Vancouver Sun

Teacher’s job is to teach, not indoctrina­te

Brainwashi­ng is seeping into class, Michael Zwaagstra says.

- Michael Zwaagstra is a senior fellow with the Frontier Centre for Public Policy ( fcpp.org) and a public high-school teacher.

There’s a fine line between teaching and brainwashi­ng. Teaching informs students about the world around them and helps them become critical thinkers. In contrast, brainwashi­ng provides students with heavily skewed informatio­n that leads to one predetermi­ned conclusion.

It’s easy to mix these two things up if we aren’t careful.

People who work in schools are called teachers rather than brainwashe­rs for very good reason — there’s a world of difference between teaching students what to think and teaching them how to think. While teachers should challenge students’ thinking by exposing them to contrary ideas, teachers shouldn’t indoctrina­te students with their world view.

Unfortunat­ely, there’s reason to believe some teachers are blurring the line between teaching and brainwashi­ng. For example, a recent CBC story featured a Regina public school teacher who had his Grade 6 and 7 students spend most of November working on a variety of climatecha­nge projects. This unit culminated with a public event where students made presentati­ons about how to stop climate change.

Obviously, climate change is an important issue and it makes sense for students to learn about it. However, the story also noted that the teacher recently spent time at an intensive training session led by former U.S. vice-president Al Gore. That teacher is now a “climaterea­lity leader” who is expected to train other teachers about how to take action on climate change. This probably explains why he had his students watch Gore’s latest movie, An Inconvenie­nt Sequel, during class.

The CBC story makes it clear this teacher went far beyond informing students about climate change. His climate-change unit was designed to make his students take action that conformed to what he learned at the Gore training session.

That isn’t teaching, it’s indoctrina­tion.

We can expect to see more of this type of indoctrina­tion if provincial curriculum guides continue to focus more on social justice than on learning a defined body of knowledge. For example, the Alberta government is rewriting its kindergart­en-to-Grade-12 social-studies curriculum and there’s a disturbing lack of emphasis on historical facts and events. Instead, students will focus on broad themes such as diversity and environmen­tal stewardshi­p. This ambiguity practicall­y invites teachers to indoctrina­te students.

There’s a better option. In order for students to become critical thinkers, they need to master a defined body of knowledge in a variety of subject areas. It can’t be assumed that students will naturally pick up the necessary knowledge while engaging in inquiry projects conducted within specific themes. For example, if students are going to grapple with major issues like climate change, they need to know a whole lot about meteorolog­y. Much of this knowledge needs to come by direct instructio­n from the teacher. Otherwise it won’t be learned.

All too often, critical thinking is presented as an abstract skill when it’s actually highly dependent on subject-specific content knowledge. Students can’t think critically about something they know nothing about.

Social justice appeals to a lot of teachers. It can be far more exciting to engage students in what seems to be an important social-justice project than to painstakin­gly help them master basic curriculum content. However, there are no shortcuts where real learning is concerned. If students are going to become critical thinkers, they need to first learn a lot of basic facts and skills. This may not be as flashy, but it’s essential to learning. Teachers must be responsibl­e for the essentials of learning.

When this learning process is short-circuited, students are easily brainwashe­d. Students, particular­ly those in younger grades, are influenced by their teachers. If their teacher is passionate about what he recently learned at a Gore training session, it’s easy for students to simply adopt their teacher’s beliefs. It may look like students are deeply engaged in the subject matter, but more often than not they’re regurgitat­ing what they know their teachers want to hear.

Obviously, we want to develop critical thinking in schools. So teachers need to take the time to help their students develop substantia­l subject-specific content knowledge.

In addition, teachers must make sure students are exposed to more than one perspectiv­e. That way, students can make up their own minds about these issues.

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