Friday, August 27, 2021

CRT -Let's Clear This Up

 Back in June, Elizabeth Schultz, a former FCPS School Board member who lost her last bid for election, published an OpEd in the Fairfax Times promoting quite a few oft-repeated, rabid-right talking points about Critical Race Theory and ominously said CRT is being taught in Fairfax County Public Schools.  She is not alone in glomming onto a quick soundbite as a way to attack the other political party and liberals. Lots of politicos all across the country who are trying to hold onto or return to power are doing it.

I did not see the article until the other day, but her points are so distorted that I can’t let her piece or this question go unanswered, even if it’s a couple of months later.

The points she put forward were:

  •       Our local schools do teach Critical Race Theory to students.
  •          It is a Marxist theory that promotes race as the most important thing about an individual.
  •          That CRT is the same thing as equity, justice, diversity, and culturally responsive learning.
  •          That FCPS incorporated CRT into its curriculum through a curriculum rewrite in 2018 by Colleen Eddy and Fairfax County supervisors adopted it through its OneFairfax program.

All of these points are, well- not really true- at least the way Schultz and her friends distort and misrepresent them. 

Critical race theory is a very specific collegiate and legal form of analysis. It is part of a collection of graduate level Critical Analyses studies that can range from Economic (sometimes Marxist, sometimes Capitalist), to Feminist, to Racial, or other perspectives in their focus. The most notable thing about Critical Analyses is that each type looks at an unsolved problem from a perspective that has been traditionally overlooked and looks at aspects of a situation that have been left out of the problem-solving cycle.

Critical Analysis can influence how teachers and policy makers choose what they teach and how they teach it, or determine what policies are most fair, but it is not a good choice for direct K-12 instruction because it requires understanding words like structural determinism, epistemology, and deconstructionism- among a lot of other philosophical and critical analysis terms.

It is true that Gloria Ladson-Billings, the president of the National Academy of Education, and author of The Dream Keepers recommends teachers learn Critical Race Analysis to better their understanding of pedagogical choices, but nobody is proposing to teach 7 year olds post-modernism and deconstruction.

Once teachers or decision makers apply the analysis, they are able to see how laws, regulations, and societal norms have affected people of a particular category. Insights from looking at policies through the lens of race can be fairly obvious. 

For instance, anti-slavery can be thought of as the original application of critical race analysis, even though the term CRT  would not be created until 1989 at a workshop led by Kimberle’ Crenshaw.  In the 19th century, anti-slavery people looked at how slavery was affecting black people on the ground in real terms and determined it was a harmful legal institution to them- Yes, it’s just that simple.

Today, we apply CRA when we ask ourselves how our zoning ordinances or subsidized housing rules affect communities predominantly of color. Or how our school boundaries and funding formulas affect families of color or poverty. We also apply Critical Feminist Analysis when we ask how does this policy or practice affect young mothers or elderly women.  Thinking and analysis is not something to be afraid of, but a problem solving tool to be used among others.

Though CRT/CRA does examine how views on race have been embedded and highly influences our cultural practices, it does not propose that a person’s race is the most important or only thing in forming anyone’s character, intellect, personality, or actions. Institutional racism may hamper a person’s chances of getting healthcare, an education, finding higher paying jobs, and acquiring property and financial security, but certainly other family and personal conditions are important in creating the intersections of values, traits, and opportunities that combine to make up our lives. It does look at how individual racism becomes more pervasive, invisible, and powerful when embedded into societal rules.

For instance, if a businessman/plantation owner believes s/he is dependent on free labor to stay wealthy, s/he might move heaven and earth to protect that ability to have free slave labor, and when those slaves are deprived of pay for their labor, their daily lives suffer from the limits that imposes.

Society wide that structure affects the whole race of people who are enslaved, and affects their descendants, who also do not have access to that money they could have earned without the structural racism of slavery. Eventually that view, embedded in government policy, led to a bloody and divisive war that had massive destructive effects for the plantation owner as well.

Similarly, critical race analysis might reveal that today’s tax codes, pay scales, and access to property skew the economic potential of most people of color and continues to affect the opportunities of black and brown families. CRA also asks if there is a way to ameliorate the negative consequences of structural bias and racism.

So, No. Racism as the most important thing in an individual’s life is not what CRT/CRA is about, but it is apt to reveal how insidiously destructive policies built on bias are.

According to Ms. Schultz, efforts to address cultural and racial diversity and to create a school system equitable to all began in 2018 with a rewrite of the social studies curriculum.  (Right before she lost her seat on the board in 2019).

I don’t mean to demean Colleen Eddy’s work, but in reality, Fairfax County schools had been grappling with meeting the needs of an increasingly diverse student population for about 20 years before that, and the 2018 rewrite Ms. Eddy oversaw was a reflection of what had already been happening in the classrooms across the county.

I know this because in 1998 when I was a FCPS parent of elementary students and began teaching, individual schools were already adapting toward a world view, rather than a one-ethnicity view.  Elementary concerts were featuring songs from a variety of cultures around the world, and picture books were being incorporated with heros of varied ethnicities.

As early as the late 1990’s schools in the county were adopting programs like International Baccalaureate which incorporated a more global cadre of creators into the curriculum in lieu of only western-centric authors, art, and ideas.  Those programs also seeped into the general curriculum of our schools, so that all students were getting a wider education.

Deliberate choices to expand the curriculum toward a more diverse and inclusive canon were not initiated to address the concerns of poor or black or brown families, but to address the concerns of those economically stable and well educated families who knew their children needed a wider education to become well-functioning adults in the broader society of the 21st century that would include many nationalities. They were driven by parent involvement.

