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Cancel fear inhibits teaching of anti-racism ideology in classroom? (ironic style)

#1
C C Offline
Implicit bias & concern about appearing racist predict teachers' reluctance to discuss race & racism in the classroom
https://www.umass.edu/news/article/impli...ce-discuss

RELEASE: Across the U.S., K-12 public school teachers face significant psychological barriers to discussing issues of race and racism with their students, according to new research by a University of Massachusetts social psychologist.

Linda Tropp, professor of psychological and brain sciences, examined how teachers' implicit racial biases and concerns about appearing racist may affect their intentions and confidence about engaging their students in race talk. The findings were recently published online by the journal Social Psychology of Education.

"This research was done to try to understand what can sometimes get in the way of teachers' best intentions to want to talk about race with their students," says Tropp, who has extensive experience working in schools and seeking to support teachers in engaging students in conversations about race and other important and sensitive topics. "How do we equip teachers to engage in these conversations? What we're hoping is that findings from this research can be used to inform future professional development programs for teachers, so that they feel more prepared to 'go there' with their students."

Analyzing data from two large surveys, each including responses from more than 1,000 K-12 teachers, Tropp found that teachers' implicit racial biases and their explicit fears of being perceived as racist both independently contributed to lower intentions to talk about race with their students. These psychological barriers are still evident, even after Tropp took into account numerous other variables such as teachers' years of experience, their demographic characteristics, characteristics of the schools in which they teach and their own prior exposure to diversity training.

Recent teacher training and professional development programs have typically focused on educating teachers about implicit racial biases -- that is, unconscious racial biases they may have and about which they may have limited awareness -- without sufficiently addressing teachers' conscious concerns about how they may be seen, or how their comments may be interpreted, Tropp explains.

"This is not just something unique to teachers, but something that we all experience in our society, where people are very quick to judge what we say," Tropp says. "It's understandable that we would have concerns about how what we say might be perceived or received by others."

Tropp emphasizes that future training efforts need to consider how both implicit racial biases and conscious concerns about being seen as racist may curb teachers' willingness to engage students in meaningful and productive conversations around race. Tropp's paper states, "As we examine potential barriers to teachers' engagement in race talk with students, we must also learn how to support teachers effectively when they are called upon to facilitate these discussions."

In light of current political and social debates about race-related topics in school curricula, Tropp says it is increasingly urgent for teachers to discuss race in the classroom to help students process what they see and hear outside of the classroom. She notes, "By providing students with opportunities to engage in meaningful discussions about race, teachers can prepare them for respectful exchanges of perspectives with others and full participation as engaged citizens in an increasingly multifaceted and diverse society."

RELATED (Wikipedia): Cancel culture
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#2
RainbowUnicorn Offline
usa education is a product purchase
the parents dictate what level of product they are happy with

the parents don't want majority racial discussions in class
only a minority would
so its a minority product seeking to gain majority approval

and

the minority that seek to have racial bias discussions, would also live in racially biased situations which disenfranchises the overall observation to them supposedly being "non biased"
which is the primary attribute to govern the product purchase model.

selling something that no one wants to pay their own money for
& student class time is not free


usa teachers are probably worried they will be sued for racial abuse
while a norm is pushed of being generally racially and culturally ignorant.
as everyone is set against each other and only the single winner is defined as an acceptable model

its doomed to fail because racial harmony is socialism, so the system is set against it & most oppose it.

irony
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