The Sunday Telegraph

Charity faces claim it brings ‘worst wokery’ to campuses

MPs warn against influence of Advance HE, including its push for universiti­es to ‘decolonise’ curriculum­s

- By Edward Malnick SUNDAY POLITICAL EDITOR

A CHARITY charging universiti­es thousands of pounds a year to take part in a racial equality scheme is behind “the most egregious wokery” in higher education institutio­ns, government figures have claimed.

Advance HE, which counts scores of universiti­es as members of its Racial Equality Charter scheme, is said to be responsibl­e for dramatic cultural changes on campuses. Tory MPs compared its influence on universiti­es via the scheme, to the Diversity Champions programme, run by Stonewall, from which a series of government bodies have withdrawn over controvers­y about its value for money and the charity’s influence on Whitehall.

Advance HE previously received millions of pounds in taxpayer funding, but now relies on lucrative membership fees from universiti­es vying for bronze or gold medals as part of the scheme.

MPs believe that Advance HE’s influence, including its push for universiti­es to “decolonise” their curriculum­s, is leading to initiative­s such as a Cambridge University guide recommendi­ng that academics use “content notes” or “trigger warnings” to forewarn students about the subject matter of course texts, enabling them “to take the necessary steps to engage safely and with minimal psychologi­cal distress”.

“As well as students with mental health conditions, we believe that content notes can play a crucial role in helping to level the playing field for minoritise­d students of all kinds, as part of the University’s commitment to inclusivit­y in teaching,” a handbook produced by Cambridge’s Centre for Teaching and Learning stated. A project at one Cambridge college involved adding “trigger warnings, with indication­s of harmful content” to an online archive of more than 10,000 books and magazines.

‘Advance HE is ramming through its toxic political ideology under the pretext of fighting for social justice’

A government source said of Advance HE: “They don’t get [government] money anymore but universiti­es pay them. They use diversity to degenerate universiti­es into the most egregious wokery.”

Brendan Clarke-Smith, a former member of the Commons education committee, added: “When institutio­ns like Cambridge University are putting trigger warnings on Little House on the Prairie, you know something’s going badly wrong on university campuses. Advance HE is doing exactly the same thing Stonewall did – ramming through its toxic political ideology under the pretext of fighting for social justice. Universiti­es should focus on providing value for money for students.”

The Race Equality Charter scheme is overseen by a governance committee whose chairman, David Richardson, an Advance HE board member, declared in an article in 2020 that “all universiti­es perpetuate institutio­nal racism”.

Last year The Telegraph disclosed how advice published by Advance HE on how to eliminate racism on campus had included stamping out racial “micro-aggression­s” such as “avoiding eye-contact” with someone from an ethnic minority group.

Alison Johns, Advance HE’s chief executive, said: “The Race Equality Charter is a sector-created, evidenced-based framework to support staff in universiti­es to develop their own plans to address the independen­t evidence of racial inequality in HE from the Equalities and Human Rights Commission and Universiti­es UK.”

She added: “Claims that we – an educationa­l charity and not a campaignin­g organisati­on – tell universiti­es to drop texts, or rip up curricula are untrue.”

Stonewall insists its simply helps employers to “build an LGBTQ+ inclusive workplace for their employees”, warning that its impact “should not be dismissed as ‘woke’”.

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