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The sun sets on the West: today's social studies experts preach an anti-western ideology.


The 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon led to a revival of patriotic feelings across the nation. Yet the mood was quite different among prominent experts within the social studies field. In the pages of Social Education (the premier journal of the National Council for the Social Studies National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS) is a US-based association devoted to supporting social studies education. History
Founded in 1921, NCSS engages and supports educators in strengthening and advocating social studies.
) and in rapidly assembled curriculum supplements, a clear effort was made to temper any hint of patriotic excess in the classroom and to stress instead the need for therapeutic healing. The concern for children who may have been traumatized by the televised carnage was of course laudable laud·a·ble
adj.
Healthy; favorable.
 and necessary, as was the insistence that students be urged to show tolerance toward their Muslim and Arab neighbors. The trouble was that the overwhelming emphasis on these themes crowded out efforts to teach students anything of political or historical relevance.

Moreover, the history curricula promoted by social studies experts insisted that teachers ought to encourage their students to look more critically at U.S. policy in the Middle East in the hopes of understanding the terrorists' motives. This focus shocked many Americans, as was clear from the bad press the National Education Association, the nation's largest teacher union, received when some of the curricula posted on its website suggested that teachers avoid attributing blame for the attacks--despite the fact that the attacks were a clear product of a well-organized terrorist group. Yet anyone aware of the global education ideology, which has captivated cap·ti·vate  
tr.v. cap·ti·vat·ed, cap·ti·vat·ing, cap·ti·vates
1. To attract and hold by charm, beauty, or excellence. See Synonyms at charm.

2. Archaic To capture.
 social studies experts ever since the end of the cold war, was not surprised. This ideology is deeply suspicious of America's institutions, values, and role in the world, while celebrating other nations and cultures without a hint of skepticism. (Of course, it should be noted that many rank-and-file teachers usually soften or ignore the ideology as they cope with the practical tasks of teaching about the world beyond our shores.)

As a general trend, the increasing coverage of nonwestern societies is welcome. Cosmopolitanism has intellectual benefits on its own, and America's expanding role in the world and the steady globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
 of both trade and popular culture make knowledge of other nations a necessity. Much less desirable is that a highly dubious ideological agenda is driving this effort. The global education ideology is being pushed by a variety of professional associations, foundations, and professors in schools of education. Perhaps most important, global education's believers exercise a strong degree of influence among textbook publishers, whose teams of multicultural advisors examine curricular materials for hints of bias or cultural insensitivity.

The global education agenda has three core elements:

* Multicultural celebration: An all-pervasive focus on the concept of "cultural diversity" and the need to expose students to as much of it as possible. This does help to counter a traditional overemphasis o·ver·em·pha·size  
tr. & intr.v. o·ver·em·pha·sized, o·ver·em·pha·siz·ing, o·ver·em·pha·siz·es
To place too much emphasis on or employ too much emphasis.
 on western societies and an ethnocentric eth·no·cen·trism  
n.
1. Belief in the superiority of one's own ethnic group.

2. Overriding concern with race.



eth
 bias in the treatment of other societies. In recent years, however, textbooks and curricula have gone overboard in correcting for these deficits. Nevertheless, many educators still insist that a pro-western bias infects the teaching of world history and cultures.

* Cultural relativism Cultural relativism is the principle that ones beliefs and activities should be interpreted in terms of ones own culture. This principle was established as axiomatic in anthropological research by Franz Boas in the first few decades of the 20th century and later popularized by : Global education's advocates seek to promote respect and understanding across cultures. This is all to the good. However, true respect and sympathy cannot be based on a completely relativistic rel·a·tiv·is·tic  
adj.
1. Of or relating to relativism.

