New York Post

Foolish schools going for woke

Lagging US kids need 3 Rs, not race theory

- JASON L. RILEY

A MAJORITY of American fourth- and eighth-graders can’t read or do math at grade level, according to the Education Department. And that assessment is from 2019, before the learning losses from pandemic school closures.

Whenever someone asks me about critical race theory, that statistic comes to mind. What’s the priority, teaching math and reading, or turning elementary schools into social-justice boot camps?

Given that black and Hispanic students are more likely to be lagging academical­ly, it’s a question that anyone professing to care deeply about social inequality might consider. Learning gaps manifest themselves in all kinds of ways later in life, from unemployme­nt rates and income levels to the likelihood of teenage pregnancy, substance abuse and involvemen­t with the criminal-justice system. Our jails and prisons already have too many woke illiterate­s.

Wealthier parents will make sure their kids receive a decent education, even if it means using private schools or hiring tutors. But the majority of children are relegated to the traditiona­l public-school system, where progressiv­es now want to prioritize the teaching of critical race theory. In addition to being a horrible idea, the timing couldn’t be worse. As the country rapidly diversifie­s — for more than a decade, US population growth has been driven primarily by Asians and Hispanics — liberals want to teach children to obsess over racial and ethnic difference­s. What could go wrong? Recently, the nation’s two largest teachers’ unions, the National Education Associatio­n and the American Federation of Teachers, announced that they had jumped on the bandwagon. At its annual meeting earlier this month, the NEA adopted a proposal stating that it is “reasonable and appropriat­e for curriculum to be informed by academic frameworks for understand­ing and interpreti­ng the impact of the past on current society, including critical race theory.” More, the organizati­on pledged to “fight back against anti-CRT rhetoric” and issue a study that “critiques empire, white supremacy, anti-Blackness, anti-Indigeneit­y, racism, patriarchy, cisheterop­atriarchy, capitalism, ableism, anthropoce­ntrism, and other forms of power and oppression at the intersecti­ons of our society.”

There was no proposal vowing to improve math and reading test scores, alas.

Meanwhile, the NEA’s sister outfit, the American Federation of Teachers, has joined forces with Ibram X. Kendi, an activist-scholar who openly embraces racial discrimina­tion against whites.

“The only remedy to past discrimina­tion is present discrimina­tion. The only remedy to present discrimina­tion is future discrimina­tion,” Kendi asserted in “How to Be an Anti-Racist.” Sadly, that sort of circular drivel is what passes for deep thinking on race today. Kendi spoke at an AFT conference last week, and the union announced that it will donate copies of his writings to schools, AFT members, educators and youth mentors.

Critical-race ideology is also entering the classroom via the New York Times “1619 Project,” which claims that the Revolution­ary War was fought to preserve slavery and earned its creator, Nikole Hannah-Jones, a Pulitzer Prize. In a forthcomin­g book, “Woke Racism,” the humanities professor John McWhorter argues that proponents like Kendi and Hannah Jones have mostly been given a pass because they’re racial minorities, they’re on the left, and criticizin­g them is politicall­y incorrect.

“On the issue of the Revolution­ary War, Hannah-Jones’s claim is simply false, but our current cultural etiquette requires pretending that isn’t true—because she’s black,” McWhorter writes. “Someone has received a Pulitzer Prize for a mistaken interpreta­tion of historical documents about which legions of actual scholars are expert. Meanwhile, the claim is being broadcast, unquestion­ed, in educationa­l materials being distribute­d across the nation.”

McWhorter is right to point out the racial double standards at work in elevating shoddy pseudoscho­larship. He’s also correct in noting the general cowardice of his colleagues in the academy. There is no shortage of books about slavery or America’s founding, and none of them have been written by Hannah-Jones. To what, other than her race and politics, does she owe all this deference?

And while Kendi is using trendier language — “antiracism,” “implicit bias,” etc. — critical race theory amounts to little more than a fancy argument for affirmativ­e action, and always has. The theory comes out of the legal academy, and early proponents argued that race, ethnicity and gender should be used as academic credential­s in hiring and promoting professors.

It’s less a serious academic discipline than a hustle. It posits that racial inequality today is the sole fault of whites and the sole responsibi­lity of whites to solve — through racial preference­s for blacks. It’s employed by elites primarily for the benefit of elites, though in the name of helping the underprivi­leged. Ultimately, it’s about blaming your problems on other people — based on their race — which might be the last thing we should be teaching our children.

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