Educator schools screening out conservatives

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from http://www.thefire.org/index.php/article/6343.html

Class(room) Warriors

by John Leo

October 24, 2005

U.S. News & World Report
The cultural left has a new tool for enforcing political conformity in schools of education. It is called dispositions theory, and it was set forth five years ago by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education: Future teachers should be judged by their "knowledge, skills, and dispositions." What are "dispositions"? NCATE's prose made clear that they are the beliefs and attitudes that guide a teacher toward a moral stance. That sounds harmless enough, but it opened a door to reject teaching candidates on the basis of thoughts and beliefs. In 2002, NCATE said that an education school may require a commitment to social justice. William Damon, a professor of education at Stanford, wrote last month that education schools "have been given unbounded power over what candidates may think and do, what they may believe and value."
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NCATE vehemently denies that it is imposing groupthink, but the ed schools, essentially a liberal monoculture, use dispositions theory to require support for diversity and a culturally left agenda, including opposition to what the schools sometimes call "institutional racism, classism, and heterosexism." Predictably, some students concluded that thought control would make classroom dissent dangerous. A few students rebelled when a teacher at Brooklyn College School of Education showed Michael Moore's movie Fahrenheit 9/11 in class and dismissed "white English" as "the language of oppressors." Five students filed written complaints and received no formal reply from the college. One was told to leave the school and take an equivalent course at a community college. Two of the complaining students were then accused of plagiarism and marked down one letter grade. The two were refused permission to bring a witness, a tape recorder, or a lawyer to meet with a dean to discuss the matter.

K. C. Johnson, a history professor at the school who defended the dissenting students, became a target himself. After writing an article in Inside Higher Ed attacking dispositions theory as a form of mind control, Johnson faced a possible investigation by a faculty Integrity Committee. The Philadelphia-based Foundation for Individual Rights in Education entered the case on Johnson's behalf, accusing the college of viewpoint discrimination and a violation of academic freedom. FIRE is a national civil liberties group that does what the American Civil Liberties Union should be doing but usually won't. FIRE said: "Brooklyn College must confirm that it tolerates dissent, that it is not conducting another secret investigation of one of its own professors." FIRE says the college has "disavowed any secret investigation."

Backing down. Another battle over dispositions theory has been unfolding at Washington State University's college of education. The college threatened to terminate a student, Edward Swan, 42, for failing four "professional disposition evaluations." Swan, a religious man of working-class background, has expressed conservative opinions in class. He opposes affirmative action and doesn't believe gays should adopt children. His grades are good, and even his critics say he is highly intelligent. One teacher gave Swan a failing PDE after spotting the statement "diversity is perversity" in Swan's copy of a textbook.
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At the start of the current semester, Swan was offered a choice: Sign a contract with the college or be expelled. The contract included mandatory diversity training, completing various projects at the faculty's direction, and the possibility of above-normal scrutiny during Swan's student teaching this fall. Instead of signing, Swan contacted FIRE. "Almost immediately, Swan's situation changed," said an article in the local newspaper, the Moscow-Pullman Daily News. The faculty told Swan he did not have to sign the contract and would not be expelled. Judy Mitchell, dean of the college of education, said the school would continue using the PDEs. A reporter asked her if Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia would pass a PDE if he were a student at the college. "I don't know how to answer that," Mitchell replied.
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David French, president of FIRE, then jumped in. "I commend the dean for her honesty," he said. "But the answer is alarming because Scalia shouldn't fail any 'character' test because of his beliefs." Obviously, the dean had a problem. She couldn't say that no conservatives need apply, and she couldn't tell her faculty that the PDE s would be waived for someone like Scalia. In both the Johnson and the Swan cases, the colleges backed down when FIRE went public, but neither agreed to avoid using dispositions theory for apparently ideological purposes. The lesson for education students is clear: Say what you think in class, and if the administration moves against you, give FIRE a call.
 
Therin lies the problem with this dispositions theory and professors who beleive that you must have the correct set of beliefs to teach.

