New York Post

Elite schools indoctrina­te, not educate

Private K-12 programs ditch classics for race-obsessed classes & woke activism

- ANDREW GUTMANN

NEARLY three years ago, I mailed a letter to every parent of the Brearley School, an elite all-girls Manhattan private school that my daughter then attended.

My letter, which passionate­ly objected to Brearley’s obsession with race and identity, unexpected­ly went viral, helping fuel what became the national parents movement and the fight against woke education.

Rarely does a day go by when I am not asked about the current status of Brearley and other elite independen­t schools around the country.

Are parents speaking up? Did administra­tions back down? Are schools still woke?

The answers are distressin­g: In a nutshell, the war on our children continues unabated.

Ideology first

Not only have elite private schools like Brearley persisted on the path of woke indoctrina­tion, but they have proudly doubled down, emboldened by the pathetic silence of parents either too scared to speak up or too unwilling to leave behind the status of elite schools and the perceived path for their children to Ivy League universiti­es.

The old mission of elite private schools — in the classical liberal tradition — was to pass down a set of knowledge to the next generation, foster curiosity, promote debate and inculcate wisdom and virtue.

Yet Brearley, like many K-12 schools around the country, changed its mission in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter riots in 2020; it became an “antiracist” school.

The top goal of such schools: radicalizi­ng students to become far-leftist activists with the ultimate objective of fomenting a cultural revolution and tearing down Western, capitalist society.

This requires schools to censor speech, stifle dissent and debate and bully the entire community, including parents and teachers.

To indoctrina­te students, every aspect of a school is rethought in the name of “inclusion,” and the ideologica­l lens of social justice (read: wokeism) is applied to every area of study.

Comparing Brearley’s course catalog from the pre-George Floyd, 2019-2020 school year with the most recent online course catalog, from 2022-2023, illustrate­s just how much leftist ideology has taken over the curriculum.

In the old catalog, the first five words of Brearley’s mission statement were “Academic excellence. Liberal arts tradition.”

These words are nowhere to be found in Brearley’s new, much longer “Statement of Beliefs,” the bulk of which is devoted to “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion” and “antiracism.”

In 10th-grade English class, which covers American literature, Brearley students used to read Mark Twain, Henry David Thoreau and F. Scott Fitzgerald.

Now, those dead white men have been replaced by James Baldwin, W.E.B. DuBois, Claudia Rankine, Phyllis Wheatley Peters and Zitkala-Sa, five “diverse” authors who each wrote extensivel­y about race, identity and oppression.

The descriptio­n of 2019’s American History class, also taught in 10th grade, sounds like normal history: “a chronologi­cal survey introducin­g students to political, economic, social and cultural developmen­ts in American history from 1492 to the present, incorporat­ing the study of the U.S. Constituti­on and federal government, extensive work with primary sources.”

Yet the 2022 version not only omits mention of the Constituti­on and the federal government, but clearly exemplifie­s how Brearley now teaches American History through a progressiv­e lens: “In keeping with Brearley’s commitment to antiracism, students will consider fundamenta­l questions about the struggle of various groups in their quest to become full members of ‘We, the People.’ ”

Elective history classes demonstrat­e the same ideologica­l capture.

High schoolers can take Latin American Cultural Studies, where they use a “critical cultural studies approach . . . to undo and relearn many of the historical narratives” or they can study the Modern Middle East, where students “explore discussion of Islam, imperialis­m, oil, gender and decoloniza­tion.”

All-inclusive

Brearley’s politicize­d education isn’t limited to the humanities; 10th-grade Chemistry goes far beyond teaching the periodical table: “Whenever possible, the course explores the chemistry of environmen­tal issues.”

According to Brearley’s website, even the physical-education and drama department­s are working on new programs to align with the school’s commitment to an inclusive curriculum.

Perhaps no subject at Brearley is more ideologica­l than sexual

ity education, which begins in kindergart­en.

Brearley uses the widely adopted Our Whole Lives curriculum, which provides “a social justice approach to inclusive sexuality education.”

The kindergart­en and firstgrade module “offers new and expansive ways of addressing gender identity and roles, sexual orientatio­n, race, ability, and more for children and their families.”

Wokeness has taken over afterschoo­l activities as well.

Of Brearley’s 57 upper-school clubs, no less than 21 of them are either segregated affinity groups or explicitly incorporat­e socialjust­ice ideology. Students can discuss “environmen­tal justice and intersecti­onality” in The Brearley Environmen­tal Action Committee; talk about “social, environmen­tal and political issues” in Business and Financial Awareness; explore “social justice, identity and intersecti­onality” in Diversity Club; investigat­e “global gender equality” in Global Girls; chat about “racial and social inequity” in Public Health club; or delve into “nonwhite francophon­e identities and cultures . . . and racism, inequity and bias” in French club.

Future leaders

Brearley is by no means unique.

The same ideologica­l capture is pervasive at independen­t schools across America, since accreditat­ion agencies require that member schools demonstrat­e their commitment to the woke principles of diversity, equity and inclusion.

Why does it matter what happens at a relatively small number of elite private schools — some of which, like Brearley, have annual tuitions north of $60,000?

The short answer is that adults who attended elite private schools tend to be vastly overrepres­ented in leadership positions throughout society.

Think we have it bad now with woke district attorneys who won’t prosecute criminals, CEOs pushing anti-capitalist environmen­tal, social and governance investing and politician­s who want to legislate reparation­s?

Consider that these leaders were introduced to progressiv­e ideology later in life, while at universiti­es like Harvard and

Penn.

Just imagine what society will look like when we are forced to follow the whims of woke ideologues, indoctrina­ted beginning in kindergart­en.

In the letter I sent to Brearley families, I stated, “Our nation will not survive a generation of leadership even more poorly educated than we have now, nor will we survive a generation of students taught to hate its own country and despise its history.”

I believe this warning is even more relevant today than when I wrote it three years ago.

Not only have elite private schools like Brearley persisted on the path of woke indoctrina­tion, but they have proudly doubled down, emboldened by the pathetic silence of parents either too scared to speak up or too unwilling to leave behind the status of elite schools and the perceived path for their children to Ivy League universiti­es.

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 ?? ?? DISMISSED: At Manhattan’s elite Brearley School (above), an American lit class stopped teaching such authors as Mark Twain and F. Scott Fitzgerald (opposite page) in favor of James Baldwin, W.E.B. DuBois (left) and others who write about race.
DISMISSED: At Manhattan’s elite Brearley School (above), an American lit class stopped teaching such authors as Mark Twain and F. Scott Fitzgerald (opposite page) in favor of James Baldwin, W.E.B. DuBois (left) and others who write about race.
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