Now MATH is racist: Educators condemn $1M 'Dismantling Racism in Mathematics' program funded by Bill Gates which tells teachers NOT to push students to find the correct answer because it promotes white supremacy
- Educators around the US have come out to condemn the 'Dismantling Racism in Mathematics' program
- It centers around a workbook which asserts that asking students to find the correct answer for math problems is inherently harmful for minorities
- So far, the workbook is being used by school districts in Georgia, Ohio, California and Oregon
- Critics say to it actually reinforces negative stereotypes and drives wedges between students according to their race
- 'The workbook's ultimate message is clear: Black kids are bad at math, so why don't we just excuse them from really learning it,' one critic said
- The program was funded through a $1million grant from The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
-
It's part of a larger push nationwide to teach students about critical race theory
Educators around the country have come out to condemn a 'Dismantling Racism in Mathematics' program which tells teachers not to push students to find the correct answers to math problems because doing so promotes white supremacy by Brian Stieglitz For Dailymail.Com.
The pictured workbook has drawn criticism from educators for claiming that it's racist to expect students to get the right answer to a math problem |
The program is centered around a workbook for teachers entitled 'A Pathway to Equitable Math Instruction' which asserts that America's education system – even mathematics instruction – reinforces the dominant power structures of white colonizers.
Grading students, asking them to show their work, requiring participation and even pushing them to get the right answer are depicted in the workbook as harmful to minorities.
The workbook was created by Oakland, California-based advocacy group The Education Trust-West under its 'Dismantling Racism in Mathematics Instruction' initiative, which is funded through a $1million grant from The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation...
'The concept of mathematics being purely objective is unequivocally false,' reads the manual. 'Upholding the idea that there are always right and wrong answers perpetuates "objectivity." '
Instead, it encourages teachers to have more than one answer for math problems, refrain from calling on students to answer problems for the class, relate math to minority students' experiences and provide examples of how math is used by political revolutionaries.
Source: Daily Mail