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‘Ethnic Studies’: CRT Advocates’ Covert Method to Fuel School Racial Discord

The Stealthy Transformation of America’s Public Schools

Controversy over critical race theory (CRT) in America’s public​ schools has been a flashpoint in our nation’s culture wars since at⁣ least 2020.​ In Virginia, parents’ outcry against it ⁣determined the 2022 governor’s race,​ and red states such as Florida and Texas⁣ are doing⁣ their best to restrict it. In this charged climate,‌ blue states are stealthily adopting a dangerous new disguise for ⁣CRT ⁢— “ethnic studies” — which incorporates all that worries Americans about ‌CRT’s ideology, and plenty more, in a deceptively ⁣appealing package.

To see what’s coming, look ​at Minnesota, where this spring ​lawmakers enacted what are likely the most radical education measures in the nation. This‌ is ethnic⁣ studies in its “liberated” form, which‌ not only teaches race-based identities and “white privilege,” but incites students to take action to “disrupt and dismantle” America’s⁤ fundamental social and political institutions.

Minnesota’s new K-12 social studies standards — now in the final stages of⁣ rulemaking approval — exemplify this ideology. The standards add ethnic studies⁣ to the core social studies disciplines of history, civics,‍ economics, and geography, and incorporate⁤ its concepts throughout. One ethnic studies “anchor standard,” titled “Resistance,” is typical. It ⁤requires ‌students to ⁣“organize​ with others to resist systemic and coordinated exercises of power” against “marginalized,” oppressed ‍groups.

These new standards and their related benchmarks prime youngsters to view American institutions with ⁤suspicion and hostility from the earliest grades. Kindergartners, for example,⁢ must “retell a ​story about an ​unfair experience that‍ conveys a power imbalance.” First-graders must “identify examples of ethnicity, ‍equality, liberation and systems of power and use those examples to construct meanings for those terms.”

High school students will be required to “analyze ‍how caste systems based upon race, social class, and religion have been⁢ used to justify imperialism, colonization, warfare, and chattel slavery”​ and to “examine ⁢the construction‌ of racialized hierarchies based on colorism and dominant European beauty standards and values.”

Even subjects like geography‍ are shot through with extremist ethnic studies ideology.

For example,‍ fourth graders will no longer be required to learn the names and locations of ⁤continents,‌ the Atlantic Ocean, the Amazon, England, or China. Instead, they will “describe places and regions, explaining how ​they⁣ are influenced by power structures.” When they study states⁤ and capitals, they must include ​“a recognition of indigenous land these places were built on.”

Criminal Justice as Oppressive

The ethnic studies-driven campaign ‍to discredit American institutions as illegitimate is most clearly evident in the standards that focus on criminal justice. Students will study our police departments and justice system in connection with an ethnic studies standard that requires them to “understand the roots⁢ of contemporary systems of oppression” and “eliminate” “injustices.”

Fifth graders,⁣ for‌ example, will “examine contemporary policing” ​and its alleged “historical roots in early America.” (The claim is that our police ⁣departments sprang directly from ‍slave patrols ⁤of the Old South.) Sixth-graders will ‌ study the “impact” of “Minnesota’s ‍juvenile justice system” on youth “from historically disenfranchised groups.” ⁣High school standards suggest the notion of criminality ⁢ itself is racist: “Explore how criminality is⁤ constructed and what​ makes a person ⁣a criminal.”

Biased, misleading instruction of this kind will likely convince many young people that policing and the very idea of criminality are ⁣oppressive, racially “constructed,” and among the many things schools are instructing ⁢them to “resist.”

Advocates’ Ambitious ‍Plan

Remarkably, the activist campaign to transform Minnesota’s‌ public schools has generated minimal public pushback. A key to its success⁣ was the promotion of ethnic studies as a unifying‌ cultural ⁢learning experience, while‌ in fact ⁢it ​stokes interracial hostility and‍ delegitimizes authority. This deceptive strategy is likely to become a ​national model for activists ‌seeking to transform our K-12 education system.

Across ⁣the country, students’ ​exposure to CRT — think The New York Times’ “1619⁣ Project” — initially⁣ came in piecemeal fashion, through outside‌ interests such as teachers unions and professional ⁤associations. In contrast, ethnic studies advocates aim to impose ‍this corrosive ideology through ⁢government ​action, either weaving it through all subjects as a “lens” or requiring an ethnic ⁣studies course as a discipline comparable to history or civics.

In ‍2021, California became the first state to⁢ make an⁣ ethnic studies course a high school graduation requirement. Though education officials there adopted a deeply flawed, leftist curriculum, they did so after rejecting an initial “liberated” draft as too radical.

Ironically, Minnesota lawmakers have now injected this‍ extremist version⁤ not‍ in one required course for teens but⁢ in academic standards ⁤for all ⁤subjects, including math and science, from‍ kindergarten through 12th grade. In ⁤addition, ⁤the ideology has been hard-wired into teacher licensing requirements and fundamental school mechanics, so the transformation will be difficult to reverse.

Extremist ⁤Org Driving⁢ The Campaign

Today, ethnic studies may be easier than CRT to sell as a cover‌ for ​radical ideology because it remains largely free of‌ the ⁣political baggage ​that CRT has accumulated, and sounds appealing to ⁣American ears in a multi-ethnic society that values fairness​ and cultural understanding. A 2022 poll by the Minneapolis-based Center of the American Experiment found a majority of Minnesotans approve of ethnic ⁢studies in schools ‌until they become aware of its extremist agenda.

