Mon. May 13th, 2024

U.S. troops serving overseas may find that government schools are indoctrinating their children and teaching them to keep secrets from their parents.

According to a report from the Claremont Institute, classes from the Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA) teach children radical activism, gender ideology, and hiding gender questions from families.

The lesson plans aren’t about teachers helping children learn the basics; instead, they’re about teachers helping children hide facts from their parents.

“Maybe that student is not ‘out’ to other students in their gender identity,” said seventh-grade humanities teacher Genevieve Chavez in a video provided to Claremont by a whistleblower. “They may be out at school; but they may not be out at home.”

Chavez was teaching at David Glasgow Farragut Middle/High School in Rota Spain, which serves the nearby American naval base.

Secret School Sexualities

The video was part of a 2021 summit talk titled “Ally 101—Creating an Inclusive Classroom for LGBTQ+ Students.”

In the same talk, Chavez urged teachers to speak about new gender identities with young children.

Epoch Times Photo
The cover of the Claremont Institute’s new report, “Grooming Future Revolutionaries.” Screenshot taken on Sept. 27, 2022. (Jackson Elliott/ The Epoch Times)

“You can talk about LGBTQ+ things in elementary school,” she said. “It’s actually the ideal time. Kids as young as 4 years old are already starting to develop a stable understanding of their gender identity. So elementary school is the perfect time because you can really show students the diversity of gender expression and gender activity.”

Claremont notes in its report that many parents disagree with exposing children to gender confusion at an early age.

“Parents have long taken for granted that cultivating a stable sexual identity is a key to individual development. Our military schools think upsetting a stable identity is the key to education,” the report states.

The 2021 summit urged teachers to filter every aspect of school life through radical gender ideology, the report states.

Prom kings and prom queens should be “homecoming court or royalty” or “partners of distinction,” teachers should say their own pronouns to “normalize” it, and teachers can keep the preferred pronouns of students secret from parents, according to Lindsey Bagnaschi, who was teaching high school drama at Stuttgart High School in Germany, which serves local army bases.

It’s also a mistake to call a roomful of students “guys” instead of “seventh-graders,” Chavez said.

This year, students rejected the idea of scrapping the old titles, the Claremont report said. But there’s always next year.

Instructed in Activism

The DoDEA’s program also encourages students to activism, according to the Claremont report. The DoDEA’s “Strategic Initiatives” seek to provide “equitable learning experiences for all students.”

To do so, the government suggests implementing “programs and supports to address achievement gaps between racial, ethnic, ability, and other identified groups” and provide “learning environments where students feel safe, secure, and supported by the entire learning community.”

The DoDEA also promises to “stand up and grow Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) structures to lead and implement DEI across the organization so that all students, employees, and families feel welcomed, respected, engaged, and empowered.”

The Claremont Institute notes that none of the DoDEA’s focus areas emphasize math, engineering, or any other form of academic excellence, and never define terms like “Key Performance Indicators.”

According to the report, encouraging students to restructure schools to hide the gender binary will teach them to restructure society as adults.

Epoch Times Photo
Newly donated LGBT books are displayed in the library at Nystrom Elementary School in Richmond, Calif., on May 17, 2022. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

“If students are used to restructuring their school environment, they will become activists for restructuring the general culture once they leave school,” the report reads. “Future citizens, sons and daughters of military personnel, will become much more like their teachers than like their parents.”

A DoDEA presentation on equity and access tells teachers to instruct students in having conversations about critical race theory, the Claremont report states.

Such a conversation is one that “explores the relationship between identity and power, that traces the structures that privilege some at the expense of others, that helps students think through the actions they can take to create a more just, more equitable, world,” according to the presentation.

Tracy Shelton, a literacy coach at Feltwell Elementary, which teaches the children of Americans serving at Air Force bases in Great Britain, recommended that children study books to learn how to be antiracist, the report said.

Racism and antiracism allow no neutral party, Shelton says.

“Racists, Shelton said, following the work of Ibram Kendi, are those who do not fight for racial equity, while antiracists put the fight for racial justice at the center of their lives,” the report reads.

ibram kendi
Ibram X. Kendi, the author of “How To Be An Antiracist,” is seen in a New York City studio on March 10, 2020. (Michael Loccisano/Getty Images)

Even white people being silent is damaging, according to presentations quoted by the report.

“I was reading ‘Me and White Supremacy’,” said one teacher, and what it teaches “about white silence, and I realized the damage I was doing by my white silence,” the report said.

Instructor Insurrection

If teachers can’t get radical books onto reading lists, they can get them to children through independent reading time, book clubs, and literature circles, says Merilee Debus.

Debus is a professional practice improvement specialist at the (DoDEA), according to her LinkedIn page.

“We still have a lot of room for getting the right book in their hands when they need it.”

Another teacher, Betty Roberts of Robinson Barracks Elementary School, which serves five military bases in Germany, recommends reading books without critical race theory using critical race theory interpretations, the report said.

She urged students to “Take a look at their textbooks and [to] identify . . . the biases and how underrepresented groups are represented in these textbooks.”

The Claremont Institute ended its report with a call for action from public officials and Congress. But if they don’t act, military parents have one last nuclear option, the report concluded.

“It seems that members of the military who object to such education are no longer welcomed in the military. Perhaps they should just walk out of the military schools with their children or walk away from the military altogether,” the report reads.

The Epoch Times contacted the DoDEA about these issues, but didn’t receive a response by press time.

SOURCE: The Epoch Times

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