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The Purposeful Degradation of America’s Schools

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  • The Purposeful Degradation of America’s Schools

    The Purposeful Degradation of America’s Schools

    Radical ideologues fueled by billions of woke foundation dollars are destroying public education.

    In the wake of school shutdowns, distance learning, and widely publicized school board battles, two trends have become increasingly difficult to conceal. The first is the failure of many of America’s primary and secondary schools to educate children competently—a failure marked by distressingly low levels of student proficiency and widening achievement gaps in core subjects like math and reading. The second is the growing prominence of radical ideology in the nation’s K-12 classrooms.

    Equally disturbing is evidence that these trends are largely correlated and that an iron triangle of self-interested actors is contributing to their acceleration in school districts across the country—even those esteemed for high achievement.

    Over the past decade, local school districts have proved easy targets for radical ideologues seeking to acquire cultural power. Though prolonged distance learning and draconian mandates have shaken the pre-pandemic confidence that many parents had in edu-crats to put the well-being of their children first, local districts and school boards have historically enjoyed a high level of public trust. Until recently, little attention was paid to union politics, school board decision making, classroom curriculum, or teacher training. As a result, activists and special interest groups bankrolled by far-left foundations have inundated primary and secondary education with radical race, gender, and queer theory, usually under the guise of innocuous sounding phrases like equity-based education, culturally responsive teaching, and social and emotional learning. While children are increasingly being taught that western institutions are systemically and irredeemably racist, sexist, etc., they are not adequately learning to read or do math. The districts most vested in radical ideology often have the worst results in terms of academic achievement and racial disparities. Seattle has embraced left-wing initiatives for decades and has one of the worst black-white achievement gaps in the nation.

    Many people concerned about the perversion of children’s minds by radical theories still believe that the poisoners are animated by the good intentions of promoting racial sensitivity, tolerance, and advancement of the vulnerable and less privileged. More attention, however, ought to be paid to the monetary and other interests motivating those facilitating such initiatives and how these actors directly gain by betraying the interests of children.

    In his new book, investigative journalist Luke Rosiak highlights pocket lining by captured interests. In the name of “equity” (a code word for forcing equal outcomes and making reparations for real or alleged past injustice, even by lowering the bar and rigging the stats), school districts have hired an army of extravagantly paid bureaucrats and consultants. Even as children were barred from attending schools, newly installed equity officers continued to bring in six figure salaries. School districts across the nation, including many that are financially struggling, frequently dole out hundreds of thousands to cover the extravagant fees charged by “anti-racism” consultants, sometimes having to lay off teachers as a result.

    These highly paid hustlers are not the only ones who profit from the lucrative “equity” and “anti-racism” racket. Union leaders, superintendents, and others seeking to conceal responsibility for failure have a vested interest in maintaining the charade. Rather than working to fix the problem and admitting that they are failing children, tax paid activists promulgate the idea that attendance requirements, performance standards, and other criteria used to measure merit and success are rigged to preserve white cis-gender privilege. Low and high performing educators alike are pressured to drastically lower the bar. Practically speaking, this has resulted in wide-spread grade inflation, eliminating testing and attendance requirements, and graduating students from high school who are functionally illiterate. This enables self-interested parties to cook the books and claim success even when the situation has worsened.

    All of this dysfunction is funded by elite foundations, staffed by radicals and stuffed with billions of tax-free dollars. “It doesn’t occur to most people that the Ford Foundation is a villain,” Rosiak says. “The people behind CRT are the foundations I named, they are profoundly radical and profoundly powerful. And so it’s like a lot of things in the school’s world. Radicals escape accountability through anonymity.”

    This shameful coverup for the abysmal performance of government schools hurts poor, minority, and other vulnerable students most. Furthermore, the bigotry of low standards, which has only aggravated disparities, is used to justify expansion of the same initiatives that contributed to the problem in the first place. In the end, the destructive cycle further advances the interest of radical ideologues. Children who aren’t prepared academically, who are told that they are either victims or perpetrators of racism, and who are constantly pressured to question their identity, are more easily groomed into disgruntled activists. Lacking the skills required for upward mobility and the capacity to critically evaluate what they have been taught, they become useful serfs in the Left’s cultural revolution.

