By Ben Van Horrick on 7.16.09 @ 6:08AM
When teaching takes a back seat to multicultural dogma.
In a cramped Philadelphia classroom, newly minted teachers and
recent college graduates were unpacking. Rather than focusing on
their belongings, which were located a few miles away at Temple
University, these new teachers were unpacking their privilege
--their whiteness, heterosexuality, college education, wealth,
and health.
This exercise was part of Teach for America's summer institute --
teacher boot camp -- for new corps members. Moreover, it was the
centerpiece of a series called "Diversity, Community and
Achievement." However, TFA's commitment to the rigid ideology of
multiculturalism stands in the way of teaching students.
Teach for America is a service organization that recruits recent
college graduates from every academic discipline with no
experience in teaching and places them in struggling school
districts for two years of toil. Each lesson is crafted based on
how students perform on individual assessments and geared towards
a specific objective. This is a critical and effective step in
boosting the academic performance of students regardless of their
individual level. But contrary to the program's commitment to
rigorously researched methods of instruction, highly ideological
race and gender theory have worked their way into the TFA
curriculum.
After teaching a summer school class, I attended a diversity
discussion group with other TFA teachers and they were led by a
TFA advisor. Each session focused on a particular topic, but the
procedure was clear for each session. We were instructed to avoid
"I" statements and those statements which revealed our personal
beliefs. Instead, we should employ "people-focused language."
During one exercise, we would raise our hand and say "ouch" if we
disagreed with a statement. The offended person would offer a
reason for the "ouch."
Without fail, each session included some type of crying
interlude. Once, an advisor began crying when she revealed that
one of the corps members had remarked in frustration, "These kids
just don't want to learn." The same sobbing advisor later stated
that she was raped and had treated one of her students
differently because the student reminded her of her attacker --
the treatment she visited upon that student racked her with
guilt. This was the first conversation I ever had with this
person.
On another occasion, a young lady broke down while recanting her
reluctance to introducing her family to a transsexual friend. She
was so sad. How could she be so prejudiced she would hide a
friend from her family based solely on her friend's alternative
lifestyle?
At one point, we were asked why we were privileged. Many stated
that their privileges included wealth, race, sexual orientation,
health, whiteness, or education. For my part, I said I was
fortunate to realize that truth was not relative nor subject to
my whiteness, income, or college education. This was my first
"ouch" offense.
I suggested multiculturalism precluded us from judging a culture
different from our own. This meant we could not speak out or even
assist Islamic women who were faced with oppressive conditions. A
female corps member raised her hand. Others in the circle joined
her dissent. How could I bring up the issue? Who am I to pass
judgment? That is their culture. I was just asserting my biases.
When leading a 7th grade class for Teach for America, I led a
discussion of Richard Connell's classic short story, "The Most
Dangerous Game." It tells of the tale of a skilled hunter who,
bored with his normal prey, turns to humans. I led the discussion
into when it is permissible to kill or go to war. The students
were thoughtful when their opinions were challenge. I was proud
that when their ideas were challenged, the situation did not
arouse their emotions; rather, they contemplated my objections
with care.
When can we compromise our values? It was a natural transition to
the Jena 6 affair. The staff that day had donned all black with a
green ribbon as a show of solidarity for the six Louisiana
youths. The ribbons were being distributed in the teachers'
lounge. Clad in my khakis, blue shirt, and striped tie, I felt
even more isolated from the predominantly black staff.
The room, already cooking, got even hotter. The students' voices
and gestures grew tense. When I challenged their beliefs and
opinions, their typically respectful and calm responses turned to
anger and disdain. The most they could offer was that the victim
of the Jena 6 attack "got what was coming to him."
Students rose from the seats, raising voices, departing from the
circle created to encourage discussion. I tried giving them all
the facts of the matter and following up with probing questions.
What responsibility did the six men have? What could have
prevented this? What are the lessons for our school? How could we
prevent this from happening at our school? Was this a simple
schoolyard fight? If so, why did six kids attack one kid? Could
it have been premeditated?
My principal, dressed in black, called me into her office. I told
her how the discussion had regressed, and how our students
deserved discussion, not dogma on the issue. "This could be
helpful," she said. She handed me a guide printed by the NAACP.
topics:
Education, Multiculturalism, Teach for America