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Probe Ministries
Politically Correct Education
Don Closson
The Power of Political Correctness
The media has recently taken notice of a trend in education that
has actually been around for some
time. This trend has been obvious to anyone well-acquainted with
the goings-on in our citadels of
higher learning or even on selected high school campuses. The term
Political Correctness,
or politically correct speech, covers most of the issues
involved. Multiculturalism is often
given as the driving ethic that prompts one to be politically
correct.
At the foundation of this movement is the belief that all education
is political. Nowhere in the
curriculum can one find a hiding place from race, class, or gender
issues. Added to this assumption
is the law of moral and ethical relativism: All systems of thought,
all cultures, are equal in value.
To assume otherwise is politically incorrect by definition.
Just how important this type of thinking is to those who influence
our nation's students is reflected
by some of their comments. According to Glenn Maloney, assistant
dean of students at the
University of Texas at Austin, "Multiculturalism will be the key
word for education. I believe that
will be the mission of the university in the 90's."(1) Donna
Shalala, chancellor of the University of
Wisconsin at Madison, adds that this movement amounts to "a basic
transformation of American
higher education in the name of multiculturalism and
diversity."(2)
A recent study of the New York school system found that "African
Americans, Asian Americans,
Puerto Rican/Latinos, and Native Americans have all been the
victims of an intellectual and
educational oppression that has characterized the culture and
institutions of the United States and
the European American worlds for centuries."(3)
The report goes on to state, "Unfortunately, stereotyping and
misinformation have become part of
the dominant culture enveloping everyone. . . . Because of the
depth of the problem and the
tenacity of its hold on the mind, only the most stringent measures
can have significant
impact."(4)
And stringent measures are what have occurred. Curricula,
admissions policies, the hiring and
promotion of faculty, and the freedom to debate issues have all
been modified by those who
currently define political correctness. There is a growing body of
evidence that quota systems are
now in place in many admissions offices across the country.
Textbooks are being written and
courses changed to promote multiculturalism at the expense of
teaching about Western
Civilization. Professors are unable to teach their courses or
participate in the academic enterprise
because their views fail to conform to the new guardians of
culture.
What is most appalling is the attempt to remove the freedom of
speech from students who fail to
conform to the correct position on a broad spectrum of topics. What
is ironic is that many of those
now attempting to limit the freedom of speech of students in the
name of multiculturalism are the
very same individuals that began the free speech movement in the
sixties, arguing for academic
freedom and student input into the curriculum. It seems that the
issue was more a matter of gaining
power to control the curriculum and inject it with their views
rather than truly to promote freedom
of academic endeavors.
Ethnic Studies
Let's look at a few places where political correctness has had a
major impact. In 1988 the Stanford
faculty voted to change the Western Culture course, one of the most
popular on campus, to
"Cultures, Ideas and Values." The fifteen-book requirement was
dropped and replaced with the
admonition to give substantial attention to issues of race(5) and
gender. The reading list now had
to include a quota of works by women and minorities. Out goes
Shakespeare, in comes
Burgos-Debray.
Shakespeare is deemed to be racist, sexist, and classist, a product
of the ultimate evil--Western
Civilization. French writer Elisabeth Burgos-Debray is, on the
other hand, politically correct. One
of her works, now part of the Stanford curriculum, describes a
Guatemalan woman's struggle
against capitalist oppression. She rejects marriage and motherhood
and becomes a feminist, a
socialist, and finally a Marxist, arguing politics with fellow
revolutionaries in Paris. According to
the author, this simple Guatemalan woman speaks for all the Indians
of the American
continent.(6)
Berkeley, Mount Holyoke, and the University of Wisconsin are just
a few of the schools where
students must take a course in ethnic studies but are not required
to take a single course in Western
Civilization. At Berkeley, the ethnic studies course is the only
required course on campus, and
Wisconsin students can graduate without taking any American
history. Ohio State has gone even
further, revamping its entire curriculum to reflect issues of
gender, race, and ethnicity. The
chairman of the English department at Pennsylvania State University
has remarked, "I would bet
that Alice Walker's The Color Purple is taught in more
English departments today than all
of Shakespeare's plays combined."(7)
An ironic twist to this revolution is that when writings of third-
world authors are included in the
curriculum, they rarely are the classics from that culture.