2. Physics
a. Of, relating to, or resulting from speeds approaching the speed of light: relativistic increase in mass.
 approach to culture. By discouraging students who might wish to criticize negative aspects of other cultures, teachers seek to suppress an irrepressible human tendency to make moral judgments. Such pressure only generates cynicism and indifference in students, not a true spirit of tolerance.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

* Transnational progressivism Transnational progressivism is a term coined by Hudson Institute Fellow John Fonte in 2001 to describe a movement and political view that endorses a concept of postnational global citizenship and promotes the authority of international institutions over the sovereignty of : Hudson Institute The Hudson Institute is a corporatist-leaning U.S. think tank, founded in 1961 in Croton-on-Hudson, New York, by the futurist Herman Kahn and other colleagues from the RAND Corporation.  scholar John Fonte coined this term to refer to a hostility toward the liberal democratic nation-state and its claims to sovereignty. As Fonte puts it, the aim of transnational progressives is to redefine "democracy from a system of majority rule among equal citizens to power sharing among ethnic groups composed of both citizens and non-citizens." Now, a devotee of the American political system can hardly object to institutional arrangements that call for the sharing of power among multiple interests and groups. But transnational progressives go well beyond traditional commitments to federalism federalism.

1 In political science, see federal government.

2 In U.S. history, see states' rights.
federalism

Political system that binds a group of states into a larger, noncentralized, superior state while allowing them
 and the separation of powers separation of powers: see Constitution of the United States.
separation of powers

Division of the legislative, executive, and judicial functions of government among separate and independent bodies.
 within a nation. Instead, they endorse a concept of postnational (global) citizenship and seek to shift authority to an institutional network of international organizations and subnational political actors not bound by any clear democratic, constitutional framework. This view is not dominant among classroom teachers or even in the way textbooks are written. However, it is a dynamic theme pushing the social studies field forward. Those who embrace it are not content with a mere celebration of diverse societies and cultures. They see this "essentialist" view of distinct cultures as insufficiently global, and they focus instead on global trends, transnational cultural interchanges, and worldwide problems, especially those that can be depicted as rendering the nation-state obsolete. Clearly many global education advocates want Americans to doubt the ability of their national civic society to deal with global challenges.

AP Global Education

Perhaps the most dramatic evidence of the growing influence of global education is the new Advanced Placement (AP) "World History" course, which in 2001 took its place alongside AP courses in U.S. and European history. The world history course emphasizes nonwestern societies, with no more than 30 percent of the course focusing on the West. Just as important in this regard is the program's stress on broad social, cultural, and economic trends and cross-cultural comparisons at the expense of a continuous narrative of world-shaping personalities and key historical moments. Consequently, the AP world history course, an otherwise reasonable idea, could well accelerate harmful trends in social studies by promoting the questionable global education ideology.

Like any world history course, the AP course must combine breadth with depth. Clear unifying principles must guide the selection of the facts, nations, and trends to be emphasized. The AP course attempts to avoid overwhelming the student with details by focusing on a few key themes, such as global interaction, change and continuity, technology, social structure, and gender. Yet the multicultural drive to cover all cultures equally makes it difficult to sustain the focus on themes and imposes on the course an impossibly broad reach. Moreover, by limiting coverage of the West, the course rejects what could provide a unifying principle for at least the past 500 years of world history--the central role of the West.

The thematic approach of AP world history also results in a downplaying of politics. As the course description puts it, "Knowledge of year-to-year political events is not required. The traditional political narrative is an inappropriate model for this course." The reduced attention to politics mutes the most important way in which individual human agency drives human experience.

The new AP course also deemphasizes the role of nation-states in human affairs, another characteristic of the global education ideology. The organizers of the AP world history course tell us that the past 1,000 years of history consist, essentially, of "processes that, over time, have resulted in the knitting of the world into a tightly integrated whole." In a sense, this is a truism. However, recent events should warn us about taking it too far. Our "tightly integrated" world system has not yet found a way to overcome deep religious, political, and cultural divisions. Nor does it appear to have found a way to dispense with To permit the neglect or omission of, as a form, a ceremony, an oath; to suspend the operation of, as a law; to give up, release, or do without, as services, attention, etc.; to forego; to part with
To allow by dispensation; to excuse; to exempt; to grant dispensation to or for.
 nation-states as the preeminent players on the world stage. Downplaying the nation-state's role in history is not, or at least not yet, justified by evidence. It is an expression of ideology, not historical scholarship.

