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New Teachers Face NCATE Litmus Test on Diversity Educators Must Exhibit
Heartland Institute / School Reform News ^ | 1/1/2002 | Robert Holland

Posted on 03/26/2004 11:22:21 AM PST by SteveH

"A monocultural faculty cannot do the job very well. We cannot teach about diversity in the absence of diversity. We need to reconstruct identities, values, beliefs, and lifestyles."

New Teachers Face NCATE Litmus Test on Diversity Educators must exhibit

Written By: Robert Holland
Published In: School Reform News
Publication Date: January 1, 2002
Publisher: The Heartland Institute

LAS VEGAS--The tight link between political advocacy of multicultural diversity and accreditation of the higher education institutions that train the nation's K-12 teachers was on display during the recent annual convention of the National Association for Multicultural Education (NAME), held at the Riviera Hotel and Casino here last November.

Donna Gollnick unveiled new standards for schools, colleges, and departments of education promulgated by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). That Gollnick is both NAME president and senior vice president of NCATE suggests the close relationship the two organizations have developed.

Gollnick pointed out how multicultural diversity will be a factor in education schools implementing four of the six NCATE standards, while a fifth standard is entirely about diversity.

For instance, Standard One, which has to do with the "knowledge, skills, and dispositions" of teacher candidates, will have a "performance-based" evaluation to determine if would-be teachers exhibit what the examiners deem to be racist or sexist attitudes unacceptable to NCATE.

On Standard Two, dealing with field experiences, NCATE will insist this work be done "in diverse settings." In Standard Five, faculty will be expected to "integrate diversity in their own teaching" by way of modeling what NCATE deems "best practices."

Overall, the emphasis on diversity is so single-minded as to suggest intellectual conformity rather than diversity of thought.

Limiting Choice

The National Commission on Teaching and America's Future (NCTAF)--based at Teachers College, Columbia University and funded by the Carnegie Foundation--wants to see all teachers compelled to graduate from education schools that are NCATE-accredited. Such a requirement would severely limit choice in education for parents and teachers alike. The National Education Association, the nation's largest teacher union, was one of NCATE's founders and remains influential in its affairs.

At a NAME institute just before the start of a convention attended by 1,000 educators from all 50 states, Gollnick stressed repeatedly how diversity is the single yardstick NCATE will use above all to measure the work of teacher trainers.

What does NCATE mean by diversity? Here is its official definition, as stated in the glossary of its Professional Standards:

"Differences among groups of people and individuals based on ethnicity, race, socioeconomic status, gender, exceptionalities, language, religion, sexual orientation, and geographical area."

Looking for Diversity

Gollnick explained NCATE would look for diversity not only in faculty numbers but in how professors teach their classes. NCATE seeks "performance-based assessment" so that, through videos or portfolios of work, teachers at all levels will have to show they are "teaching multiculturally."

The NCATE standards repeatedly emphasize the necessity for teacher-trainers and future teachers to exhibit the correct "dispositions" with regard to diversity.

What does that mean? Another presenter, G. Pritchy Smith, an education professor at the University of North Florida, made the point more explicitly.

Lamenting the fact that 80 percent of teacher-education students are white, Smith said "many do not have the requisite attitudes and lifestyle diversity. I have yet to be convinced that a student who is racist can teach. Many say they do not want to teach minorities except as a last resort, if it is the only possibility to get a job."

Meanwhile, 95 percent of professors of education are "white European-Americans," and fewer than 5 percent have ever taught in an urban school.

Achievement Gap

"A monocultural faculty cannot do the job very well. We cannot teach about diversity in the absence of diversity. We need to reconstruct identities, values, beliefs, and lifestyles," said Smith, a NAME icon for whom the organization names its Multicultural Educator of the Year Award.

"We should be more aggressive," he concluded. "We should hire people who are anti-racists and encourage them to create a new world order. Social justice is the way to close the achievement gap. This should be the central 'disposition.'"

Smith commended long lists of books and other curricular materials to teach teachers to value the kinds of diversity valued by NCATE and NAME. Among the recommended works were ones sympathetic to black English or Ebonics, the special needs of gay and lesbian students, and bilingual education to help children retain their non-English first language.

Elevating Fact Over Feeling

While saying much about the differences known as diversity, the new NCATE standards have little to say about raising student achievement. That could be because the view of NCATE accreditors pretty much corresponds with the dominant view of the NAME conference: that standardized tests are unfair impediments to diversity.

For example, keynote speaker Peggy McIntosh, associate director of the Wellesley College Center for Research on Women, criticized tests for a "get-it-right syndrome" that elevates fact over feeling.