Instead, they tend to be recent, Marxist,
and politically correct works.
Unfortunately, curriculum revisions are not confined to the college
campus. The state of New
York recently commissioned a committee to review its statewide
secondary-school curriculum. The
results were a bit startling, to say the least.
According to the report, no topic is culture-free. The Eurocentric,
white, American culture
currently dominating the curriculum must give way to one which
represents all cultures equally.
Even math and science were cited as culturally biased because they
failed to give credit to
contributions from other cultures.(8)
In the social sciences, even more radical demands have been made.
One Black Studies professor
charges that the current curriculum in New York's high schools
reflects "deep-seated pathologies
of racial hatred." He argues that time spent studying the U.S.
Constitution, which is seriously
flawed in his opinion, is grounds for miseducation. He adds that
studying the Constitution is
egocentric and blatant White Nationalism.(9)
Instruments of Exclusion
In chapter 2 of his book Illiberal Education, Dinesh D'Souza
takes up the case of high
school senior Yat-pang Au. To make a fairly long story short, Yat-
pang received a rejection letter
from the University of California at Berkeley in 1987 although he
had graduated first in his high
school class, scored 1340 on the SAT, earned letters in track and
cross-country, served on the
student council, and won seven scholarships from groups such as the
National Society of
Professional Engineers. What went wrong?
It wasn't his credentials. In fact, Yat-pang was considerably above
the Berkeley average in his
qualifications. His only real problem was his race, and what
chancellor Ira Michael Hayman called
"a little social engineering." Under Hayman the university began to
devalue the importance of
merit and achievement in admissions in order to achieve a racially
balanced student body, one that
reflects the population at large.
As a result, this family of immigrants from Hong Kong found that
their son could not go to
Berkeley although ten other students from his high school had been
accepted with lower
qualifications. The policy of racial balance which seemed so fair
to Hayman was anything but fair
to the Au family.
If Yat-pang had been Hispanic or Black he would have had no problem
attending Berkeley.
Asians, many of them immigrants, are now being excluded from
Berkeley because they happen to
be a too-successful minority that values the family and
education.
Unfortunately, Berkeley is not the only place one can find this
type of discrimination. Harvard,
UCLA, Stanford, Brown, and others have been charged with
discrimination towards Asians. As
D'Souza writes, "Quotas which were intended as instruments of
inclusion now seemed to function
as instruments of exclusion."(10)
Even if we set aside Yat-pang's individual rights, does this policy
make sense for the minorities it is
trying to help? Often it does not. D'Souza notes that Blacks and
Hispanics admitted under reduced
academic requirements do not fare well at Berkeley. In one study,
only 18 percent of the Black
and 22 percent of the Hispanic affirmative-action students
graduated within five years. Almost 30
percent of Black and Hispanic students drop out at the end of their
freshman year.(11) Because
we have set aside academic preparation as the criterion for
admission to our top schools, many
students who cannot compete are being admitted. They simply drop
out, more frustrated and angry
than before.
Another issue that goes hand-in-hand with admissions is the issue
of testing itself. Many argue that
since some groups do better than others on the SAT, the test is
biased. A New York federal judge
has ruled that, since women do not do as well as men on the SAT,
using the test as a criterion for
awarding its Regents and Empire State scholarships violates state
law.(12)
What is remarkable about this trend is that testing was installed
in the 1920s to fight arbitrary bias
in admissions. When one removes testing, which even the critics
must agree is still the best way to
predict academic success, all other criteria except race and
gender are subjective.
