Group warns of ‘non-violent ideological war’ in classrooms
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[July 09, 2021]
By Greg Bishop
(The Center Square) – A group in Illinois
is looking for chapters across the state to help keep tabs on teaching
plans they say are dividing children.
A parent in Naperville, Shannon Adcock, said she became aware of
“culturally responsive teaching” when she was unsuccessful in running
for the school board. She said the more she learned about it, the more
she felt it was regressive and divisive by teaching children race or
gender directly impacts outcomes.
“You are having students segregated by their color, by their sexuality,
by their any number of filters that an activist teacher can choose and
say ‘so because of your skin color you are a problem, because of your
skin color you will never make it in life, because of this intangible
systemic problem in one of the greatest countries in the world,’ and to
me, it’s to me extremely anti-Americanism, it’s anti-child and I believe
it to be child abuse,” Adcock told WMAY. “Teach history, there’s no
question about that, but when you begin filtering students, this becomes
a problem and it’s a violation, a constitutional violation.”
She said the curriculum can take many different names and forms, so she
and others seeing similar trends in other parts of the state started the
website AwakeIL.com as a way to share information with taxpayers,
parents and educators about trends around the state.
“We are going to preserve the integrity of our constitution, state and
federal, and we’re going to take that divisive curricula and
segregationist approach to education out of our classrooms,” she said.
A teacher of the Evanston district recently filed a lawsuit against the
district alleging its policies are segregating and denigrating white
teachers and students, casting them as inherently racist and privileged.
Last month, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said those complaining about what some
term “critical race theory” being taught in some public schools are
“right-wing.”
“They’re going to grab on to anything that they can use a few words, put
it together and make it sound like it’s an attack on white people, then
they’re going to make it an issue,” Pritzker said.
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From June 16 in Springfield, Gov. J.B.
Pritzker reacts to critics of "critical race theory." On
WMAY Thursday, AwakeIL.com founder Shannon Adcock discuses
those concerns.
BlueRoomStream, WMAYNews Facebook
Those downplaying concerns are “full of it,” Adcock
said.
“When you have the teachers union, the national teachers union,
saying that they want this taught and they will defend in court
teachers who are teaching it, this is ideological war right now,”
Adcock said. “It’s a nonviolent ideological war and our children are
at the heart of it and parents are awake and we’re going to fight
it.”
Earlier this week, the president of the American Federation of
Teachers gave a speech, reported by the Washington Post, saying
those with concerns about teaching about racism are bullying
teachers from “teaching students accurate history” and the union is
preparing for litigation.
The National Education Association has already adopted new
provisions that support critical race theory.
Several states, including Texas and Florida, have prohibited such
teachings.
In Indiana, Attorney General Todd Rokita proposed a “Parents Bill of
Rights” to combat the ideology.
“Numerous parents and state legislators have contacted me to express
concern about how much indoctrination, not instruction, is being
thrust upon students,” Rokita said in a statement. “While American
students fall behind the rest of the world in math, science, reading
and writing, some schools are prioritizing political agendas over
academic achievement.”
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