Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's pretty obvious you have no clue about the history of how these theories developed. Most likely because you never took a class that covered them in any way.
I’ve seen and heard Kendi, including at GDS last year talk. He’s slick and talks over any questions or concerns or counter points to his theories.
They are theories. Not historic facts. His 24/7 lens and personal viewpoint of why anything happened. And it’s making him very wealthy.
Anonymous wrote:Oh look the trolls are out
Same people that voted for Youngkin's CRT lies.
Anonymous wrote:They are primed for the woke elite universities.
I'm liberal and accepting, but there is a time and place. English should be focused on the Classic works. A little new sprinkled in here and there, but holy crap none of that belongs in English class.
Anonymous wrote:It's pretty obvious you have no clue about the history of how these theories developed. Most likely because you never took a class that covered them in any way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:one-sided political content and agendas
LOL, "one-sided." Why do you think these theories developed in the first place?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:one-sided political content and agendas
LOL, "one-sided." Why do you think these theories developed in the first place?
Anonymous wrote:one-sided political content and agendas
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GDS is a college-prepatory school. Believe it or not, courses like these help to prepare GDS students to succeed in college. Unlike their peers are less progressive schools, GDS students won't be shell shocked by these perspectives and cutting-edge scholarship, as well as the highly interdisciplinary nature of the humanities and social sciences, when they start college. As someone who went to a very traditional high school, and then went to a top SLAC for college, I was in over my head compared to classmates who had the kind of HS curriculum that GDS is offering.
“Cutting edge ‘scholarship’s?
That’s what you’re calling one-sided political content and agendas now?
Good grief. No wonder everyone’s applying to colleges in the UK and Canada.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent here. Have been mostly happy w GDS HS english and related faculty.
This fall, one of the HS grades as started out by studying the following topics:
Queer Studies, CRT, Marxist Theory, Intersectionality, Structuralism Theory
Serious old person question - why are these taught in ENGLISH rather than in a special elective class? Isn't english for the study of literature. I get it - literature is a window into humanity....but really? I also get it - it's GDS but this is a core class all students must take.
And there was even an op-ed in student paper last week from a student very unhappy with the single-minded bias faculty show and the lack of oxygen they provide for dissenting views.
OP here. Yes that’s junior English and it’s still taught like that. I’m talking about the new senior English in which CRT and intersectionality are the lenses through which literature will be analyzed. This is new since last year.
I went to GDS. This sounds like the 11th grade English course that I took (albeit, this was many years ago), so no, not OP is a troll. That class was very focused on rhetoric and argument in addition to the study of various critical lenses through which literature can be examined. I remember once I had to do a paper that involved taking two of the aforementioned critical lenses and close reading a short story or essay, the goal being that different critical frameworks yield different analyses and interpretations (so, not at all the 'indoctrination', but an encouragement of different thinking). And for the people griping that English needs to focus on the "classics" this same English 11 course started with Greek rhetorical appeals (ethos, logos, pathos) and Aristotle's poetics.
The only reasonable critique of teaching these things that I can fathom is that they're boring and maybe a bit advanced for some students (and I take issue with that claim, personally). English, especially a class which is focused on rhetoric and argument, is absolutely the place to learn about, well, different approaches to reading a text. And I don't remember that DD was taught that one of these approaches is more right than another -- it's simply useful and important to know they exist.
I found this class to be challenging, but it did make me a better writer and I still use what I learned today, as an adult.
So, OP, you're really just talking about one part of one senior English class? Just trying to stir up trouble, aren't you?
My DC found the GDS English teachers to be phenomenal, and he was much better prepared than my public school kids for the writing challenges of college. These are all various lenses through which literature can be analyzed, and what is the problem with your kid learning about them in high school - doesn't that make them better prepared for college?
Anonymous wrote:GDS is a college-prepatory school. Believe it or not, courses like these help to prepare GDS students to succeed in college. Unlike their peers are less progressive schools, GDS students won't be shell shocked by these perspectives and cutting-edge scholarship, as well as the highly interdisciplinary nature of the humanities and social sciences, when they start college. As someone who went to a very traditional high school, and then went to a top SLAC for college, I was in over my head compared to classmates who had the kind of HS curriculum that GDS is offering.