In light of this fact, College Board president Donald Stewart, who
is black, has argued that the test
covers words and ideas necessary for success in college, regardless
of cultural background.(13)
Freedom of Speech
Those who consider themselves politically correct have inflicted
grave damage on the concept of
free speech. It is interesting to note that Christians have endured
free-speech restrictions for years,
but only recently have others who hold to politically incorrect
positions experienced this form of
discrimination.
Restrictions on speech come in three different forms on campus. The
most widespread form is the
conduct code. Another is the refusal to allow conservative speakers
to address groups on campus.
And last is the censure of faculty members who step outside the
sphere of politically correct
thought.
The University of Michigan has been a leader in restricting First
Amendment rights. Responding to
a student radio disc jockey who invited other students to call in
their favorite racial jokes, the
university began a long crusade to stamp out racism, sexism, and a
multitude of other "isms."
Instead of just punishing the offender, all students were now under
suspicion, and all speech would
be monitored carefully.
A new policy on discrimination and discriminatory harassment was
approved. It defined as
punishable "any behavior, verbal or physical, that stigmatizes or
victimizes an individual on the
basis of race, ethnicity, religion, sex, sexual orientation, creed,
national origin, ancestry, age,
marital status, handicap, or Vietnam-era veteran status."(14)
Debate on these topics was to be restricted in fear that someone
might be stigmatized by the
discussion. The so-called marketplace of ideas that colleges are
supposed to represent had been
shrunk down to convenience-store size.
Since one cannot be certain that even the most balanced discussion
of a topic such as gay rights or
religious cults might not stigmatize a fellow student, one must
refrain from entering into that
territory. The result of this type of policy is to guarantee a
monopoly to the radical Marxist and
feminist ideas now being promoted by the faculty and administration
on many of our campuses.
Fortunately, this policy was successfully challenged by an unnamed
psychology professor who
realized that most of the subject matter he dealt with in class
might stigmatize someone. In a
strange twist, the ACLU was on the right side of this issue and
represented the professor.
Eventually a U.S. District Court struck down even a modified
version of the code. But there are
still codes in effect at Emory, Middlebury, Brown, Penn State,
Tufts, and the
Universities of California, Connecticut, North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, and others. Many more
schools are considering implementing codes.(15)
Some groups on campus have used more blatant tactics to keep
conservatives from speaking.
Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Conner, U.N. ambassador Jeanne
Kirkpatrick, and
Secretary of Health and Human Services Louis Sullivan have all been
victims of censorship in the
form of gay and pro-abortion groups shouting them down. In one
case, black students with clubs
disrupted a meeting for the National Association of Scholars, a
conservative group of professors,
charging that they were actually supported by the Ku Klux
Klan.(16)
Another form of censorship is the silencing of faculty. Alan
Gribben, a professor at the University
of Texas, made the mistake of voting against the politization of a
writing course in the English
Department. As a result he was ostracized by the department and
decided to leave after seventeen
years on the faculty.(17)
The "Ism" Proliferation
The goal of the political correctness revolutionaries on campus is
the removal of any remnant of
racism, sexism, class elitism, and even lookism, the practice of
treating people differently because
of their looks. There are also specific positions on ecology,
foreign and domestic policy,
homosexuality, and animal rights that are politically correct.
The hope behind all of this is the creation of a society where each
culture and social group is
appreciated for its contributions. But the fallout has been to
encourage people to find some reason
to declare oppression, for it seems that only those who are
oppressed are in a position to determine
what is politically correct. White, middle-class males are the
great Satan incarnate--even the most
repentant among them must be watched closely.
Politically correct people argue that they are calling for a
philosophy of inclusion. They are not
thought police, they say; they are only concerned with correcting
centuries of unfairness. In reality
the effect of this movement has been to silence or remove from
campus those who differ from the
politically correct position. If a professor opposes racially based
admissions policies, he is racist. If
a student holds to religious convictions concerning homosexuality,
she is homophobic. The issue
really goes beyond mere tolerance; the goal of this movement is to
remove opposition to the plans
of the radical left.
