Houston Chronicle Sunday

Texas schools are awash in this; it’s up to parents to fight it

- By Brooke L. Rollins

It’s the worst-kept secret in Texas. Even as educators and administra­tors continue to deny that critical race theory is being taught in Texas schools, CRT’s concepts and terminolog­y are working their way into classrooms and libraries throughout the state.

And it won’t stop until determined parents hold school boards accountabl­e for what their children are being taught about themselves and the world in which we live.

Here are just a few examples. In Aldine Independen­t School District, near Houston, Superinten­dent LaTonya M. Goffney appears to have gone all-in on CRT. In a “Message from the Superinten­dent” released in 2020, she pledged to remold the schools into a “culturally responsive environmen­t,” a hallmark of the so-called “anti-racist” movement.

“Facing the reality of the world we live in — one full of systemic racism, bigotry and ignorance — is the first step,” she wrote. “We must also acknowledg­e that we have failed, even right here in our district, to successful­ly honor Black lives and have hard conversati­ons about where and how we are struggling to promote excellence and equity for every child in our schools.”

“Anti-racist” is the nom de guerre of critical race theory. And “systemic racism” is the foundation of the entire school of thought — it holds that racism is inherent to law and many American institutio­ns, and it critiques that role in perpetuati­ng ongoing racial inequaliti­es. For some critical race theorists, that means these institutio­ns are beyond redemption and must be torn down and remade. As for “bigotry and ignorance,” Goffney correctly points out that Aldine ISD

isn’t doing a very good job of teaching the basics to students; she adds that fewer than a third of its third-grade students are reading at grade level.

The next example comes from Katy ISD, where parents objected to an event featuring author

Jerry Craft who wrote the book “New Kid.” Essentiall­y, “New Kid” is a graphic novel about “microaggre­ssions.” Its protagonis­t is a Black youth who enrolls in a mostly white private school. Throughout the story, Jordan is subjected to the usual insults, intentiona­l and unintentio­nal. Before critical race theory, we had a different term for kids being jerks to other kids — we called it “middle school.”

But the study of microaggre­ssions is often associated with the CRT framework. “Racial microaggre­ssions are layered and cumulative assaults, often carried out in subtle and unconsciou­s ways, which take a psychologi­cal and physiologi­cal toll on the body, mind, and spirit,” the authors of “Racial Microaggre­ssions: Using Critical Race Theory to Respond to Everyday Racism” explain.

So many other examples: A high school in Cypress-Fairbanks ISD planned to show a video to its students in which a speaker stated, “anyone — to be blunt — that is not a white male” may feel the implicit effects of internal bias.” Dividing schoolkids into two classes, the oppressors and the oppressed, seems to be the goal of CRT.

And Alief ISD’s “equity plan” includes anti-bias training and initiative­s for “reducing in- and out-of-school suspension­s for designated ethnic groups.” These policies would mean selective punishment based not on the infraction, but on the color of the student’s skin.

So, let’s stop pretending. Texas schools are awash in CRT, or the same thinking that drives it anyway, despite the Legislatur­e’s best efforts to ban its teaching in our schools. But that doesn’t mean the fight is over; in fact, it has just begun.

The good news is that parents aren’t powerless. Many Texas school districts have special school board elections scheduled for Nov. 2; many more have elections slated for May.

Parents in Carroll ISD formed a coalition around a slate of school board candidates who oppose CRT; they won both seats with nearly 70 percent of the vote. That’s what happens when parents step in.

Even better, parents can step up — and run for a seat on the school board themselves.

Our most sacred work in this world is to care for, educate and prepare our children for the trials they will surely face in the future. And that task doesn’t stop at the schoolhous­e steps. Critical race theory has no place in our schools, and it’s up to us to ensure it’s booted out and never allowed back in.

 ?? Juan Figueroa / Dallas Morning News ?? Protesters against critical race theory demonstrat­e June 22 before a Fort Worth ISD board meeting. CRT has become a hot-button issue for some.
Juan Figueroa / Dallas Morning News Protesters against critical race theory demonstrat­e June 22 before a Fort Worth ISD board meeting. CRT has become a hot-button issue for some.

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