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EdAction
Maple River Education Coalition PAC
105 Peavey Rd, St 116
Chaska, MN
55318
952-361-4931
http://www.EdAction.org
E-mail
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Version
November 29, 2003
The following article relates to the current debate
over K-12 academic standards, as well as higher education curriculum:
Is The Curriculum
Biased?
A Statement of the National Association of Scholars
http://www.nas.org/statements.html
American higher education is facing widespread demands to eliminate the
allegedly "Eurocentric" and "patriarchal" bias of the
curriculum. While the details vary from campus to campus, these demands
tend to focus on four objectives:
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that the "canon" be
revised to include more works by blacks, other ethnic minorities, and
women
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that the "issues of race,
gender, and class" be introduced into a greater variety of
courses
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that more courses in women's
studies and minority studies be developed that courses in women's
studies and/or minority studies be required of all undergraduates.
Various justifications are commonly
proffered for making these changes. It is alleged that:
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works by minorities, women, and
Third World authors have been excluded from the curriculum
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minority and female students feel
alienated and their educational progress is retarded by being asked to
study works primarily by white males
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in order to overcome their own
prejudices, white males must become acquainted with the cultures and
problems of minorities and with the perspectives and problems of women
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the traditional curriculum
represents the hegemony of Western culture, covertly supports a status
quo inherently oppressive of women and minorities, and is unfairly
imposed on students from different cultures
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the traditional desiderata of
truth, objectivity, and critical intelligence can be met only by
adding the perspectives of women and minorities and by facing up to
the new questions they raise
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an increasingly diverse society and
interdependent world require that our citizens gain greater
understanding of different cultures.
The National Association of Scholars
disputes the first five of these arguments and believes that the last
entails something other than the changes being proposed.
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First, any work, whether formerly
neglected or widely known, should be added, retained, or removed from
the curriculum on the basis of its conformance to generally applicable
intellectual and aesthetic standards. A sound curriculum cannot be
built by replacing those standards with the principle of proportional
representation of authors, classified ethnically, biologically, or
geographically.
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Second, the idea that students will
be discouraged by not encountering more works by members of their own
race, sex, or ethnic group, even were it substantiated, would not
justify adding inferior works. Such paternalism conveys a message
opposite to the one desired.
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Third, other cultures, minority
subcultures, and social problems have long been studied in the liberal
arts curriculum in such established disciplines as history,
literature, comparative religion, economics, political science,
anthropology, and sociology. But more important, mere acquaintance
with differences does not guarantee tolerance, an ideal Western in
origin and fostered by knowledge of what is common to us all.
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Fourth, the idea that the
traditional curriculum "excludes" the contributions of all
but males of European descent is patently false. From their
beginnings, Western art and science have drawn upon the achievements
of non-Western societies and since have been absorbed and further
enriched by peoples around the globe. That the liberal arts oppress
minorities and women is yet more ludicrous. Even if the curriculum
were confined to thought strictly European in origin, it would still
present a rich variety of conflicting ideas, including the very
concepts of equality and freedom from oppression invoked by those who
would reorient the curriculum.
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Fifth, while diversity of
background is valuable to the discussion of issues to which those
differences are germane, objectivity is in general not enhanced but
subverted by the idea that people of different sexes, races, or ethnic
backgrounds necessarily see things differently. The assertion that
cognition is determined by membership is itself an example of
stereotypic thinking which undermines the possibility of a true
community of discourse.
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Sixth, the study of the traditions
and achievements of other nations and of ethnic subcultures is
important and should be encouraged. But this must proceed in a manner
that is intellectually honest and does not serve as a pretext for
inserting polemics into the curriculum.
Furthermore, "multicultural
education" should not take place at the expense of studies that
transcend cultural differences: the truths of mathematics, the sciences,
history, and so on, are not different for people of different races,
sexes, or cultures, and for that reason alone their study is liberating.
Nor should we further attenuate the study of the traditions of the West.
Not only is knowledge of those traditions essential for any evaluation of
our own institutions, it is increasingly relevant to our understanding of
other nations, which, in striking testament to the universality of the
values they embody, are rapidly adapting Western practices to their own
situations.
The National Association of Scholars is in favor of ethnic studies, the
study of non-Western cultures, and the study of the special problems of
women and minorities in our society, but it opposes subordinating entire
humanities and social science curricula to such studies and it views with
alarm their growing politicization. Efforts purportedly made to introduce
"other points of view" and "pluralism" often seem in
fact designed to restrict attention to a narrow set of issues,
tendentiously defined.
An examination of many women's studies and minority studies courses and
programs discloses little study of other cultures and much excoriation of
our society for its alleged oppression of women, blacks, and others. The
banner of "cultural diversity" is apparently being raised by
some whose paramount interest actually lies in attacking the West and its
institutions.
We urge our colleagues to demand clear explanations and cogent arguments
in support of the proposals being so rapidly brought before them, and to
reject any that cannot be justified. The curriculum is and should be open
to change, but we must rebut the false charges being made against existing
disciplines. We must also reject the allegations of "racism" and
"sexism" that are frequently leveled against honest critics of
the new proposals, and which only have the effect of stifling much-needed
debate.
"For Reasoned Scholarship in a Free Society"
Copyright National Association of Scholars
221 Witherspoon Street, Second Floor
Princeton, New Jersey 08542-3215
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