    It’s time for lawmakers who believe that education should be directed towards academic achievement and preparing American children from all backgrounds to live responsible, meaning-filled lives to stop funding radical, destructive interests. Instead, they should vest power, influence, and options directly into the hands of parents—the only group across race and class whose self-interest is based simply on a desire to see their children thrive.


    The first to state his case seems right until another comes and cross-examines him.

  • #2
    Why we hate teachers unions...

    National Education Association teachers union proposes resolution to change 'mother' to 'birthing parent'

    The National Education Association proposed a resolution that would change the word "mother" in contracts to "birthing parent" for the purpose of being inclusive to the LGBTQIA+ community.

    https://www.foxnews.com/media/nation...irthing-parent
    Atheism is the cult of death, the death of hope. The universe is doomed, you are doomed, the only thing that remains is to await your execution...

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jbnueb2OI4o&t=3s

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by seer View Post
      Why we hate teachers unions...

      National Education Association teachers union proposes resolution to change 'mother' to 'birthing parent'

      The National Education Association proposed a resolution that would change the word "mother" in contracts to "birthing parent" for the purpose of being inclusive to the LGBTQIA+ community.

      https://www.foxnews.com/media/nation...irthing-parent
      "My daughter started referring to me as "birth person", so I started referring to her as "financial drain".
      The first to state his case seems right until another comes and cross-examines him.

      Comment


      • #4
        One of the FEW "silver linings" of COVID is that it exposed a lot of the ugliness of the public school system to parents, and they're fighting back.

        Hot mic: Entire school board resigns after making disparaging comments about parents during live meeting

        Hudson school board responds after mayor calls for resignations due to controversial writing book

        The first to state his case seems right until another comes and cross-examines him.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by seer View Post
          Why we hate teachers unions...

          National Education Association teachers union proposes resolution to change 'mother' to 'birthing parent'

          The National Education Association proposed a resolution that would change the word "mother" in contracts to "birthing parent" for the purpose of being inclusive to the LGBTQIA+ community.

          https://www.foxnews.com/media/nation...irthing-parent
          I'll see your idiocy and raise you a malicious

          Source: NEA teachers union spending 140K for 'enemies list' opposition research of groups turning up heat on schools


          An NEA member told Fox News Digital that the teachers' union has 'no ability to tolerate somebody who doesn't agree with them'

          The National Education Association passed a resolution during their annual Representative Assembly in Chicago that would allocate thousands of dollars to conduct opposition research on 25 organizations that are supposedly attacking gender identity and sexual orientation freedoms in public schools.

          "NEA shall compile research to create fact sheets about the largest 25 organizations that are actively working to diminish a students' right to honesty in education, freedom of sexual and gender identify, and teacher autonomy," the resolution said. NEA's resolutions are called new business items (NBI) and represent the teachers' union's opinions and beliefs. They also open the door to funding.

          The cost for compiling the list and for the research would amount to $140,625, NBI 15 said. The research will include probing into groups' funding sources, the leaders of the organizations, "connections to known entities that are seeking to dismantle public education, organization headquarters and chapter locations."

          Nicole Neily of Parents Defending Education told Fox News Digital that she was very concerned about the resolution. "It’s not surprising that the unions would compile an ‘enemies list,'" she said.


          "[The NEA's] policies are deeply unpopular with average American families - and, I suspect, with many of their rank-and-file membership - which means that they must enforce their ideology through bullying and intimidation. We will not be bullied, we will not be cowed, and we will not be silenced - we will continue to advocate for our children, because the past two years have made it abundantly clear that children’s welfare is the unions’ absolute last priority."

          The research on the 25 organizations will be sent out to state affiliates so that they can be "armed with information to organize against attacks on public education."

          "They're not just trying to change culture, they're trying to change what it means to be human," a retired union member, Jeralee Smith, told Fox News Digital. "They have no ability to tolerate somebody who doesn't agree with them."

