CounterCurrent: Week of 12/8
NAS releases new report: Social Justice Education in America
CounterCurrent is the National Association of Scholars’ new weekly newsletter, bringing you the biggest issues in academia and our responses to them.
Category: Social JusticeReading Time: ~2 minutes

Featured Report - Social Justice Education in America by David Randall

 

According to Minding the Campus, Penn State University’s Office of Vice Provost for Educational Equity employs a whopping 66 staff members. Amherst College’s equivalent clocks in at 19, even though the school barely matriculates 1,800 students. Top diversity bureaucrats in higher education earn salaries well into six figures, in some cases approaching $500,000 per year. If we adhere to the age-old proverb and “follow the money,” college administrations’ top priorities are revealed: diversity, equality, and ultimately, social justice.
 

The term “social justice,” as defined by Oxford Reference, means “the objective of creating a fair and equal society in which each individual matters, their rights are recognized and protected, and decisions are made in ways that are fair and honest.” However, when used by left-leaning professors and university bureaucrats, the sensibility usually goes something like this: “American society treats people unfairly. American culture elevates the wealthy and the privileged over everybody else. It is oppressive. I’m oppressed. I want to redistribute wealth and privilege. Those things should be taken away from the people I don’t like and given to me and those people I do like.”
 

Unfortunately, because social justice theory is viewed as an objective moral imperative rather than what it is, namely a theory, administrators have spent countless millions of dollars to ensure that it permeates every square inch of campus. For students in the vast majority of colleges and universities, there is no escape. Social justice theory has infected virtually every academic department, even those that might be considered “safe,” such as mathematics and the hard sciences. It can also be found in core curricula, admissions requirements, student events, residence halls, study abroad programs, and accreditation policies, to name a few. In short, nearly every student will be forced to accept or reject social justice theory, with very little room for indifference.
 

In response to this rapidly-growing trend, the NAS is proud to announce a new research report titled Social Justice Education in America. In it, Research Director David Randall expounds the core tenets of social justice theory, the ways in which they are made manifest within higher education, their specific dangers, and our recommendations for reform. In order to effectively challenge this ideology, it is vital to understand how it infected college campuses, making this report an essential read for all who promote intellectual freedom and academic freedom and value viewpoint diversity.
 

Until next week.
 

John David
Communications Associate
National Association of Scholars
Read the Full Report
For more on social justice in American education:
November 14, 2019

Social Justice Comes to Harvard

George Seaver

In this long-form essay, independent researcher George Seaver expounds the many reasons for academic decline within Harvard University since the 1960s.

October 23, 2019

College Summer Reading: A Mandated Dive Into ‘Oppressed Minorities’

Rachelle Peterson

NAS Policy Director Rachelle Peterson evaluates the current state of common reading programs, beginning with a bizarre choice by Lackawanna College in Scranton, Pennsylvania.

August 15, 2019

California Says Goodbye to "Hxrstory," For Now

NAS

The California State Board of Education orders the state's proposed "Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum" be redesigned. The news is a small victory for sanity. 

November 01, 2019

The End of Meritocracy

NAS

In an excerpt from The Diversity Delusion, Heather Mac Donald describes the "diversity mania" taking over the academy.

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