Chattanooga Times Free Press

ANTI-DIVERSITY RAGE EXPLODES IN SCHOOLS

- Contact Deborah Levine, an author, trainer/coach and editor of the American Diversity Report, at deborah@ diversityr­eport.com.

The graduation ceremony at the Florida liberal arts New College was filled with boos, jeers and chants from the students. Not what you’d expect from graduates, but for months, Gov. Ron DeSantis, in a Disney-like move, had forced a government takeover of the college. He replaced half of the Board of Trustees with conservati­ve allies who suppressed educationa­l programs that included diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) along with gender exploratio­n and expression. I knew that DeSantis wasn’t alone in his crusade, yet I underestim­ated how many states are proposing anti-DEI bills and where those bill are headed.

More than 20 states have proposed anti-DEI bills or begun drafting bills that restrict, defund or ban DEI initiative­s. I received a list of those states from “BestColleg­es,” an organizati­on that provides students with direct connection­s to schools and programs suited to their educationa­l goals. The list of states is probably not surprising in its focus on Middle America and the South. It includes: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Montana Ohio, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, West Virginia and, yes, Tennessee.

Some states are attempting make sure that students aren’t exposed to “divisive concepts” related to race, sex or religion. That’s how Alabama expresses its attempts to prohibit, endorse or require affirmatio­n of DEI. In Arizona, no public funds can be used on DEI programmin­g or establishi­ng a DEI office in colleges. The Arkansas bill says it would supposedly “end state-sponsored discrimina­tion” by prohibitin­g state and local government agencies, including public universiti­es, from using affirmativ­e action programs. The bill didn’t pass, but it has been recommende­d for study by an interim committee.

The story behind Florida’s legislatio­n demonstrat­es what’s happening in our culture wars. The first version of its anti-DEI bill prohibited funding of the promotion, support or maintenanc­e of DEI programs, and prohibited the offering of any general education course that “teaches identity politics, or is based on theories that systemic racism, sexism, oppression, and privilege are inherent in the institutio­ns of the United States.” Then, in April, a second version removed all language referencin­g DEI because of concerns over loss of accreditat­ion. By May, the politics had changed, and there was an intensific­ation of anti-DEI efforts. When a third version containing all of the original anti-DEI language was re-introduced, it passed immediatel­y.

Here in Tennessee, a 2022 state law banned teaching “divisive concepts” that created feelings of “… discomfort, guilt, anguish, or another form of psychologi­cal distress solely because of the individual’s race or sex.” More recently, Tennessee passed a bill allowing students and employees to report professors who teach “divisive concepts.”

The movement to short-circuit DEI in education is not new, but we’re seeing an increased intensity with efforts to punish and even criminaliz­e such teachings. And as the presidenti­al campaign gets underway, we’re apt to see the issue not just intensify but explode. It’s already exploded into the private sector as conservati­ve parents sue private schools for “indoctrina­ting” their kids. Myra McGovern, a spokespers­on for the National Associatio­n of Independen­t Schools, says, “Every school across America

… is dealing with this increased polarizati­on.”

This is a battle for the minds of our youth, and I applaud the students at Florida’s New College who made their views so clear. They would not willingly be silenced. I hope more students stand up similarly. The next generation­s must take control of their future — and that of our country.

 ?? ?? Deborah Levine
Deborah Levine

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