          Other resolutions that were passed during the conference were seen by critics to have "anti-Israel" and "antisemitic" implications. For example, NBI 13 would allocate $9,000 for defending educators advocating for the Palestinian narrative "when they are under attack."

          "The NEA will now be establishing protocols to support their teachers who face backlash when using one-sided, factually inaccurate sources that question Israel’s right to exist. The NEA's singling out and holding to a different standard the sole Jewish country is blatantly antisemitic. This is greatly concerning not only for Jewish NEA members, but also the many Jewish students, and all students, who will have these teachers pushing their antisemitic agenda in their classrooms," Rebecca Schgallis of United Against Antisemitism in Northern Virginia told Fox News Digital.

          Elana Fishbein of No Left Turn in Education also accused the union of Jew-hatred. "For the NEA to even permit these anti-Israel issues to be included among its new business items is antisemitic and reprehensible. They should be focusing their energy on strategies to improve student academic performance, instead of making foolish political statements," she said.

          The union also passed resolutions relating to ensuring various "anti-LGBTQ+ legislation" around the country are defeated. NBI 41 stipulated that the NEA would take "all necessary steps" to overturn Florida's Parental Rights in Education law, which critics call the "Don't Say Gay bill." The law, which was signed in March, imposed restrictions on the ages that students can be introduced to topics relating to sexual orientation and gender identity.

          Fox News Digital reached out to the NEA for comment but did not immediately receive a response.

          Some resolutions that were proposed did not ultimately become adopted. For example, NBI 82, a resolution that would proclaim that there is institutional homophobia and transphobia in schools, was ultimately withdrawn. It would have included action items that would amount to $574,900.

          "It is time to acknowledge and address the systemic homophobia and transphobia taking place in our great public schools. NEA has an obligation to be at the forefront of dismantling an oppressive system full of hate, misinformation, and fear mongering," the proposed resolution said.

          Another resolution – NBI 63 – which ultimately did not meet a vote on the floor, proposed changing the word "mother" in contracts to "birthing parent" for the purpose of being inclusive to the LGBTQIA+ community.

          "Using this contract language, members need not worry about how a Board of Education/solicitor defines ‘maternity leave,’ ‘mother,' and/or ‘father’; the language is an inclusive reflection of how LGBTQIA+ members build families," the proposed resolution said.

          The union's goal is "to create a society where equity and justice are the rule, not the exception," the president of the NEA, Rebecca Pringle, said at the conference.

          An adopted resolution, NBI 11, would focus on supporting queer and people of color to run for school boards. NBI 68, which was "awaiting debate" as of Thursday, would create a "task force" that would "advocate for courses… to navigate white supremacy culture."

          The task force would also "Acknowledge and identify the manner in which educational courses maintain superficial courses instead of submerging Aspiring Educators in the reality of student experiences."

          Vice President Kamala Harris praised the NEA on Tuesday.

          "NEA, you are extraordinarily effective as a group advocate for change, which is why we know that you have been able to see the success you have achieved. And it is no surprise why, because we know unions know how to organize," she said.

          "[W]e… know, across our country, folks face barriers that have been built up over the years by corporate interests and anti-union politicians and regressive court cases," she added. "And so, our administration, together with you, we are all doing a lot to tear down those barriers."

          The union previously released a statement to Fox News, which said, "Every year, NEA members submit New Business Items concerning a wide range of issues. Some are intimately tied to NEA operations and others reflect policy positions delegates would like the organization and its state-level affiliates to take. NEA is committed to democratic processes and open debate. These values are fundamental not just to NEA’s vision as a union but to our functioning as a multiracial democracy."



          Source

          © Copyright Original Source


          I'm always still in trouble again

          "You're by far the worst poster on TWeb" and "TWeb's biggest liar" --starlight (the guy who says Stalin was a right-winger)
          "Overall I would rate the withdrawal from Afghanistan as by far the best thing Biden's done" --Starlight
          "Of course, human life begins at fertilization that’s not the argument." --Tassman

          Comment


          • #6
            I have been saying for decades -- ever since I got arrested for home schooling back in the 80's -- that the NEA is a corrupt and evil entity straight from the pits of Hell.

