Thursday, March 28, 2024

Ohio Teachers Tout Critical Race Theory Trojan Horse Strategy

-

Accuracy in 's hidden camera investigation into schools has already revealed the deceptive tactics being used in both Columbus and to sneak into education – but those aren't the only schools that are willing to mislead parents. 

, Ohio educators are similarly prepared to skirt anti- laws if they are enacted in the state. 

“There's all sorts of ways around it,” Kettering City School District Student Services Supervisor Rick Earley told AIM's investigators on hidden camera. 

Betsy Gann, director of Curriculum and Gifted Services at Bellbrook-Sugarcreek Schools, echoed this, saying that “There's language that we need to be careful of. There are triggering kinds of words and that's how I put it.”

When AIM investigators asked if they could teach the same content under a different label, she said, “Yeah.”

Last year, Republican lawmakers in Ohio introduced legislation that would have prohibited CRT in schools. Specifically, House Bill 616 would have barred “teaching or providing training that promotes or endorses divisive or inherently racist concepts.”

The measure, which was smeared as a “don't say gay” bill and compared to Florida's Parental Rights in Education Act, did not advance out of Ohio's legislature. 

Activist educators in the state are making it very clear that even if the bill had been signed into law, it wouldn't have stopped them. 

According to Gann, phrases such as “CRT” and “culturally responsive” are “triggering.” They also “don't formally use” the word antiracism. However, she claimed that students are still taught to be “antiracist.”

Defending the content that may trigger some, she said “that's not putting you down, caucasian man, it's being an advocate.”

It would be “unfortunate” to change the name of the content being taught due to a CRT ban, said Earley. But he explained how the school is prepared to work around a possible ban nonetheless. 

“It all goes back to how you dress the window,” Earley told investigators. “You can do a lot of shopping without anybody even knowing you're shopping.”

“You just have to be very careful how you phrase whatever you're going to say,” he continued, confirming that they would indeed change the label of the lessons while leaving the content unaltered. 

Gann also revealed to investigators that she used school funds to purchase the book “” by Robin DiAngelo for staff members–and the reading counted as “professional development.”

We did ‘White Fragility,'” she said. “I did buy those out of funds. So, it was a professional development opportunity.” 

“It was grant-funded,” she explained, specifying that the money came from “staff development funds.”

Dayton educators, similar to their counterparts in both Columbus and Cincinnati, are willing to do whatever it takes to get CRT into schools. They're willing to slap new labels on their lessons so they can keep infusing social justice into them. 

Bans like the one proposed in HB616 would not stop these schools, as is evident in their conversations with AIM's investigators.

The answer may lie in a bill recently introduced in Ohio's legislature by Ohio Sen. Sandra O'Brien. The Enact the Parent Educational Freedom Act, or SB11, seeks to expand school choice for students and families in the state. 

O'Brien's proposal would open up eligibility for the existing Educational Choice scholarships while also increasing the income tax credit available to cover homeschooling expenses.

This way, families across Ohio would be able to access private schools or even afford to homeschool. While public institutions have a monopoly, they clearly won't stop pushing CRT content. 

If Ohio were to grant families choices in schooling options, public schools would be forced to ditch the agenda to maintain enrollment rates. 

This article originally appeared in Accuracy in Media. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions of American Liberty News. Republished with permission.

3 COMMENTS

  1. Specifically, House Bill 616 would have barred “teaching or providing training that promotes or endorses divisive or inherently racist concepts.”

    First of all, it is wise to ban the key immoral and unethical concept being taught as opposed to identifying it by the current label they are using, which can easily be changed.

  2. Second, anyone who would plot to hide or deceive what they are teaching our children is no better than any other child abuser and should be immediately and permanently removed from anything to do with children.

  3. Just trash being the trash they are. “Woke” isn’t appropriate for what they are. Stupid is more appropriate and they ALL need to be gone..

Comments are closed.

Latest News