Re-educating teachers. Literally.
Do you believe in the American dream—the idea that in this country,
hardworking people of every race, color and creed can get ahead on
their own merits? If so, that belief may soon bar you from getting a
license to teach in Minnesota public schools—at least if you plan to
get your teaching degree at the University of Minnesota’s Twin Cities
campus.
In a report compiled last summer, the Race, Culture, Class and
Gender Task Group at the U’s College of Education and Human Development
recommended that aspiring teachers there must repudiate the notion of
“the American Dream” in order to obtain the recommendation for
licensure required by the Minnesota Board of Teaching. Instead, teacher
candidates must embrace—and be prepared to teach our state’s kids—the
task force’s own vision of America as an oppressive hellhole: racist,
sexist and homophobic.
The task group is part of the Teacher Education Redesign Initiative,
a multiyear project to change the way future teachers are trained at
the U’s flagship campus. The initiative is premised, in part, on the
conviction that Minnesota teachers’ lack of “cultural competence”
contributes to the poor academic performance of the state’s minority
students. Last spring, it charged the task group with coming up with
recommendations to change this. In January, planners will review the
recommendations and decide how to proceed.
The report advocates making race, class and gender politics the
“overarching framework” for all teaching courses at the U. It calls for
evaluating future teachers in both coursework and practice teaching
based on their willingness to fall into ideological lockstep.
The first step toward “cultural competence,” says the task group, is
for future teachers to recognize—and confess—their own bigotry. Anyone
familiar with the reeducation camps of China’s Cultural Revolution will
recognize the modus operandi.
The task group recommends, for example, that prospective teachers be
required to prepare an “autoethnography” report. They must describe
their own prejudices and stereotypes, question their “cultural” motives
for wishing to become teachers, and take a “cultural intelligence”
assessment designed to ferret out their latent racism, classism and
other “isms.” They “earn points” for “demonstrating the ability to be
self-critical.”
The task group opens its report with a model for officially approved
confessional statements: “As an Anglo teacher, I struggle to quiet
voices from my own farm family, echoing as always from some unstated
standard… . How can we untangle our own deeply entrenched assumptions?”
The goal of these exercises, in the task group’s words, is to ensure
that “future teachers will be able to discuss their own histories and
current thinking drawing on notions of white privilege, hegemonic
masculinity, heteronormativity, and internalized oppression.”
Future teachers must also recognize and denounce the fundamental
injustices at the heart of American society, says the task group. From
a historical perspective, they must “understand that … many groups are
typically not included” within America’s “celebrated cultural
identity,” and that “such exclusion is frequently a result of
dissimilarities in power and influence.” In particular, aspiring
teachers must be able “to explain how institutional racism works in
schools.”
After indoctrination of this kind, who wouldn’t conclude that the
American Dream of equality for all is a cruel hoax? But just to make
sure, the task force recommends requiring “our future teachers” to
“articulate a sophisticated and nuanced critical analysis” of this view
of the American promise. In the process, they must incorporate the
“myth of meritocracy in the United States,” the “history of demands for
assimilation to white, middle-class, Christian meanings and values,
[and] history of white racism, with special focus on current colorblind
ideology.”
What if some aspiring teachers resist this effort at thought control
and object to parroting back an ideological line as a condition of
future employment? The task group has Orwellian plans for such rebels:
The U, it says, must “develop clear steps and procedures for working
with non-performing students, including a remediation plan.”
And what if students’ ideological purity is tainted once they begin
to do practice teaching in the public schools? The task group frames
the danger this way: “How can we be sure that teaching supervisors are
themselves developed and equipped in cultural competence outcomes in
order to supervise beginning teachers around issues of race, class,
culture, and gender?”
Its answer? “Requir[e] training/workshop for all supervisors.
Perhaps a training session disguised as a thank you/recognition
ceremony/reception at the beginning of the year?”
When teacher training requires a “disguise,” you know something sinister is going on.
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