            I was amazed at what I found out about them during my trial prep, and it has only gotten worse by an order of magnitude of...
            The first to state his case seems right until another comes and cross-examines him.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Cow Poke View Post
              I have been saying for decades -- ever since I got arrested for home schooling back in the 80's -- that the NEA is a corrupt and evil entity straight from the pits of Hell.

              I was amazed at what I found out about them during my trial prep, and it has only gotten worse by an order of magnitude of...
              It's more of the F = Fantastic[1] mentality where the idea of working to improve the schools never crosses their minds and the immediate go-to solution is working to silence critics.





              1. This is what happened at Mollie E. Ray Elementary in Orlando, Florida as the 2002-2003 school year began. The school had received an "F" rating for the past two years (1 of only 10 schools to "earn" such a distinction), as judged annually by the state of Florida so the victims of such failed schools are allowed to apply for vouchers to help them escape. So how did the school react? Vowing to fix the problem? To work on improving education?

              Nah.

              To start, students were met by teachers wearing T-shirts proclaiming "F = Fantastic." Getting an "F" grade was now considered a positive thing. The union educrats chose to brainwash young minds with Orwellian double-speak into thinking that flunking is actually a good thing. Then school officials attacked the scores of parents, who did choose to opt out, for "abandoning" their schools in a time of need. Excuse me. Apparently some parents had the temerity to want the best for their children rather than sacrifice them on the altar of public "edjumakatun" and were savaged for it. Still it would have been interesting come Report Card time when the little darlings still stuck in that unrepentantly failed school explained this "F = Fantastic" concept to their parents. Trouble is, too many might fallen for it. Especially those in "blue" districts."

              I'm always still in trouble again

              "You're by far the worst poster on TWeb" and "TWeb's biggest liar" --starlight (the guy who says Stalin was a right-winger)
              "Overall I would rate the withdrawal from Afghanistan as by far the best thing Biden's done" --Starlight
              "Of course, human life begins at fertilization that’s not the argument." --Tassman

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by rogue06 View Post
                It's more of the F = Fantastic[1] mentality where the idea of working to improve the schools never crosses their minds and the immediate go-to solution is working to silence critics.





                1. This is what happened at Mollie E. Ray Elementary in Orlando, Florida as the 2002-2003 school year began. The school had received an "F" rating for the past two years (1 of only 10 schools to "earn" such a distinction), as judged annually by the state of Florida so the victims of such failed schools are allowed to apply for vouchers to help them escape. So how did the school react? Vowing to fix the problem? To work on improving education?

                Nah.

                To start, students were met by teachers wearing T-shirts proclaiming "F = Fantastic." Getting an "F" grade was now considered a positive thing. The union educrats chose to brainwash young minds with Orwellian double-speak into thinking that flunking is actually a good thing. Then school officials attacked the scores of parents, who did choose to opt out, for "abandoning" their schools in a time of need. Excuse me. Apparently some parents had the temerity to want the best for their children rather than sacrifice them on the altar of public "edjumakatun" and were savaged for it. Still it would have been interesting come Report Card time when the little darlings still stuck in that unrepentantly failed school explained this "F = Fantastic" concept to their parents. Trouble is, too many might fallen for it. Especially those in "blue" districts."
                If a car manufacturer turned out as many poorly performing cars as the NEA does students...
                The first to state his case seems right until another comes and cross-examines him.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Cow Poke View Post

                  If a car manufacturer turned out as many poorly performing cars as the NEA does students...
                  I have to nit-pick. Not to defend the NEA, but the analogy is horrible.

                  As much as I would LOVE the idea that managing buildings full of willful and independent students, each with their own quirks and bad habits was as easily repeatable as assembling an inanimate object from raw materials, it just isn't. Heck, teaching grown adults who (supposedly) are more mature, with higher attention spans, is difficult.

