Walter
Williams
http://www.NewsAndOpinion.com | Several
weeks ago, I wrote about
After that tirade, which included
many other anti-American remarks, he gave the students the
"definition" of capitalism — telling them that "capitalism is at
odds with humanity, at odds with caring and compassion and at odds with human
rights."
After public exposure by my column
and
Last Friday, Dr. Monte Moses,
Like a few others who have
defended Jay Bennish, Dr. Moses talked about academic
freedom and First Amendment guarantees. Others have criticized and even
threatened Sean Allen for recording and making the teacher's comments public.
The issue is neither academic freedom and free speech nor public exposure of
the teacher's comments.
It's academic and intellectual
dishonesty when a teacher, who is supposed to be teaching geography, uses his
classroom to indoctrinate relatively uninformed teenagers. Recording the
teacher's comments broke neither school policy nor
I've taught economics for 37
years. I encourage students to record my lectures. Moreover, I tell them that
the class deals with positive economics and if they hear me make a statement
appearing to be an opinion, without saying so, they are to raise their hands
and say, "Professor Williams, we didn't take this class to be
indoctrinated with your personal opinions passed off as economic theory; that's
academic dishonesty." I also tell them that if I ever preface a comment
with, "In my opinion," they can stop taking notes because my opinion
is irrelevant to economic theory.
I've received numerous letters
from all over our country saying that indoctrination at
Preaching instead of teaching
might go a long way toward explaining why in civics, math, reading, writing and
geography, nearly a quarter of all students leave high school with academic
skills that are "Below Basic," the category the National Assessment
of Educational Progress (NAEP) uses for students unable to display even partial
mastery of knowledge and skills fundamental for proficient work at their grade
level. In science, 47 percent leave high school with skills Below Basic, and in
American history, it's 57 percent. I'd like for Jay Bennish's
supporters to explain how his indoctrination will help that.