distributed at a DPI-VISTA training class urged whites to “put a
note on your mirror or computer screen as a reminder to think about privilege,”
to “make a daily list of the ways privilege played out” and to conduct an
“internal dialogue” asking questions such as “How do I make myself comfortable
with privilege?” and “What am I doing today to undo my privilege?”
After criticism erupted, the DPI removed
the flyer from its Web site and posted a dishonest statement claiming that the
wristbands were a hoax perpetrated by conservatives. But, again, the flyer DPI
posted explicitly advocated the wristbands. And Wisconsin’s taxpayer-funded
indoctrination continues, funded by more than Wisconsin taxpayers.
In Delavan-Darien
High School’s “American Diversity” curriculum, students were urged to
verify white privilege by visiting a Wal-Mart toy section and counting
the white and black dolls. After objections, the school district is
reconsidering this curriculum.
Such distractions
from the study of calculus and literature are encouraged by CREATE Wisconsin (the acronym
stands for Culturally Responsive Education for All: Training and Enhancement),
which is funded with federal tax dollars from IDEA, the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act. The disability being rectified here is, presumably,
the handicap of insufficient guilt — arising from false consciousness — about
white privilege.
Today, the school
systems in 20 states employ more non-teachers than teachers. The Friedman
Foundation for Educational Choice reports that between 1950 and 2009, while the
number of K-12 students increased 96 percent, full-time-equivalent school
employees increased 386 percent. The number of teachers increased 252 percent,
but the number of bureaucrats — including consciousness-raising sensitivity
enforcers and other non-teachers — increased 702 percent. The report says
states could have saved more than $24 billion annually if non-teaching staff had grown only
as fast as student enrollment. And Americans wonder why their generous K-12
financing (higher per pupil than all but three of the 34 Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development nations) has done so little to improve
reading, math and science scores.
Higher education,
from which much of such diversity and sensitivity nonsense trickles down, cries
poverty while spending lavishly on administrative overhead irrelevant to its
teaching and research missions. The Manhattan Institute’s Heather
Mac Donald notes that in 2011, while the University of
California at San Diego was pruning academic offerings, it created a “vice chancellor for equity,
diversity and inclusion” to augment a diversity
apparatus that included an assistant vice chancellor for diversity; faculty
advisers, staff, graduate and undergraduate diversity coordinators and
liaisons; a director of development for diversity initiatives; the Committee on
Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation Issues; the Diversity Council; the
Campus Council on Climate, Culture and Inclusion; and much more. Perhaps tens
of millions could be diverted from progressive gestures to academic purposes by
abolishing on every American campus every administrative position whose title
contains the words “diversity,” “equity,” “race,” “ethnicity,”
“sustainability,” “green,” “gender,” “inclusion,” “identity,”
“interconnectivity,” “globalization,” “climate,” “campus climate,”
“cross-cultural” or “multiculturalism.”
No corner of the
country is immune to propaganda pretending to be pedagogy. Lincoln Brown of KVEL-AM
in Vernal, Utah, says one student from the University of Utah showed
him required reading that told students to “list ways your family may have
colluded with or benefited from the exploitation of African-Americans.” Another
reading was titled “White Privilege — Unpacking the
Invisible Knapsack.”
Twenty-five years
ago, President Reagan, paraphrasing Education Secretary William Bennett, said:
“If you serve a child a
rotten hamburger in America, federal, state and local agencies
will investigate you, summon you, close you down, whatever. But if you provide
a child with a rotten education, nothing happens, except that you’re liable to
be given more money to do it with.” But only until the soaring tuitions and
taxes that fund this featherbedding for administrators of political correctness
create a critical mass of parental and taxpayer disgust.
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