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Teacher Training Programs Spread Politicized Education | National Review

  
Via:  Vic Eldred  •  2 years ago  •  2 comments

By:   Daniel Buck and Garion Frankel (National Review)

Teacher Training Programs Spread Politicized Education | National Review
A radical theory of education — one that sees the classroom as the locus of societal change, not academic training — dominates our colleges of education.

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Last year, one of us wrote about how universities have fostered our politicized classrooms. Since then, it seems as if public education has devolved into woke-ism. The media denied critical race theory's existence in American education for months, only to now admit that it does in fact influence policy and curricula. In response, countless legislatures have introduced "CRT bans" and school-choice bills as a means to combat the apparently rapid progressive capture of American schools.

These laws, alongside school-choice bills, are necessary but insufficient efforts. If one tap is contaminated, perhaps it's a local phenomenon. However, with ever more examples of the woke-ification of public education, it’s safe to assume that there’s something polluting the reservoir and the solution must move higher up.

In reality, media coverage is really only now paying attention to what has been a long, ongoing process. A radical theory of education — one that sees the classroom as the locus of societal change, not academic training — dominates our colleges of education. Thus, like a drainage pipe into a common supply, teacher-prep programs around the country dump a  politicized approach  to education into our schools, and it is here where our reform efforts must focus.

This outsized influence of the university on K–12 schools occurs not without precedent. Once before, our nation’s dominant philosophy of education universally altered. Prior to the 20th century, American education was almost universally classical in nature — great books, grammar and rhetoric, direct teacher guidance, a healthy patriotism. However, the establishment of teacher colleges began to change that. Between 1910 and 1930, 88 normal schools — local institutions to train teachers — associated with universities and became teacher colleges.

At the most influential of these, Columbia’s Teachers College, John Dewey and William Kilpatrick trained 35,000 students and wrote popular essays that influenced countless more. With such an influence, the progressive pedagogy of Dewey and Kilpatrick — which rejects liberal notions of knowledge worth knowing and direct teacher guidance to instead center a student’s personal interests and exploration — supplanted classical education in American schools. The theory’s association with colleges of education legitimated progressive education and so flooded American schools with proclamations of “best practices” and “expertise.”

The influence of teacher colleges hasn’t changed, only the theory within. Today, Teachers College, still one of the  most prestigious  teacher-prep programs in the country with 90,000 alumni, continues its significant role in determining what occurs in K–12 classrooms. A quick scroll through Columbia’s  course catalog  reveals that teacher-prep programs now look toward “liberation” rather than virtue. A popular  curriculum  from Teachers College encourages children to read through  critical-race lenses  and acknowledges its dependence on critical race theory.
The college offers a class in “Black, Latina, and Transnational Feminisms,” which seeks to “engage in an interdisciplinary exploration of feminist scholarship located at the intersections of race, class, and culture.” In addition, the school offers a class in “Anti-Racist Curriculum, Pedagogy, Leadership and Policy.” This trend continues across the college’s course offerings, with frequent mentions of gender, race, class, and inclusivity.

Notably, course descriptions rarely if ever mention instruction, curriculum, assessment, or anything having to do with educating children. It amounts to a program in “proper” political opinions, not the practicalities of classroom instruction.

And Teachers College is no outlier. An education-policy  course  at the also influential University of Wisconsin-Madison “[focuses] on the ideas of transformative educators such as Paulo Freire and bell hooks.” Freire’s  Pedagogy of the Oppressed , an incoherent attempt to explore the parasitic relationship between oppressor and oppressed in the context of the classroom, is considered a seminal work by many teacher-prep programs. References to Freire and other advocates of critical pedagogy appear on the syllabi of  Harvard UC Berkeley California State-Long Beach , and the  University of North Texas .


A UW professor, Gloria Ladson-Billings, is considered one of the single most influential  thinkers in education. In 1998, she  synthesized CRT and K–12 education , and just last year, Indianapolis Public Schools  hosted her  at a racial-equity training for teachers.


Simply look through the DEI offerings at local schools to see that references to Freire, Billings, hooks, and other radical theorists abound. The organization Teachers Without Borders  encourages their educators  to understand and implement Freire’s theory of “peace education” — ironic, considering that Freire cites Che Guevara and Lenin as exemplary teachers. After the passing of bell hooks last year,  countless testimonials  appeared online of how teachers implemented her ideas in their classrooms.

Woke ideas about race and power did not form  ex nihilo  in the minds of DEI consultants at K–12 schools. They stem from a decades-long process that saw a noteworthy shift in the  research interests  of education faculty. As the DEI fad caught on, its teachings made their way to both university and K–12 classrooms. Moreover, the transformation of the university’s pedagogical environment is not an unprecedented event. Once again, Columbia and universities like it are acting like a superspreader event of critical pedagogy and other radical ideas.


That our teaching force requires their credentials ensures that the drainage pipe will flow on. Even if we ban explicit instruction in something like CRT, its ideas can still influence  policy, curricula, behavior plans, and teaching. Even if school-choice bills passed in every state today, the same teaching force trained in the precepts of Freire and other pedagogues would staff our schools tomorrow. We must decouple the colleges of education and schools by ending teacher-licensing requirements.


Thankfully, schools don’t seem to need these schools of education.  Research  into the efficacy of such programs finds “little difference in the average academic achievement impacts of certified, uncertified and alternatively certified teachers.” More like a degree in business than medicine, official teacher-training may assist in initial hiring but is no guarantee of effectiveness. In fact, many successful charter schools  run on a model  that relies on well-educated but untrained recent graduates who then undergo rigorous on-the-job training and constant professional development.

There are other potential knock-on  benefits  of ending our licensing racket. Burdensome processes that require years of training and financial investment create an opportunity cost that  dissuades  talented would-be candidates from other professions. Furthermore, fewer regulatory hoops to jump through could encourage entry into the profession and thereby mitigate the teacher-shortage crisis that our schools currently face.

Any attempt at reform — reestablishing classical and liberal conceptions of education in these institutions — would take a 50-year Gramscian countermarch of our universities. As such, our only recourse is to sever the control they have over teacher training.

Daniel Buck is a teacher and a senior visiting fellow at the Fordham Institute. His writing can be found at   National Review Online ,   City Journal , and   Quillette . Garion Frankel is a graduate student at Texas A&M University’s Bush School of Government and Public Service with a concentration in education policy and management. His writing can be found at   Young Voices ,   reimaginED , and the   Chalkboard Review





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