To be sure, the focus in U.S. high schools is still on U.S. history: 241,000 students took the AP exam in U.S. history in the spring of 2003, compared with 72,500 in European history and 34,000 in world history. This reflects, mostly, the fact that only 1,474 schools offered AP world history. By comparison, 3,643 and 9,202 schools offered the AP European history
    Advanced Placement European History (commonly known as AP European History, AP Modern European History, Euro AP, AP Euro, APE, APEH, EHAP, or simply Euro
     and U.S. history courses, respectively. However, the number of students taking AP world history increased by 64 percent from 2002 to 2003, while the increases in European history and U.S. history were just 7 percent. In any case, the story here is the creation and rising influence of a world history course that is clearly a product of the global education ideology.

    Neither "Multi" nor "Cultural"

    World history textbooks in Wisconsin devote substantial space to describing the internment internment, in international law, detention of the nationals or property of an enemy or a belligerent. A belligerent will intern enemy merchant ships or take them as prize, and a neutral should intern both belligerent ships that fail to leave its ports within a  of Japanese-Americans in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  during World War II, according to according to
    prep.
    1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

    2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

    3.
     a recent review by Paul Kengor Paul Kengor is an American conservative author and academic. A professor at Grove City College and the executive director of the College's The Center for Vision & Values, Kengor is widely popular with students and conservative readers.  of the Wisconsin Policy Research Institute. Meanwhile, Kengor found little mention of Japan's treatment of POWs and other Japanese atrocities in the war, in particular the rape and murder of hundreds of thousands of civilians in Nanking in 1937.

    This is characteristic of the global education ideology, which seems to hold America to far higher standards for human rights than it does other nations. Why? To put it simply, multiculturalism has less to do with any rigorous study of other cultures than it does with ethnic, gender, racial, or other subgroup tension within the nations of the West, the United States in particular. Lacking a clear, consistent, and nonideological definition of culture, global education advocates and other advocates of multiculturalism exhibit a strong tendency to identify such subgroups as "cultures," especially when they can be depicted as victims of a "dominant culture." The result is that students are taught to view the world not as multicultural but as bicultural--as a world of oppressed op·press  
    tr.v. op·pressed, op·press·ing, op·press·es
    1. To keep down by severe and unjust use of force or authority: a people who were oppressed by tyranny.

    2.
     vs. oppressor OPPRESSOR. One who having public authority uses it unlawfully to tyrannize over another; as, if he keep him in prison until he shall do something which he is not lawfully bound to do.
         2. To charge a magistrate with being an oppressor, is therefore actionable.
    . A key corollary is the view of the West as the one region where such subgroup "cultures" have been most grievously griev·ous  
    adj.
    1. Causing grief, pain, or anguish: a grievous loss.

    2. Serious or dire; grave: a grievous crime.
     oppressed.

    The cultural relativist rel·a·tiv·ist  
    n.
    1. Philosophy A proponent of relativism.

    2. A physicist who specializes in the theories of relativity.
     stance so common in the global education field today represents a refusal to apply any universal ethical standards in judging another culture. Yet this denial of universal standards is itself a universal standard, usually called "tolerance." Tolerance is an admirable quality, within limits. But if tolerance is our sole universal value, are we not then called on to tolerate the intolerable? And if so called on, are we even capable of performing such an act of mental jujitsu jujitsu or jujutsu: see judo; martial arts.
    jujitsu

    Martial art that employs holds, throws, and paralyzing blows to subdue or disable an opponent. It evolved among the samurai warrior class in Japan from about the 17th century.
    ? In fact, the pressure not to apply moral standards is more likely to produce an ethic of indifference, not one of true tolerance--as young people learn not to pass judgment on all kinds of horrendous practices, especially when they are nonwestern.