"African-Americans learn holistically," elaborated Smith. "They are not so concerned about specific little details. Most white kids have respect for validated knowledge. In other cultures, it has to feel like the truth."

So if the professional multiculturalists have their way, there can never be meaningful intellectual standards tied to a common core curriculum. There can only be standards for celebrating and accentuating cultural differences. If NCATE and NAME get their way, this is how all future teachers will teach.

Robert Holland is a senior fellow at the Lexington Institute, a public policy think tank in Arlington, Virginia. His email address is rholl1176@aol.com.

For more information . . .

NCATE's January 2001 statement of "Professional Standards for the Accreditation of Schools, Colleges, and Departments of Education" is available at http://www.ncate.org/2000/2000stds.pdf.

J.E. Stone discusses NCATE standards at length in "The National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education: Whose Standards?" available through the Education Consumers Web site at www.education-consumers.com/articles/whose_standards.shtm.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: diversity; education; educrats; multiculturalism; ncate; schools; teachers
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1 posted on 03/26/2004 11:22:21 AM PST by SteveH
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To: SteveH
This is totally insulting to everyone.

Blacks don't learn like whites do? Bull!
2 posted on 03/26/2004 11:26:03 AM PST by I_Love_My_Husband (Borders, Language, Culture, Straights - now more than ever)
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To: SteveH

"This breaking news just in, Generalísimo Francisco Franco is still dead."

[This article is over 2 years old]

3 posted on 03/26/2004 11:30:40 AM PST by ZGuy
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To: SteveH
We cannot teach about diversity in the absence of diversity.

Here's an idea-- why don't you teach about reading and math and science instead, and junk the diversity crap?

4 posted on 03/26/2004 11:31:18 AM PST by hellinahandcart
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To: SteveH
Translation: The Native Born, English Speaking White MALE doesn't get the job. It started as "The WASPs" then EEO with Affirmative Action, now Diversity. No one ever mentions ABILITY or MERIT. Once they remember those two words, then there will be EEO, Diversity etc based on reality, not political correctness
5 posted on 03/26/2004 11:32:53 AM PST by Henchman (I Hench, therefore I am!)
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To: SteveH
INTREP - EDUCATION - SOCIOLOGY -

would someone please explain to me how including people from different ethnic groups increases anyone's ability to learn. How does ethnic diversity guarantee a better educational system? How does it make the government system indoctrination any more useful to the "real world," not the "ought-to-be" world of the leftist activists?

6 posted on 03/26/2004 12:32:56 PM PST by LiteKeeper
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To: SteveH
Public education in America took a step backwards during FDR's agenda to establish central government control over sovereign state government during WWII. While this might have been good for the war effort. This allowed today's all powerful NEA to establish control over all public school districts in America via unionization. Today's public school districts must continually combat unions for control of a system that regulates education as secondary by-product after the primary function of a secure 'jobs program'. Public education is very similar to the Veterans Administration: in order to produce "health care" one must first be concerned with primary function of jobs and careers.

No amount of change in the past has ever been able to correct either institution. I fear that the only way to correct this gross downward spiral is to totally do away with both systems... in order to create something new or better. Children receive substandard education when compared with any education effort prior to the 1940s. And veterans receive substandard care via VA hospitals and clinics which must first be concerned with funding for jobs.

Example it takes almost a year to complete a VA entry process unless you are discharged for physical reasons; and once in the system... almost a year to obtain a simple appointment with a dermatologist. If for any reason you do receive hospitalization you must contend with the fact that more than 1,000 VA patients a year are killed because of mistakes made by VA physicians, nurses or pharmacist or simple in attention to detail. (All this has been documented by congressional testimony.) It has gotten to the point where any type of private health care insurance is better than VA health care.

Why are the two so related? The dumbing down of public education equals the dumbing down of everything else we rely on. The article above is just more foul odor from a decayed system of failure. How can we correct this? Take education out of the hands of a socialist organization calls unions.

7 posted on 03/26/2004 12:34:14 PM PST by Luke (u)
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To: kenth; CatoRenasci; Marie; PureSolace; Congressman Billybob; P.O.E.; jcb8199; cupcakes; Amelia; ...

8 posted on 03/26/2004 12:34:57 PM PST by Born Conservative (It really sucks when your 15 minutes of fame comes AFTER you're gone...)
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To: SteveH
That most important diversity of all, diversity of intellectual viewpoints, the raison d'etre of the university is scarely to be found on college campuses today.

I just came back from a meeting where the department head (a Caucasian) said he was leaving soon for Jerusalem to address a conference on Palestinian Liberation and would be working against "Christian Zionism."

Happens all the time in the academic Gestapo. Tenure has become a cloning device for radicals. Once it guaranteed a free market (oops, dirty word) of ideas.