In truth, though, those expanded horizons resonated with the colors and cultures of the students we were seeing in our classrooms, and enabled students to be excited about a curriculum that reflected them and their heritages.  White students were not left out, but all students got a more universal view of what it means to be human in this world.

Because the county’s population continued to diversify, and because those program changes were so successful at building a highly regarded system, by 2018 those changes were becoming codified in the central office to reflect what was already happening across the county.

Similarly, the Board of Supervisors had a growing awareness that the county was developing pockets of economic disparity which threatened the unity and common prosperity for the county. They knew they were looking at a growing level of diversity, and an economic disparity in which the average family income on one side of the county was about half what it was in other parts of the county.  Without a problem solving model taking that into account, Fairfax ran the risk of becoming a bifurcated rich-poor economy with haves and have nots that would change the reputation which had built a highly attractive community. One Fairfax was a reflection of that awareness.

So, much as Ms. Schultz and many of her friends would like to frighten us all about the threat of Critical Race Theory, there is nothing to fear from a step on the problem-solving wheel that asks, “Have we taken the needs of all our residents/students into consideration?” 

Do we really want to be two, or three, or five Fairfaxes? Or two, or three, or five nations? 

Friday, March 26, 2021

Gaslit School Nation Redux: The Democratic Version

 

Education policy may be the one place real bipartisanship exists in Washington, but that may not be a good thing for children. 

Wednesday, March 24, 2021 almost exactly one year after Covid-19 closed most of the nation’s schools, Dr. Miguel Cardona, Joe Biden‘s new Secretary of Ed kicked off his first big public event: a 3-hour virtual Return to Schools Education Summit. The summit featured an all-star cast and almost flawless supporting company. 

The opening speaker was well loved and revered, Dr. Jill Biden and the summit wrapped up with the President himself.

This was President Joe Biden’s chance to convince the teachers and parents of America not only that the disastrous four years of Trump and DeVos’ corruption and lies were done, but that we have collectively turned the corner on C19 and are now ready to re-open our school buildings and our communities for the children and families of the country. What great news to deliver! 

Dr. Cardona’s second major speaker of the day was Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the new head of the CDC who has been on most major networks every day for weeks already assuring the nation that though we are not ready to reopen adult venues completely, we are ready to reopen children’s areas at the reduced 3ft distance (as long as they all wear masks). Both Dr. Cardona and Dr. Walensky both referenced lovingly their own children. Each of whom would be able to graduate this coming year. The new Covid variants were given a short phrase, “Yes, we’re concerned,” but there was little about the high plateau of cases, or the potential for post spring break outbreaks. The message was: 3 feet is safe. 

This first Summit was also the moment when the Biden administration and Secretary Cardona had the chance to establish the direction, vision, and positions they would chart for the future of US Schools. In today’s view of the education landscape, divided between billionaire investors and working class teachers and parents, everyone was waiting to see. 

Who would they listen to? 

Whose perspective would they deem valid? 

And whose expertise would they respect with action, not just well worn phrases?

 Were it not for the weary reality on the ground, the smiles and cheerful demeanors might have gone completely unchallenged, and the determinedly intense, unbreakable smile of Dr. Cardona (who is under fire for requiring Spring 2021 standardized testing) might have been convincing. 

 The presentation team consistently portrayed gratitude, chipper determinism, and plucky optimism, but more importantly the selection of presenters was perfectly designed to affirm and uplift the past and future reform-charter-business model of school management. 

 Reports from the field kicked off with Cleveland Ohio’s CEO (not superintendent) Eric Gordon and Chief of Schools Lisa Farmer-Cole, who had been integral to implementing the charter-portfolio-schools Cleveland Plan.

Cleveland is one of a minority of places that still is under “takeover.” It has a mayoral controlled and appointed school board, and 15 charter schools that represent over half the students in the 32K district. Gordon in his presentation even gave a shout-out to JEB Bush’s Chiefs for Change. 

No mention was made of the study from Stanford’s Hoover Institute that showed Ohio charter students learn 36 days less math and 14 days less reading than traditional public school students.

The second district featured was Tulsa Oklahoma’s Superintendent Deborah Gist, who was the DC State Superintendent during Michelle Rhee’s tenure as superintendent and is a proud alum of both the Kennedy School of Government and the Broad Academy class of 2008. Tulsa is about the same size district as Cleveland, but has fewer charters, with 7 in a 32K district. At least three of which have experienced newsworthy scandals in the last several years: Epic, Dove Science Academy, and Langston Hughes Academy. 

For labor coverage, the two representatives were Cleveland teachers’ new union president Shari Obrenski (AFT), and NYC’s UFT President Michael Mulgrew both of whom messaged the importance of collaboration with administration. Notable is that none of the major leaders of the unions, grassroots movements, nor large districts that have fought for their staffs’ safety during the pandemic were there. 

The pedagogy reports were about exciting summer programs that should be offered this year and was coordinated by long time presidential ed advisor, Stanford’s Linda Darling-Hammond. 

She brought with her a collection of teachers expressing deep gratitude for being allowed to be there and cheerfully reporting “best practice” plans to teach first graders how to learn outside and choose a job path this summer as part of their social-emotional learning. After a year of traumas like their family losing jobs, homes, and lives, it is bound to be great fun for first graders to learn how they can one day fill a slot in the corporate-worker-world of the future economy. 

 The Portrait of a National School System painted by the new Democratic administration is a picture of positively resilient school managers, lots of messaging about collaboration and data, with Spring 2021 universal testing, all buildings open, large scale summer school, a business model management plan, a high value for school choice and charters, and lots of well-trained workers for US companies. 

By the time President Biden came on to announce the $130B for schools included in the Covid relief package, the four note chord that sounded in my head, was 

“That’s great! 

What strings are attached?

Whose pocket is that earmarked for?

And the American Enterprise Institute is going to love this!”