    Another way to handle the challenge of tolerating the intolerable is denial. This has certainly characterized the response of many educators to the threat of Islamic radicalism. In countless ways, such educators have insisted on misinforming students about this threat by denying its links to any aspect of Islam as a religion or to the broader Muslim societies of the Middle East and Asia. And when such links cannot be ignored (as, for example, in the cases of the horrendous treatment of women by the Taliban or the rulers of Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia (sä`dē ərā`bēə, sou`–, sô–), officially Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, kingdom (2005 est. pop. , the clear calls for holy war against the infidel INFIDEL, persons, evidence. One who does not believe in the existence of a God, who will reward or punish in this world or that which is to come. Willes' R. 550. This term has been very indefinitely applied.  by many Muslim clerics, or the widespread dissemination of Nazi-level anti-Semitic propaganda throughout the Arab world “Arab States” redirects here. For the political alliance, see Arab League.
    The Arab World (Arabic: العالم العربي; Transliteration: al-`alam al-`arabi) stretches from the Atlantic Ocean in the
    ), students are still exhorted to tolerate the intolerable by "understanding" its cultural or historical context to the point of excusing it all away.

    Take the Islamic concept of jihad jihad: see Islam.
    jihad

    In Islam, the central doctrine that calls on believers to combat the enemies of their religion. According to the Qur'an and the Hadith, jihad is a duty that may be fulfilled in four ways: by the heart, the tongue, the hand,
    . Here is the definition provided in a lesson on Afghanistan in a recent issue of Social Education:
        Jihad: Arabic term meaning striving or effort in the service of God.
        It refers to an individual's struggle to overcome personal traits
        that are in conflict with the Koran. It is often used [italics
        added] to describe a war undertaken by Muslims as a sacred duty-a
        political or military struggle on behalf of Islam.
    


    For most of Islam's history, the vast majority of Muslims, including Muslim scholars and religious leaders, have clearly understood jihad to mean primarily a holy war to expand and defend the realm of Islam. Students, however, would never know this from the passive construction of that last sentence. They might even conclude that only Eurocentric westerners see it that way. The redefinition of jihad as peaceful self-struggle is part of a more general tendency to soften Islam's harsher edges in dealing with it in the classroom.

    This will appear cynical to students, who need only to read the daily news to learn that these are euphemisms. As Middle East scholar Daniel Pipes writes, the notion of jihad as mere peaceful self-struggle contradicts the headlines students see each day:
       It suggests that Osama bin Laden had no idea what he was saying when
       he declared jihad on the United States several years ago and then
       repeatedly murdered Americans in Somalia, at the U.S. embassies in
       East Africa, in the port of Aden, and then on September 11, 2001. It
       implies that organizations with the word "jihad" in their titles,
       including Palestinian Islamic Jihad and bin Laden's own
       "International Islamic Front for the Jihad Against Jews and
       Crusade[rs]," are grossly misnamed.
    


    What accounts for this unwillingness to deal honestly with unpleasant truths about Islam? After all, educators who deny any link between Islam and violence are often perfectly happy to take note of similar facts about Christianity's past. Few textbooks today slight the Crusades, the Inquisition Inquisition (ĭn'kwĭzĭsh`ən), tribunal of the Roman Catholic Church established for the investigation of heresy. The Medieval Inquisition


    In the early Middle Ages investigation of heresy was a duty of the bishops.
    , the wars of religion, the persecution of witches, or the arrogance of missionaries. In fact, dwelling on such defects is seen as a necessary corrective to Eurocentric bias in world history materials and courses. This glaring double standard causes many global education and world history programs to regularly overlook or whitewash whitewash, white fluid commonly used as an inexpensive, impermanent coating for walls, fences, stables, and other exterior structures. It varies in composition, being generally a mixture of lime (quicklime), water, flour, salt, glue, and whiting, with other  forms of injustice and brutality in other cultures that they roundly round·ly  
    adv.
    1. In the form of a circle or sphere.