The ultimate art of teaching is presenting all the alternatives for honest discussion, giving information and guidance so that students can do research and thinking/reasoning and arrive at an answer that they should be able to justify.

Learning based upon regurgitation is fine for learning basic priciples and theories. However, there comes a time as we advance in the eductional hiearchy that regurgitation should give way to questions and honest open disscusion and finally decisons based upon reasoning and the answers we get from questions and research.

A classroom is a place where there should be an abundance of questions. There should be a freedom to question anything. If a classroom restricts what questions can be asked and what beliefs should not be challenged it is not a classroom but a regurgitation factory. To just present one side of the facts and then retaliate against those who question them or think different than you is not teaching but presenting propoganda.
 
Fortunately, teacher certification is something that occurs at the state level and the national organization mentioned is of no consequence in my state.

It's great to be in Texas.
 
Not agreeing with either the program or it's critics, I must observe that teachers do not get to choose their students. Therefore, someone who is "anti-diversity" might prove to be a liability if they are unable to control themselves when faced with a student of gay parents, mixed race, unusual religion or political views. If such a person can't make nice in a one semester class, are they going to suddenly be impartial when they must live with the despised diversity on a daily basis? Will they end up stating their convictions about the perversity of those in the community they serve?

I'm beginning to wonder if teaching attracts those of a more liberal mindset, or if it is just that the conservative mindset discourages those people from putting themselves in situations that demand tolerance. How can someone with a fairly rigid view of what 'perversity' is possibly mentor a gay student (for instance)?



There is something really ironic, though, about flunking a diversity class because the teacher can't tolerate your personal views.
 
There is something really ironic, though, about flunking a diversity class because the teacher can't tolerate your personal views.
This is the saving grace to your post. The administration is being more intolerant than the conservative student. I don't see much evidence that the student would be "unable to control" himself. I do see evidence of discrimination on the basis of politics by the administration.
 
"Diversity is perversity" is not an anouncement that one is prepared to be open minded about the people he wants to teach. I was referring to his inability to not write obviously prejudicial slogans in the one class where it might matter.

Diversity means alot of things, and putting them all in the same basket as "perverse" shows a fundamental lack of respect for ANY part of the class or instructor. It's kind of like writing "German: The language of Nazism" in your foreign language and culture class. See how well the German instructor takes to that show of cultural learning.
 
Diversity = Only a means to supplement a political agenda.

Diversity = Creates specific fixed voting blocks.

Diversity = key words: multicultural education/self esteem, preserving culture==Only liberalism and socialism are acceptable..........

Vote Democrat-----Its much easier than getting a job.
 
Diversity = no more seperate water fountains.

No, that would be equality. Diversity now means quotas, accusations of racism if a "minority" (in quotes because in some areas, "minorities" are the majority but are still accorded minority status) isn't fully represented notwithstanding any other explanation, and discrimination in favor of "minorities".
 
Water fountains ?? Whats that ?? Many of my relatives were Lakota Sioux. Some still live on Winnabago and Macy Reservations. Native Americans--stuck on the reservation and if you vote for us, we will fill all your needs...liberals, the true slave masters.
 
Diversity now means quotas, accusations of racism if a "minority" (in quotes because in some areas, "minorities" are the majority but are still accorded minority status) isn't fully represented notwithstanding any other explanation, and discrimination in favor of "minorities".

In sociological terms, a minority is a group that is economically or socially disadvantaged, regardless of their size when compared to the total population (like the blacks in South Africa during apartheid).
 
I'm a school teacher. I've been teaching for 11yrs now. I'm a staunch conservative...just slightly right of Ghengis Kahn.

I had a very difficult time in college. I was a 27yr old combat Vet, a little high strung, taking classes with 18yr olds. I had professors ask me not to take their classes again. Some would not call on me when I raised my hand, or would sigh and roll their eyes at my comments.

When I got into the School of Education, I was fed up. A = A, and I called BS daily. Having books by Jonathan Kozol and Naomi Wolf shoved down my throat as Authorative text was sickening. It was socialist indoctrination. I hated it, but I made it and was certified to teach.

