Whatâs driving the escalating political tensions over education in America? Rick Hess on the culture war surrounding U.S. classrooms. â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â Course Selection Whatâs driving escalating political tensions over education in America? Rick Hess on the culture war surrounding U.S. classrooms. Artem Maltsev Conflict over education in America is getting more intense, and more central to the countryâs politics, as itâs become more about culture and identity. Former U.S. President Donald Trump, now officially a candidate for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, released a video last month saying that Americaâs public schools âhave been taken over by the radical-left maniacsâ and warning against âpink-haired communists teaching our kids.â One of Trumpâs potential rivals, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, is now among the United Statesâ most prominent opponents of âwokeâ progressivism in educationâand one of many Republican governors to have passed significant restrictions on how schools teach about U.S. history and issues of race, gender, and sexuality. [Jeffrey Sachs]( and other critics of these new laws associate them with a new climate of confusion and fear among educators, while othersâincluding prominent Democratsâframe them as reactionary, even âauthoritarian.â Yet Republican leaders argue theyâre just responding on behalf of voters to educational institutions that have gone out of control. According to a [recent study]( by David Houston of George Mason University, meanwhile, American voters themselves are now developing their views on these issues increasingly along partisan lines. Why is this happening? Rick Hess is the director of education-policy studies at the center-right American Enterprise Institute. To Hess, this growing division in American life represents a major departure from the last few decades of political debate about U.S. schoolsâan era defined more by technocratic, often bipartisan, efforts to reform primary and secondary education through standardizing testing, accountability measures, changes to funding mechanisms, and charter schools operating independently of the traditional public system. But the new division isnât entirely new, either, Hess saysâor entirely bad. Graham Vyse: How unprecedented are the cultural battles weâre seeing today over education in America? Rick Hess: You mightnât imagine it, but itâs actually been normal throughout U.S. history for cultural tensions to drive public debate about education. In the 19th century, there were major disputes about compulsory schooling, what languages were acceptable in schools, who could attend them, or the status of parochial schoolsâall of which were along ethnic or religious divides. Later in the 19th century and into the 20th, there were ferocious clashes over the âJim Crowâ laws in the South, enforcing racial segregation; later in the 20th century, over the desegregation laws of the Civil Rights era; later still, over âbussingâ laws that mandated transporting students to schools within or outside their local districts to diversify the schoolsâ racial compositions. But there was also a steady stream of very consequential, but less well-remembered, fights about curricula and educational access: There were conflicts over the teaching of science, which frequently turned on questions of religion and faith. There were conflicts over schooling for students from German, Italian, Chinese, Japanese, Irish, East European, and Mexican communities. As the century went on, American education was variously consumed by fights over communism, school prayer, the Pledge of Allegiance, efforts to outlaw private schools, efforts to legalize homeschooling, the issue of teen pregnancy, the role of faith. In this sense, the last few decades have been unusualâwhen the focus turned away from these value-laden questions about what should happen within schools and toward more technocratic questions about policy levers for improving the performance of schools: What are the right funding mechanisms? What are the right choice mechanisms? How best to hold schools or universities accountable? And so on. Right now, thereâs a feeling in America that itâs somehow weird for there to be so much cultural conflict in public debates over education. But from a historical perspective, the last 20 or 30 years have been a vacation from this kind of conflict. You could say that, in the substance of the fights, what the United States is experiencing right now is more the norm than not. Vyse: Whatâs caused the shift back to that norm? Advertisement Hess: One thing thatâs set the stage for it is that, before the 1980s, education wasnât really ever a defining issue in U.S. national politics. In the eras of Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, that really started to change. Educational policy became more technocratic, but it also become more important politicallyâfor Democrats, as a way to show they were committed to investment and impact rather than handouts; for Republicans, as a way to show they were sincere about equal opportunity. Now, education is a big national issue in America. In this context, the country has since become much more politically polarized. And that polarization has changed the way that both parties have thought and talked about education. For Clinton, for Bush, for Barack Obama, education was an issue where national political candidates could play to voters in the middle. What you see now is that aspiring presidents, or governors, will use educationâas theyâll use so many other national issuesâto reassure and energize their base. In the meantime, there have been other important transformations: First, in higher education, the faculty population as a whole has continued to move further to the leftâand so, overall, further from mainstream American sensibilities. In the 1980s, Democrats outnumbered Republicans among faculty by about two-to-one; today, itâs about five- or six-to-one. Second, along the way, after the killing of Michael Brown by a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014âand especially after the killing of George Floyd by police in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in 2020âthe idea of anti-racism started to gain more prominence in primary, secondary, and higher education, even while its definition often remained unclear or contentious. And third, there was the pandemicâwhich upended a lot of American parentsâ sense of schoolsâ and collegesâ custodial relationship with their children. Thereâs been a long-established sense that these are institutions where we send our kids, where our kids are taken care of, and where we place a high degree of trust. Itâs a kind of covenant between parents and educational institutions. The pandemic disrupted that covenantâand as it did, this disruption started to exacerbate some of the reservations a significant ratio of parents had about the implicit and explicit politics of the instruction their kids were getting. The pandemic created a new environment that deeply changed American parentsâ relationship with schools and universitiesâand that brought these latent issues to the surface. Eugenio Mazzone More from Rick Hess at The Signal: âRarely has U.S. media coverage captured the extent to which this new Republican legislation was directed against the dominance of a very specific set of nostrumsâassociated with the views of âanti-racistâ progressives such as Ibram X. Kendi, or Robyn DâAngelo, or Kimberle Crenshawâsome of which are genuinely contentious, such Kendiâs idea that every position in public policy is either anti-racist or racist. If youâre for lower capital-gains rates, for example, thatâs a racist position. If youâre against the legalization of marijuana, thatâs racist too.â âAs you look around the world, you can see this same gap between sentiments dominating higher-education systems and sentiments in the population at largeâand sometimes between sentiments dominating higher education and sentiments among other elites. In France, for example, you can see President Emmanuel Macron, along with a broad swath of the French cultural vanguard, deeply concerned about the importation of what they see as ideological extremism from the American University.â âThereâs a kind of American exceptionalism at work in U.S. educational cultureâprimarily in higher eduction, but in a way that also influences teacher training and school leadership throughout the education system. The culture has developed in a way thatâs, by global standards, unusually removed from a lot of the social and cultural center of gravity outside of it. Which is why, I think, weâre seeing such a distinctive backlash against it. Educational systems can only work, ultimately, in harmony with the societies and cultures around them. To the extent they hold themselves too far removed, theyâll incur an inevitable reigning in from the people who pay for them and use them.â [Continue reading ...]( [The Signal]( explores urgent questions in current events around the worldâto support it and for full access: [Subscribe now]( The Signal | 1717 N St. NW, Washington, DC 20011 [Unsubscribe {EMAIL}](
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