In Minnesota’s 2023 legislative session,​ Democratic⁤ leaders and leftist activists took advantage of this ‌goodwill by mounting ⁣a coordinated bait-and-switch campaign to deflect public scrutiny. The ⁤campaign⁣ was spearheaded by a coalition of activist teachers and community‌ organizers, whose parent organization​ is the Minnesota chapter ⁤of the Education for Liberation Network, which has California roots.

The goal of “EdLib MN” is‍ to “be a political force” ⁤to “contend with the status quo of⁢ colonial education that prioritizes Eurocentric curricula” and “predominantly⁤ white educators and administrators,” according to its website. During the legislative campaign for an ethnic studies mandate in Minnesota schools, the organization retweeted a ​ graphic that called for “the abolition” (not reform) “of⁤ policing,” and declared that “defunding the police” means “abolishing the⁢ social order and building a new society.”

“EdLib MN” leader ​ Brian ⁣Lozenski, ⁣a‍ St. Paul-based⁤ professor who serves on the board of the national ​EdLib Network,⁣ has been candid about‌ Ed Lib’s ‍endgame of political upheaval. In an article titled “The Black Radical Tradition​ Can​ Help Us ​Imagine a More Just World,” which he wrote in ⁤June⁤ 2020, he described the George Floyd riots in Minneapolis as “mass uprisings against racialized state violence,” which ‌portend “the inevitable death” of the American “social order that prioritizes vulgar economics.” After⁢ Covid closings, Lozenski declared, “Schools need only reopen if they⁣ join the social unrest and actively combat the greater public health crisis of ⁣systemic racism.”

Calculated Deception

At the state capitol in St. Paul, however, ⁢savvy activists and their Democratic legislative allies lobbied for liberated ethnic ‍studies using ​a benign, inclusive “kumbaya” message. They framed ethnic studies as unifying: “An unequaled opportunity to bridge ⁣the ⁤ethnic and ‍cultural divide” in Minnesota classrooms by “invit[ing] students to more deeply explore” the state’s “many diverse cultures and histories.”

“When everyone gets a chance⁢ to learn about everyone in their community,” read one promotional piece, “it brings ⁢us closer.” A legislative sponsor portrayed ethnic studies ⁢as a way to cultivate the sort of cultural pride her children felt when encouraged to​ bring their Lebanese food and gowns to school.

Ed Lib’s Lozenski served ⁣as a chief testifier for the primary ethnic​ studies bill. He did not disclose his radical ​agenda or connections but held himself out as a concerned parent who favors ethnic studies because it will⁤ provide Minnesota students⁤ with the “intra- and inter-cultural knowledge” they need in a “globalized world.”

Ethnic studies advocates’ entire legislative ‌strategy was marked by calculated deception and lack ⁤of transparency. Sweeping proposals ⁣to infuse “liberated” ideology through K-12 schools were subtly woven throughout bills that were pushed ​through at ​breakneck speed, using slickly packaged testimony and often omitting examination​ of the legislation’s actual text. Earnest students flocked ⁤to the capitol to appeal to⁢ legislators in person​ —⁢ in line⁣ with Ed Lib’s national strategy of portraying the campaign for ‍ethnic studies as “student-led.”

The final omnibus bill not only entrenched ethnic ⁢studies throughout Minnesota’s K-12 education​ system, it also⁣ created ⁣a permanent “Ethnic Studies Working Group” at the Minnesota‍ Department of‍ Education to implement the mandate. By law,​ the members of this powerful group — which will design a⁤ statewide ethnic studies framework, recommend teacher training, and develop instructional‍ resources⁣ — ​must‌ be chosen “with input” from EdLib MN’s Ethnic Studies coalition. As a result, going forward, the political extremists who launched the crusade to hijack Minnesota’s public education system⁤ will play a central role ‌in determining what students learn in history, civics, language arts, math, and science classrooms across the state.

St. Paul Schools Show What’s Coming

To see what’s coming for Minnesota’s roughly 500 district and charter schools, look at the ⁤St. Paul Public Schools, ⁣where a “critical ethnic​ studies” course became a ⁣graduation requirement in 2021. School officials designed the curriculum in consultation with Lozenski and other ethnic studies activists.

The ⁤St. Paul curriculum does not cultivate ​mutual understanding but pushes students‌ to form⁢ tribalized ‌identities and stokes defiance of authority. It exhorts 16-year-olds to “build” a race- and ethnicity-based “narrative of transformative resistance,” to‌ “challenge and​ expose” “systems ⁣of inequality,” and to​ “resist all systems of ‍oppressive power rooted in racism through collective action⁢ and change.”

Related artwork,⁣ labeled‍ “seeds of resistance,” announces school-approved targets of politicized resistance. This artwork promotes the‌ liberated “abolitionist” agenda, and features protest signs that ​read “No Bans/No Walls” and “Abolish Prison.”

Today, St. Paul students and parents​ lament growing disrespect for teachers and dangerous hallways. Youth crime in the city is rising, and in​ a recent survey, a majority of St. Paul high school faculty and staff report that they ​feel “unsafe” or “very unsafe” at school. What will happen as ethnic studies further delegitimizes authority there?

Similar campaigns are underway in other states, not only California — where activists ⁤are now going school district to school district to sell the “liberated” version that failed at the state level — but⁣ in ‍Washington, Oregon,⁣ Vermont, and elsewhere. Minnesota provides a cautionary tale. Unless legislators and citizens understand‌ “liberated” ethnic studies’ real agenda, many more​ states ​will follow.




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