    2. With full force or vigor; thoroughly: applauded roundly; was roundly criticized.
     denounce de·nounce  
    tr.v. de·nounced, de·nounc·ing, de·nounc·es
    1. To condemn openly as being evil or reprehensible. See Synonyms at criticize.

    2. To accuse formally.

    3.
     in western societies.

    The Unbearable Blandness of Diversity

    Any worthwhile world cultures course needs a systematic concept of culture taught and then used consistently to compare societies. Such a concept would define and explain linkages between family structure, kinship grouping, language, technology, religion, art, and ethical norms and laws. Far more common instead is a seemingly random selection of disparate elements, often superficial or exotic: clothing styles, food, holidays, religious observances, leisure activities, rituals, and other customs. More often than not such features are stressed mainly to provide a sense of difference and to "celebrate diversity"; they do not have much context to give them real meaning. Rarely is anything included that might strike a typical western student as objectionable, such as female circumcision female circumcision
    n.
    Partial or complete removal of the clitoris, prepuce, or labia of a girl or young woman, as practiced among certain cultures, especially in parts of Africa and western Asia. Also called clitoridectomy.
    , slavery in the Sudan, China's one-child policies The Planned Birth policy (Simplified Chinese: 计划生育; Pinyin: jìhuà shēngyù) is the birth control policy of the government of the People's Republic of China (PRC). , or religious discrimination.

    Consider a popular world history textbook intended for use in grades 9-12, Modern World History: Patterns of Interaction, published by McDougal Littell, a Houghton Mifflin Houghton Mifflin Company is a leading educational publisher in the United States. The company's headquarters is located in Boston's Back Bay. It publishes textbooks, instructional technology materials, assessments, reference works, and fiction and non-fiction for both young readers  imprint. The book devotes a page to African textiles African textiles are a part of African cultural heritage that came to America along with the slave trade. As many slaves were skilled in the weaving, this skill was used as another form of income for the slave owner.  under the heading "History Through Art." Brief paragraphs describe the various kinds of cloth and the "cultures" that produce them. The text claims that historians can learn much about each group's myths, celebrations, and social roles from these fabrics. What students learn from this page, however, is a good deal less than that. Take a representative paragraph on Kuba cloth:
       Made by Kuba people of the Congo, this cloth was made of raffia, a
       palm-leaf fiber. The cloth design was based on traditional geometric
       styles. The cloth was worn at ceremonial events, was used as
       currency, and may have been offered for part of a dowry.
    


    This is all very interesting. However, since the Kuba people are never again mentioned in the textbook, students never learn why geometric styles were used or what their symbolic meaning to the Kuba might be. No description of Kuba "ceremonial events" is offered. Nor is the Kuba economy described or Kuba family structure analyzed, hence the significance of Kuba cloth as currency or as part of a dowry dowry (dou`rē), the property that a woman brings to her husband at the time of the marriage. The dowry apparently originated in the giving of a marriage gift by the family of the bridegroom to the bride and the bestowal of money upon the bride by  goes unexamined. The page is located in the middle of a chapter entitled "The Age of Imperialism, 1850-1914." However, no connection is made between the information on the page and the chapter's historical theme, and there is no overall concept of culture that might explain the cultural artifacts depicted.

    This is multiculturalism as a kind of exotic and colorful ethnic travelogue. It exemplifies an incredibly superficial treatment of stylistic cultural differences around the world. To avoid giving offense, only uplifting aspects of any culture are normally stressed in this approach. Even when something unpleasant is dealt with, it is done so indirectly, vaguely, and only if it can be presented within an acceptable multiculturalist framework.

    An especially odd example of this appears in McDougal Littell's World Cultures and Geography. A paragraph headed "Government in Rwanda" describes the events of the 1990s. One would naturally expect the passage to deal with the tensions between the Hutu and Tutsi ethnic groups and the tragic way in which they led to one of the worst slaughters in history. In its defense, the book does very briefly mention these events on an earlier page. However, in this particular passage, it gives them a very peculiar spin:
       In 1991, a new constitution was passed. It gave women the right to
       own property and hold jobs. But the new laws were not enforced. Then,
       in 1994, a civil war began in Rwanda. So many men were killed that
       women began taking over as heads of households. Finally, as a result
       of the deadly wars, women were able to claim their constitutional
       rights.
    