That's all changed since the late 1960's.

9 posted on 03/26/2004 1:33:27 PM PST by Hibernius Druid (Perseverantia Vincit!)
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To: ZGuy
[This article is over 2 years old]

Acknowledged. However, I searched for it on FR but did not find it, and I thought that FR folks would find it of interest. So, con permiso...

10 posted on 03/26/2004 3:31:46 PM PST by SteveH
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To: SteveH
J.E. Stone discusses NCATE standards at length in "The National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education: Whose Standards?" available through the Education Consumers Web site at www.education-consumers.com/articles/whose_standards.shtm.

This link did not work for me when I tried it. However, the following link works:

http://www.education-consumers.com/articles/whose_standards.shtm

Also, I posted it as a FR article here:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1105700/posts

(Read it and weep ;-)

11 posted on 03/26/2004 3:35:45 PM PST by SteveH
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To: Henchman
Translation: The Native Born, English Speaking White MALE doesn't get the job. It started as "The WASPs" then EEO with Affirmative Action, now Diversity.

Go to the front of the class... ;-)

12 posted on 03/26/2004 3:36:34 PM PST by SteveH
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To: SteveH
I was just kidding you. I try to do the same thing when I find articles that I feel are important enough to preserve for future reference.
13 posted on 03/26/2004 3:48:40 PM PST by ZGuy
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To: ZGuy
I was just kidding you. I try to do the same thing when I find articles that I feel are important enough to preserve for future reference.

In that case, phooey on me... ;-)

14 posted on 03/26/2004 4:51:38 PM PST by SteveH
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To: SteveH
On Standard Two, dealing with field experiences, NCATE will insist this work be done "in diverse settings."

This is already a requirement for the ed program I am in. I *think the requirement is something like a 70% minority population for the school to qualify.

We are required to have taken some multicultural gen ed classes. I'm not sure if we are required to demonstrate our sensitivity in some manner or not.

15 posted on 03/26/2004 5:11:47 PM PST by Dianna
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To: SteveH; summer; Amelia
A monocultural faculty cannot do the job very well. We cannot teach about diversity in the absence of diversity. We need to reconstruct identities, values, beliefs, and lifestyles," said Smith, a NAME icon for whom the organization names its Multicultural Educator of the Year Award.

This simply is not true, a teacher of any stripe could teach diversity. The issue is that diversity is not something that has value in a performance based world. (It has plenty of value in a diversity plagued group trying to acheive equal outcome in a multicultural love fest. ) But in the classroom, the subject may be taught without regard or mention of race, religion, gender, sexual orientation and all the other stuff. Now I also agree that a teacher who does not see every student as an individual with the potential to master a subject should not be in front of the classroom.

16 posted on 03/26/2004 5:54:25 PM PST by KC_for_Freedom (Sailing the highways of America, and loving it.)
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To: KC_for_Freedom; SteveH
While saying much about the differences known as diversity, the new NCATE standards have little to say about raising student achievement. That could be because the view of NCATE accreditors pretty much corresponds with the dominant view of the NAME conference: that standardized tests are unfair impediments to diversity.

For example, keynote speaker Peggy McIntosh, associate director of the Wellesley College Center for Research on Women, criticized tests for a "get-it-right syndrome" that elevates fact over feeling.

"African-Americans learn holistically," elaborated Smith. "They are not so concerned about specific little details. Most white kids have respect for validated knowledge. In other cultures, it has to feel like the truth."

They ALL need to learn to succeed in the dominant culture. It's unrealistic to expect the culture to adapt to you...I've always been a small-town Southern girl, but if I moved to New York City I've no doubt I'd need to learn new ways of doing things and of interacting with others, both to get along and for my own safety.

If students want to succeed, and if we want them to succeed, we need to teach them how to succeed in the real world, in the dominant culture. This doesn't mean we should ridicule their current cultures, however.

Too many of these educrats have spent their entire lives in the educational establishment and have never ever ventured out into the real world.

17 posted on 03/26/2004 6:12:17 PM PST by Amelia
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To: KC_for_Freedom; SteveH
And it IS a two year old article. What's up with that?
18 posted on 03/26/2004 6:13:04 PM PST by Amelia
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To: Amelia
I just responded to the comment, not to the age of the article, the poster said he did not find it in the FR archives.
19 posted on 03/26/2004 6:28:35 PM PST by KC_for_Freedom (Sailing the highways of America, and loving it.)
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To: KC_for_Freedom
I just responded to the comment, not to the age of the article,

As did I in #17. I was curious, though.

20 posted on 03/26/2004 7:13:09 PM PST by Amelia
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