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Educators Seek
Shift in U.S. Schooling to Stress "Global" Values, See Nationalism as
"Obsolete"
Objectives
are at the heart of an agenda that has been pursued at the highest
levels of the U.S. educational system for decades
Old-Thinker News | Dec. 15, 2008
By Daniel Taylor
In October of 2007, the annual
Frontiers in Education Conference met in Milwaukee Wisconsin. Among
the several papers presented at the conference was,
Critical
Theory, Globalization and Teacher Education In A Technocratic Era.
The paper was written by three professors, Mark Malisa, Randall
Koetting, and Kristin Radermacher. The authors opening statements read,
"Our perspective is that of
educators who view the current world as one that is highly
internationalized and intensely global, rendering nationalistic
orientations obsolete. We also view education and educators as
involved agents in the construction of a just social world, and
contend that this implies infusing the curriculum and teacher
education with cosmopolitan sensibilities, frequently, through
critical theory and critical pedagogy."
The authors propose that because of
globalization, education programs must be reordered. The report states
that teacher education programs in the U.S. must adopt a "global
perspective" and that "...the time of splendid isolation is over...
purposes of education have changed."
"As globalization becomes the dominant
term for describing and conceptualizing teacher education, colleges and
schools of education will need to revisit their mission statements and
rethink what it means to be part of the global community," the report
states.
"As such, educators will have to
evaluate the extent to which they function as part of a new system
that creates and sustains a new dominant global culture..."
Educators in the "global world" will,
"...need an unprecedented willingness to teach and be taught by the rest
of the world. Part of this will involve rethinking the language and
practice of nationalism... even in the classroom."
The report concludes that there will
be resistance to these measures, but offers a solution,
"...a lot of work remains to be
done in creating a critical consciousness that makes it possible to
realize that global solidarity does not threaten nationalism."
Whether or not these professors
realize it, their objectives are at the heart of an agenda that
has been pursued at the highest levels of the U.S. educational system
for decades. As
the 1954 Reece Committee discovered, tax-exempt
foundations, particularly the Rockefeller Foundations, Ford Foundation,
Carnegie Foundation and others were instrumental in influencing U.S.
education. Their goals, as the committee found, were international in
scope.
The Committee cited
a report from the President's Commission on Higher Education,
published in 1947, which outlines the goals of educational programs:
The realization on part of the people of the necessity of world government
"...psychologically, socially and... politically". The
cited report states,
"In speed of
transportation and communication and in economic
interdependence, the nations of the globe are already one world;
the task is to secure recognition and acceptance of this
oneness in the thinking of the people, as that the concept of
one world may be realized psychologically, socially and in good
time politically.
It is this task
in particular that challenges our scholars and teachers to lead
the way toward a new way of thinking. There is an urgent need
for a program for world citizenship that can be made a part of
every person's general education.
As the United States enters into
uncharted economic waters, and possibly a new depression, globalist
ideology is losing its flavor to many intelligent young people. However,
the agenda will continue in an attempt to raise a generation to man the
controls of a world-wide system of governance.
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