                  Teaching is hard, even under the best of circumstances, add to it the more modern parenting styles like helicoptering and lawn mowering, and things get even more difficult.

                  Where the NEA and others really suck is political activism in the classroom.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by CivilDiscourse View Post

                    I have to nit-pick. Not to defend the NEA, but the analogy is horrible.

                    As much as I would LOVE the idea that managing buildings full of willful and independent students, each with their own quirks and bad habits was as easily repeatable as assembling an inanimate object from raw materials, it just isn't. Heck, teaching grown adults who (supposedly) are more mature, with higher attention spans, is difficult.

                    Teaching is hard, even under the best of circumstances, add to it the more modern parenting styles like helicoptering and lawn mowering, and things get even more difficult.

                    Where the NEA and others really suck is political activism in the classroom.
                    Personally, I think there is more problems with kids who's parents clearly don't give a darn about them than those who are overly involved.

                    I'm always still in trouble again

                    "You're by far the worst poster on TWeb" and "TWeb's biggest liar" --starlight (the guy who says Stalin was a right-winger)
                    "Overall I would rate the withdrawal from Afghanistan as by far the best thing Biden's done" --Starlight
                    "Of course, human life begins at fertilization that’s not the argument." --Tassman

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by rogue06 View Post
                      Personally, I think there is more problems with kids who's parents clearly don't give a darn about them than those who are overly involved.
                      It's mixed. But, at the end of the day, that still reinforces my point about kids and teaching not being as simple as repetitive assembly line work of things like cars.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Cow Poke View Post

                        "My daughter started referring to me as "birth person", so I started referring to her as "financial drain".
                        Atheism is the cult of death, the death of hope. The universe is doomed, you are doomed, the only thing that remains is to await your execution...

                        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jbnueb2OI4o&t=3s

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by CivilDiscourse View Post

                          I have to nit-pick. Not to defend the NEA, but the analogy is horrible.
                          It is.

                          As much as I would LOVE the idea that managing buildings full of willful and independent students, each with their own quirks and bad habits was as easily repeatable as assembling an inanimate object from raw materials, it just isn't. Heck, teaching grown adults who (supposedly) are more mature, with higher attention spans, is difficult.

                          Teaching is hard, even under the best of circumstances, add to it the more modern parenting styles like helicoptering and lawn mowering, and things get even more difficult.
                          I taught Junior High -- what made it REALLY hard was the schools "progressive discipline" where they had huge "billboard" type signs in each classroom spelling out the multiple steps a teacher must follow before a student is "sent to the office". And the kids know full well how far they can go, then back off, and start the process all over again.

                          Further, the schools have ALIENATED parents from involvement, where, in the past, they welcomed our involvement. When my oldest daughter was having trouble with a math teacher, I stopped by the Principal's office to see what the problem was, and I was told, in no uncertain terms, "Let us handle it - we're trained professionals, and you don't have a teaching degree". (Aside from the fact that she was an arrogant [ bad word ], I DID have a teaching degree, but it was from the days where we actually educated students.

                          Where the NEA and others really suck is political activism in the classroom.
                          That, too!

                          The first to state his case seems right until another comes and cross-examines him.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            I believe all mandatory schooling - at least, or especially, the brick-and-mortar variety - should be abolished. And any parent who has had a child brainwashed, bullied, molested, assaulted or murdered in a school will likely agree.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Ronson View Post
                              I believe all mandatory schooling - at least, or especially, the brick-and-mortar variety - should be abolished. And any parent who has had a child brainwashed, bullied, molested, assaulted or murdered in a school will likely agree.
                              I was charged with "failure to comply with the Compulsory Attendance" law in Texas.

                              That was part of my defense --- the Texas School Law Bulletin (thick orange book with all education law for Texas) has no such law.
                              It actually says "compulsory education", not attendance.
                              And my kids were being educated in a home school, which was simply specified as "a private school shall have as its course good citizenship".

                              I'd be surprised if that last phrase were still there, as the NEA is anti-citizenship.
                              The first to state his case seems right until another comes and cross-examines him.

                              Comment

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