Preparing the US students for more political
correctness.
Kids Expelled from Kindergarten for ‘Micro-aggressions’?
Maybe Soon in Kansas, by Jillian Kay Melchior, 6/13/16
A Kansas K-12
school district may soon become among the first in the nation to prohibit
“offensive symbols” and “micro-aggressions” and punish students and
employees who violate this ban.
The Board of
Education of Lawrence Public Schools will soon vote on a proposal to update its
discrimination and harassment policy. It would impose stiff penalties on those
who commit a micro-aggression or tout an offensive symbol. The vote on
whether to enact this policy, originally scheduled for June 27, was recently
pushed back to allow for more discussion.
“Any student or
employee who violates the Discrimination and Harassment Policy is subject to
disciplinary action,” said Julie Boyle, communications director of Lawrence
Public Schools, noting that each of the 21 schools in the district issue their
own handbooks for students and staff.
Heat Street reviewed several of these handbooks, from Lawrence elementary schools to
high schools. Most say that students or employees who violate the
discrimination and harassment policies can be fired or expelled, among other
disciplinary repercussions.
The Lawrence
School Board defines micro-aggressions as “subtle but offensive comments or
actions directed at a minority or other non-dominant group that are often
unintentional or unconsciously reinforce a stereotype.”
Though the idea
of micro-aggressions was conceived in the 1970s at Harvard, it has made a huge
resurgence on college campuses recently. Complaints of micro-aggression,
frequently submitted through Bias Response Teams, are increasingly seen as
grounds for the discipline of college students and staff. In a recent report on micro-aggressions by the University
of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, one student complained because a map of the
Mediterranean displayed in class “showed demarcations of various nation states
in Eurasia, [but] northern Africa was just labeled ‘Africa.’”
Students at
Oberlin, meanwhile, have complained that racially inauthentic cafeteria
food constitutes a micro-aggression—the same goes for a non-Latino calling soccer “futbol.” Asking where someone is from or where they
were born is also taboo. The list goes on.
The Topeka Capital-Journal’s editorial
board recently raised two central questions about the proposed policy in
Lawrence that remain unanswered: “Who will be the arbiter of what’s
offensive? How will teachers and administrators punish students for
‘unintentionally’ or ‘unconsciously’ offending someone?”
Heat Street reached out to both of the school board members who sit on the policy
advisory committee that’s suggesting the proposed change. Vanessa Sanburn,
board president, did not respond our request for an interview. Shannon
Kimball declined to comment “because we are in the midst of receiving input on
our policy.”
The Lawrence
school district may be the first in the nation to adopt such a policy,
though with more than 14,000 public school districts in the United States, it’s
difficult to say so definitively.
The Center for
Public Education, an initiative of the National School Boards Association, said
it was unaware of any school policy addressing micro-agressions or offensive
symbols, though it doesn’t collect comprehensive policies of all school
districts. Heat Street searched
extensively and could not find any cases where K-12 schools had enacted such a
policy.
Likewise, local
Kansas experts following the Lawrence School Board proposal were unaware of any
precedent, and the district’s spokesperson said she had no information about
other school districts that had adopted similar policies.
The Lawrence
school board’s policy advisory committee was prompted to action after a
Lawrence Free State High School student drove a pickup truck to school earlier
this year flying a Confederate flag in the back.
Hundreds of his
fellow students signed a petition calling for a ban on the flag, and eventually
administrators told the student it was forbidden because it disrupted the
learning environment, the Lawrence
Journal-World reported.
Jillian Kay Melchior writes for Heat Street and
is a fellow for the Steamboat Institute and the Independent Women’s Forum.
Comments
In a free
society, tolerance must be earned.
Setting up non-assimilating Muslims and Mexicans as “protected groups”
only encourages their isolation and turns all other students into the real
victims of intolerance. It’s time to abolish public schools. Smart parents will
home-school and all others will be lost.
Students need to learn how to negotiate and get along. They need to learn to enjoy learning. Political indoctrination has no useful role
in education. These students are
ultimately responsible for their own education.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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