I am virtually alone among my peers and co-workers. My position on guns, hunting, gay marriage, the war on terror..etc are met with chuckles and long sighs. I'm called a "nut" by some. As if I'm crazy for thinking the way I do.

I'm not invited to parties, friday nites at the Hilltop Bar, or the like. I really don't care.

There is some creedence to the notion that Ed Schools prefer you to be liberal. My evidence is anecdotal, but read a middle school/High School social studies book and look up "2nd Amendment" or "Core Democratic Values" and "serving the greater whole". Makes my hair stand up.

A=A, but don't say that at a public school.
 
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In sociological terms, a minority is a group that is economically or socially disadvantaged, regardless of their size when compared to the total population (like the blacks in South Africa during apartheid).

Are Appalachian whites entitled to minority status? They are economically and socially disadvantaged, yet are entitled to no special status at law.
 
Maybe it's geography (I don't mean what you teach).
I am virtually alone among my peers and co-workers. My position on guns, hunting, gay marriage, the war on terror..etc are met with chuckles and long sighs. I'm called a "nut" by some. As if I'm crazy for thinking the way I do.

It's great to be in Texas.
You wouldn't feel so lonely here.:)

(I'm teacher, too).
 
"Diversity is perversity" is not an anouncement that one is prepared to be open minded about the people he wants to teach. I was referring to his inability to not write obviously prejudicial slogans in the one class where it might matter.

Diversity means alot of things, and putting them all in the same basket as "perverse" shows a fundamental lack of respect for ANY part of the class or instructor. It's kind of like writing "German: The language of Nazism" in your foreign language and culture class. See how well the German instructor takes to that show of cultural learning.

You're right, "diversity is perversity" was a little over the top. Your German language example makes your point very clearly.

I would have been more subtle, something like "diversity is a statistic, not a virtue." ;)

But I still see the administration's actions as being politically intolerant.
 
Virgil Caine-

I'm truly surprised that your college instructors didn't like you. I spent a year and a half teaching part time at the college level while finishing my graduate degree (I was an actual faculty member, not just a TA), and my favorite students were almost always the older ones who had work or military experience under their belts. The only reason I gave up the teaching job was to take a full-time job on the other side of the country after grad school. I'll probably look for another part time teaching gig in a year or so, to supplement my income, and I'll be torn between the sort of institution that attracts older students, or a more traditional name-brand college that will look better on the resume.

Of course, I was teaching science, not education, but my colleagues in a wide range of subjects all seemed to enjoy the older students more.

On "diversity = perversity": I need to know more context. I consider myself a fairly liberal person in many ways (not gun control, obviously), but in academia the word "diversity" is way over-used as a buzzword, and buzzwords of any sort are almost always annoying. I can see him sitting through yet another lecture laden with buzzwords and relieving his boredom by doodling something that rhymes.
 
Two of the complaining students were then accused of plagiarism and marked down one letter grade.

Marked down one letter grade for plagirarism? They must go to a liberal school. I'd probably be lucky if all I got was an F in the course here.
 
Uhh... I'm at a pretty liberal school (see location to the right) and I'd fail the class and be put on probation if I got cought plagarizing.
 
Asmall,

I wouldn't say they disliked me. I had good relationships and learned alot from some, mainly in the sciences. I never mentioned my military past, altho' some may have guessed until I calmed down a bit.

The probelm I had was the refusal to debate. I did my homework, researched my facts (on top of class work), and came to class ready to take the other side on alot of theory that was handed to us as if it were all true and fact.

I hated the "chuckle", the "smile", and the "head shake" that I would get as if I were a 4 yr old that farted in public. If I was so wrong, tear apart my argument, show me my error in logic, but don't just brush a student aside because he disagrees.

I went to Eastern Michigan University BTW. An ultra liberal teachers college.
 
Virgilcaine.....good on you....If one wishes to see the end game of the liberal democratic educational system and where it is headed in the world, look at the argument ongoing between mainstream inclusion and full inclusion of specific students. It is a wonderful thing to be compassioned and altruistic, but without logic, there is chaos....
 
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