    Amazingly, the passage manages to turn one of the century's worst acts of genocide into a "civil war" that inadvertently advanced the rights of women! Even the issue of women's rights The effort to secure equal rights for women and to remove gender discrimination from laws, institutions, and behavioral patterns.

    The women's rights movement began in the nineteenth century with the demand by some women reformers for the right to vote, known as suffrage, and
     in Rwanda is itself unlikely to be understood outside a modern western framework. This is the key point about the blandness of diversity. Without solid historical context and a strong grounding in their own western cultural heritage, students will not be able to grasp fully how other cultures differ from that heritage. To understand the role of women in Rwanda, for instance, one needs to know what ideas prevail there about the relationships among individuals and family, community, and state. Moreover, to fully appreciate these relationships as "different" from their own, students also need some awareness of western ideas about the individual's relationship to authority as these have evolved from feudalism feudalism (fy`dəlĭzəm), form of political and social organization typical of Western Europe from the dissolution of Charlemagne's empire to the rise of the absolute monarchies.  and the Magna Carta Magna Carta or Magna Charta [Lat., = great charter], the most famous document of British constitutional history, issued by King John at Runnymede under compulsion from the barons and the church in June, 1215. , to Locke and Jefferson, to the "Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen

    Manifesto adopted by France's National Assembly in 1789, which contained the principles that inspired the French Revolution.
    ," and on to Seneca Falls Seneca Falls

    A village of west-central New York on the Seneca River east-southeast of Rochester. The first women's rights convention was held here in 1848. Population: 6,870.
     and the modern women's rights movement. An uncritical celebration of multiculturalism cannot provide this context, and it cannot lead to a true appreciation of cultural difference.

    The global education ideology detailed here results in excessive breadth of coverage as well as a lack of rigor rigor /rig·or/ (rig´er) [L.] chill; rigidity.

    rigor mor´tis  the stiffening of a dead body accompanying depletion of adenosine triphosphate in the muscle fibers.
     in the study of world history and the evaluation of other cultures. In its most concentrated form, it instills a deep skepticism about the political worth of the nation-state and support for a divisive, anti-western form of multiculturalism. It claims to offer a broader, more tolerant approach to world culture and history. And it claims to offer students a more active learning experience, one that will move them to participate as global citizens in building a better world. But in fact, by suppressing the student's natural tendency to make--and to want to make--moral judgments; by relentlessly denigrating den·i·grate  
    tr.v. den·i·grat·ed, den·i·grat·ing, den·i·grates
    1. To attack the character or reputation of; speak ill of; defame.

    2.
     the student's core western cultural heritage; and by pandering to the supposed victim status of some cultures in relation to others, this ideology is a recipe for further alienating al·ien·ate  
    tr.v. al·ien·at·ed, al·ien·at·ing, al·ien·ates
    1. To cause to become unfriendly or hostile; estrange: alienate a friend; alienate potential supporters by taking extreme positions.
     a generation already too comfortable with a fashionable distrust of authority.

    --Jonathan Burack, a former secondary-school history and social studies teacher, has produced curriculum materials in history for the past 20 years. This essay is excerpted from his chapter in Where Did Social Studies Go Wrong? (Thomas B. Fordham Foundation The Thomas B. Fordham Foundation is a nonprofit education policy organization based in Washington, D.C., and Dayton, Ohio. Its stated mission is "to close America's vexing achievement gaps by raising standards, strengthening accountability, and expanding education options for , 2003).
    COPYRIGHT 2004 Hoover Institution Press
    No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
    Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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    Title Annotation:Feature
    Author:Burack, Jonathan
    Publication:Education Next
    Date:Mar 22, 2004
    Words:3263
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