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July 6, 2022

As the country plunges deeper into Wokeland, the institutions of alleged higher learning continue to support and promulgate the ideology of the Left.

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The National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) offers an online book titled “Racial Literacy” edited by Detra Price-Dennis.

Chapter titles include the following:

  • To Dismantle Racism, We Must Discuss It
  • Everyday Colorism: Reading in the Language Arts Classroom
  • Centering #BlackLivesMatter to Confront Injustice, Inspire Advocacy, and Develop Literacies
  • Reopening Racial Wounds: Whiteness, Melancholia, and Affect in the English Classroom
  • Tough Talking: Teaching White Students about Race and Responsibility
  • Antiracist Language Arts Pedagogy is Incomplete without Black Joy

Thus, “[t]his collection shows how teaching from a racial literacy perspective is in conversation with antiracist, culturally responsive, equity-oriented frameworks that uplift curriculum design and instructional strategies to help educators [.]”

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In effect, “[t]he English language arts classroom provides a significant place to begin as English Language Acquisition (ELA) schol­ars and teacher educators are illuminating the ways white supremacy of language policies and practice devalue Black ways of knowing, being, and doing in schools.”

Translated, this word salad of pseudo-intellectual leftist jargon states that education must be race-based. It reflects the infiltration of Marxist, communist, leftist, progressive ideology that runs completely counter to American ideas.

The contributors are “committed to the joy of Black women teachers and girls in K–12 schools.” And their “writing, research, teaching, and activism meet at the intersection of race, education, abolition and Black joy.”

Abolition of what?  Furthermore, will the Greek poet Sappho be acknowledged when she writes “I will sing my songs beautifully, now, for my friends’ delight” or does this fail the racial joy test?

NCTE is certainly not speaking of the classics of Western literature in their curricula. Shakespeare has all but been eliminated from the classroom. The dynamics of Antigone’s resistance or the questions raised by Plato are relegated to the dustbin. Dostoevsky who?

Instead, teachers are expected to consider the following:

1. In what ways might you be complicit in perpetuating racial inequities, racial oppression, and/or White privilege?

2. In what ways do you work against racial inequities, racial oppression, and/or White privilege?

3. What tension/s do you notice?

4. What steps can you take to align your actions and eventually teaching practices with the principles of racial literacy?