The Washington Times

HICKS: Finding the source of ‘floating babies’

Social scientists use the parable of the “floating babies” to remind us that we can’t solve a problem until we know its source.

You know this story: The townspeople meet at the riverbank for a celebration when suddenly they notice a baby struggling to stay afloat in the river’s rushing waters. Someone runs to save the baby; then he notices another one coming from upstream. More and more babies come rushing down the river as the people of the town quickly make a human chain to try to save the infants.

When a few townsfolk run upstream along the riverbank, someone yells, “Where are you going?”

“We’re going to find out who is throwing these babies into the river and stop them!”

A new documentary, “Waiting for Superman,” is posing the question: Just who is throwing an entire generation of American children into the rough and dangerous waters of public education, only to drown in a torrent of mediocrity?

The film is being criticized for pointing out that America’s teachers unions too often protect incompetent educators and perpetuate a system that rewards longevity over talent. Being unions, they place the economic goals of their members over the educational needs of the children they supposedly serve. (Why does this surprise some people?)

Still, it’s simplistic — and believe it or not, convenient — to point fingers only at the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers. We have to look farther up the river.

The problem is poorly prepared and uneducated teachers, and for that, we can thank the recently retired Bill Ayers, the former distinguished professor of education at the University of Illinois at Chicago and late of the Weather Underground.

Most folks don’t realize that in the decades between Mr. Ayers‘ infamous taunt, “Guilty as hell, free as a bird,” and then-candidate Barack Obama’s disingenuous explanation, “He’s just a guy from my neighborhood,” Mr. Ayers distinguished himself as one of the pre-eminent leaders in American teacher education.

He thinks the purpose of public education is to empower “change agents” for participation in democracy, not to instill in our children the knowledge, skills and critical-thinking habits that will lead them to a productive future. More important, when Mr. Ayers uses “democracy,” he isn’t thinking Thomas Jefferson and John Adams; he’s thinking Hugo Chavez and Che Guevara.

Mr. Ayers helps lead the radically leftist postsecondary education machine that has, for more than a half-century, churned out educators who think their job is doing “social justice.”

One of the most important leftist theories is “critical pedagogy,” developed by Brazilian socialist educator Paulo Freire and articulated in his iconic tome, “Pedagogy of the Oppressed,” first published in 1968. There probably isn’t a teacher in an American classroom today who hasn’t read Freire’s book, and meanwhile, Mr. Ayers has said it is a “myth” that teachers must possess subject-matter expertise.

Starting to see the source of the problem?

The field of teacher education is dominated by those who view their role as training up the army of teachers who will instruct America’s children about the values and virtues of a socialist society.

Certainly, not all of America’s schoolteachers are out to indoctrinate our youth. The vast majority of rank-and-file teachers are caring, committed educators who do what they do because they love children and have a heart for teaching. I do not condescend when I say they mean well.

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