Cupertino elementary school forces third-graders to deconstruct

来源: qing_us 2021-01-14 12:57:02 [] [旧帖] [给我悄悄话] 本文已被阅读: 次 (10505 bytes)

https://christopherrufo.com/woke-elementary/

A Cupertino elementary school forces third-graders to deconstruct their racial identities, then rank themselves according to their “power and privilege.”

An elementary school in Cupertino, California—a Silicon Valley community with a median home price of $2.3 million—recently forced a class of third-graders to deconstruct their racial identities, then rank themselves according to their “power and privilege.” 

Based on whistleblower documents and parents familiar with the session, a third-grade teacher at R.I. Meyerholz Elementary School began the lesson on “social identities” during a math class. The teacher asked all students to create an “identity map,” listing their race, class, gender, religion, family structure, and other characteristics. The teacher explained that the students live in a “dominant culture” of “white, middle class, cisgender, educated, able-bodied, Christian, English speaker[s],” who, according to the lesson, “created and maintained” this culture in order “to hold power and stay in power.”

Next, reading from This Book Is Antiracist, the students learned that “those with privilege have power over others” and that “folx who do not benefit from their social identities, who are in the subordinate culture, have little to no privilege and power.” As an example, the reading states that “a white, cisgender man, who is able-bodied, heterosexual, considered handsome and speaks English has more privilege than a Black transgender woman.” In some cases, because of the principle of intersectionality, “there are parts of us that hold some power and other parts that are oppressed,” even within a single individual.

Following this discussion, the teacher had the students deconstruct their own intersectional identities and “circle the identities that hold power and privilege” on their identity maps, ranking their traits according to the hierarchy. In a related assignment, the students were asked to write short essays describing which aspects of their identities “hold power and privilege” and which do not. The students were expected to produce “at least one full page of writing.” As an example, the presentation included a short paragraph about transgenderism and nonbinary sexuality.

The lesson caused an immediate uproar among Meyerholz Elementary parents. “We were shocked,” said one parent, who agreed to speak with me on condition of anonymity. “They were basically teaching racism to my eight-year-old.” This parent, who is Asian-American, rallied a group of a half dozen families to protest the school’s intersectionality curriculum. The group met with the school principal and demanded an end to the racially divisive instruction. After a tense meeting, the administration agreed to suspend the program. (When reached for comment, Jenn Lashier, the principal of Meyerholz Elementary, said that the training was not part of the “formal curricula, but the process of daily learning facilitated by a certified teacher.”)

The irony is that, despite being 94 percent nonwhite, Meyerholz Elementary is one of the most privileged schools in America. The median household income in Cupertino is $172,000, and nearly 80 percent of residents have a bachelor’s degree or higher. At the school, where the majority of families are Asian-American, the students have exceptionally high rates of academic achievement and the school consistently ranks in the top 1 percent of all elementary schools statewide. In short, nobody at Meyerholz is oppressed, and the school’s high-achieving parents know that teaching intersectionality instead of math is a waste of time—and potentially dangerous.

One parent told me that critical race theory was reminiscent of the Chinese Cultural Revolution. “[It divides society between] the oppressor and the oppressed, and since these identities are inborn characteristics people cannot change, the only way to change it is via violent revolution,” the parent said. “Growing up in China, I had learned it many times. The outcome is the family will be ripped apart; husband hates wife, children hate parents. I think it is already happening here.”

The small fight at Meyerholz reflects a larger development: for the first time, Asian-Americans on the West Coast have become politically mobilized. In 2019, Asian-Americans ran a successful initiative campaign against affirmative action in Washington State; in 2020, Asian-Americans ran a similar campaign in California, winning by an astonishing 57 percent to 43 percent margin. In both cases, they defended the principles of meritocracy, individual rights, and equality under the law—and roundly defeated a super-coalition of the states’ progressive politicians, activists, universities, media, and corporations.

The stakes are high for the Asian-American community. For progressives insisting on the narrative of “white supremacy” and “systemic racism,” Asian-Americans are the “inconvenient minority”: they significantly outperform all other racial groups, including whites, in terms of academic achievement, college admissions, household income, family stability, and other key measures. Affirmative action and other critical race theory-based programs would devastate their admissions to universities and harm their futures.

At Meyerholz Elementary, the Asian-American families are on high alert for critical race theory in the classroom. Since their initial victory, they have begun to consider campaigning against the school board. “We think some of our school board members are [critical race theory] activists and they must go,” said one parent. The capture of our public institutions by progressives obsessed by race and privilege deserves opposition at every level. The parents of Cupertino have joined the fight.

Originally Published at City Journal.

所有跟帖: 

crazy! -Calsh2007- 给 Calsh2007 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 01/14/2021 postreply 13:06:00

美国人真是疯了、自己折腾自己、真是自做?不可活 -yfzf- 给 yfzf 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 01/14/2021 postreply 13:12:17

从疯狂走向灭亡 -cwang28- 给 cwang28 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 01/14/2021 postreply 13:19:24

给富足的新贵灌输种族观念,用他们的钱资源和声音去打压一个种族。同时对那个种族的人 -julie116- 给 julie116 发送悄悄话 julie116 的博客首页 (44 bytes) () 01/14/2021 postreply 13:43:11

这里支持民主党的人也不少,到时候一样被清算,不要以为你是造反派就是安全的 -tz2000- 给 tz2000 发送悄悄话 tz2000 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 01/14/2021 postreply 13:46:42

为这些家长的聪慧,勇敢,和正义感,感到非常自豪,他们不随波逐流,真是好样的。 -Oona- 给 Oona 发送悄悄话 Oona 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 01/14/2021 postreply 14:07:16

今天看到某州一个公立中小学改民 George Floyd -我想飞- 给 我想飞 发送悄悄话 我想飞 的博客首页 (29 bytes) () 01/14/2021 postreply 14:34:28

看这个地方的老中烙印一代移民们有什么想法。 -湾区范儿- 给 湾区范儿 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 01/14/2021 postreply 14:47:41

parents have to fight, time to stand up and speak your voice, th -greenfinger- 给 greenfinger 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 01/14/2021 postreply 18:22:17

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