Surreal Class . . . An Inside(r) View

Why teach? A window into the realities of the day-to-day life of a classroom. The views and opinions presented here are the sole responsiblity of the author and do not necessarily represent the views or policies of CEA. Names and details included in the posts have been changed to preserve the privacy of students and colleagues.

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Political Right PC

Political correctness used to be a language grenade thrown at the so called "left" by conservatives. Like so many political transformations in the last six years, Political Correctness has become the rally cry of the right. Jay Bennish, the sacrificial lamb of the right, is the latest PC controversy intended to stir up negative connotations of public education.

The word that seems to strike fear in the political conservative movement is dissent. There seems to be no room for them in American culture for a good ol' critique of much of anything they like. Dissent, one of the fundamental conditions of healthy democracy, has been stretched close to a synonym of treason.

Teachers can be propagandists or can be principled provocateurs. Jay Bennish at twenty-eight is what any credible, democratic, freedom-loving teacher should be, thoughtful and challenging. Clearly, from many of his quoted comments, the class was in no way propaganda and met any reasonable criteria of balanced. But that isn't good enough, apparently, for the right-wing scream machine that has harped on this one period of a high school geography class as if it were the end of days, with Joe Scarborough for example, ranting about "taking back education." And Rush Limbaugh referred to Bennish as "long haired, maggot infested." Nice, balanced dialog.

Fact is we have a choice, as in The Matrix. The red pill of propaganda makes teachers tools of the state and the foot soldiers of oppression, whose job it is to socialize American children into obedient, dissent-less thought. The blue pill of principled provocateurs makes teachers tools of freedom and the leaders of liberation, whose job it is to provoke independent minds, willing to dissent, and willing to remain open minded. What's happending to Bennish will effect, in some way, every classroom in the U.S. It has definitely been the talk of the lunchroom.

But one thing. Once we choose, we may never be able to go back.

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