Since those who are politically correct agree that Western
Civilization is the cause of all evil in the
world, one might ask what should replace it. Not surprisingly, the
writers and heroes of this
movement tend to be Marxist, feminist, and gay. It is interesting
that Marx, a white male
European, is still considered politically correct, although he held
quite incorrect views on racial
issues (in fact, he spoke positively concerning slavery in
America).(18)
If true multiculturalism were the issue, these folks would be
calling for the study and
implementation of traditional cultures from around the world,
which, by the way, are just as racist
and far more male-dominated than our own. Whether one looks at
Islam or the teachings of
oriental traditions, one finds that a dim view is taken of both
modern feminist thought and
homosexuality.
The tradition of Western thought has been to deal with ideas that
transcend race, and it has been
anything but homogeneous in its conclusions. The irony of the
accusations leveled at Western
thought by the politically correct is that the ideas they favor
have been most fully developed in
America and Europe. Even with all of its faults, Western
Civilization has been the most open and
tolerant of all societies. It has been eager to find and
incorporate ideas that are beneficial from
other cultures.
All the important issues considered on our campuses have religious
elements. Whether one is
considering the uses of technology or the relationships between the
sexes, everyone is informed by
his or her religious presuppositions. Placing a prior restraint on
someone's freedom to speak
because he is coming from a different position not only violates
our historic view of freedom of
speech but also can be used to further remove Christian thought
from our schools.
What those in authority on our campuses really hope to accomplish
is the unquestioned
implementation of a world view that releases man from his moral
obligation to a creator God, a
God who sees all men and women, regardless of their color, as in
need of redemption. As
Christian parents and alumni, we need to make certain that colleges
remain places where students
can seek and find the truth.
Notes
1. "Multiculturalism Seen As Education Key," Dallas Morning
News, 9 December 1990,
sec. A, p. 56.
2. Dinesh D'Souza, Illiberal Education (New York: The Free
Press, 1991), 13.
3. Helle Bering-Jensen, "Teaching All Things to All People,"
Insight, 2 April 1990, 49.
4. Ibid.
5. Allan C. Brownfeld, "`Cultural Imperialism' Is Destroying
American Education," Human Events, 29 June 1991, 523.
6. D'Souza, Illiberal Education, 71.
7. Brownfeld, "Cultural Imperialism," 523.
8. Bering-Jensen, "Teaching All Things," 50.
9. Ibid.
10. D'Souza, ILLIBERAL EDUCATION, 29.
11. Ibid., 39.
12. Ibid., 44.
13. Ibid., 45.
14. Ibid., 142.
15. Ibid., 146.
16. "Race Riot: Minority Students Disrupt NAS Lecture," Campus
Report from Accuracy in Academia, May 1991, 1.
17. "P.C. or Not P.C., That Is the Question," The Dallas Morning
News, 21 April 1991, sec. J, p. 1.
18. Brownfeld, "Cultural Imperialism," 11.
© 1992 Probe Ministries International
About the Author
Don Closson received the B.S. in education from Southern Illinois
University, the M.S. in educational administration from Illinois State
University, and the M.A. in Biblical Studies from Dallas Theological Seminary.
He served as a public school teacher and administrator before
joining Probe Ministries as a research associate in the field of education. He is the
general editor of Kids, Classrooms, and Contemporary Education.
He can be reached via e-mail at dclosson@probe.org.
What is Probe?
Probe Ministries is a non-profit corporation whose mission is to reclaim the
primacy of Christian thought and values in Western culture through media,
education, and literature. In seeking to accomplish this mission, Probe provides
perspective on the integration of the academic disciplines and historic
Christianity.
In addition, Probe acts as a clearing house, communicating the results of
its research to the church and society at large.
Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by
writing to:
Probe Ministries
1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100
Richardson, TX 75081
(972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
info@probe.org
www.probe.org
Copyright (C) 1996-2008 Probe Ministries
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Updated: 14 July 2002
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