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SCHOOLS: Subversive agenda of multicultural education

by Kevin DonnellySend to a Friend | Ask a Question | Buy a Copy | View Cart
 Contents - 04 Feb 2006NW 04 February 2006

EDITORIAL: Bushfires: the lessons of history - Peter Westmore
CANBERRA OBSERVED: Unanswered questions about oil-for-food scam
NATIONAL SECURITY: How prepared are our intelligence agencies? - John Miller
INTERNATIONAL TRADE: Australia left holding trade's $1-billion-dollar baby - Martin Feil
TAXATION: Government's dilemma - "future fund" or tax cuts? - John Ballantyne
PRIMARY PRODUCTION: SA egg producers at breaking point - Damian Wyld
STRAWS IN THE WIND: Some like it hot / Thatcher the chemist / Turks in denial - Max Teichmann
AUSTRALIAN SOCIETY: Whatever has gone wrong with sex? - Dr Kerrie Allen
SCHOOLS: Subversive agenda of multicultural education - Kevin Donnelly
EMBRYO EXPERIMENTATION: Cells, lies and Korea-gate - Babette Francis
HEALTH: 4,000 submissions to RU-486 abortion pill inquiry - Peter Westmore
Civilisation's fragile fabric (letter) - Malcolm Harris
So, who's to blame? (letter) - Wally Eves
Packer 'dumbed down' Australia (letter) - Brian A. Peachey
CINEMA: Good Night, and Good Luck: Hollywood spin on the McCarthy era - Bill James (reviewer)
BOOKS: The Pope Benedict Code, by Joanna Bogle - Michael Gilchrist (reviewer)
BOOKS: What Our Mothers Didn't Tell Us: Why Happiness Eludes the Modern Woman - Frank Gashumba (reviewer)
Latest Titles from News Weekly Books

Cultural diversity is uncritically celebrated in the classroom, while our Anglo-Celtic heritage is thoroughly repudiated, writes Kevin Donnelly.

If there is one positive thing to come out of the violence in Cronulla, it will be a long hard look at how schoolchildren are educated about Australian culture and what they are taught about their responsibilities as members of a civil society.

Judged by the age of many of those involved in abusing women, the mob violence at Cronulla beach and the subsequent destruction of personal property, many would have been of school age during the 1980s and '90s. While Al Grassby and Gough Whitlam sowed the seeds, this was a time when governments under the leadership of Malcolm Fraser, Bob Hawke and Paul Keating spent millions on the multicultural industry.

With the support of left-liberal academics, teacher unions and curriculum writers, the prevailing orthodoxy uncritically promoted cultural diversity, denigrated or ignored Australia's mainstream Anglo-Celtic tradition and taught children that our society is riddled with racism, inequality and social injustice.

The national Studies of Society and Environment curriculum developed during the Keating years argued that children must be taught "an awareness of and pride in Australia's multicultural society" and "develop an understanding of Australia's cultural and linguistic diversity".

The 1993 Australian Education Union's curriculum policy argued that children must be taught that they "are living in a multicultural and class-based society that is diverse and characterised by inequality and social conflict".

Not only was the then academically-based school curriculum, especially in subjects such as history and literature, condemned as Eurocentric, patriarchal and socially unjust, but examinations were seen as favouring rich, white kids and culturally biased against recent migrants. Fast forward to more recent years and little has changed.

The 1999 Australian Education Union policy on combating racism argues that government polices "are founded upon a legal system which is inherently racist in so much as its prime purpose is to serve the needs of the dominant Anglo-Australian culture".

The AEU also states that racism in Australia is both overt and covert and that "both forms of racism are still widely practised in Australian society", especially as a result of the school curriculum supposedly being based on "the knowledge and values of the Anglo-Australian culture".

Politically correct

On reading curriculum documents developed during the '90s, once again, it becomes obvious that all adopt a politically correct approach to issues such as multiculturalism and how we define ourselves as a nation.

Cultural diversity is uncritically celebrated and students are taught, in the words of the Queensland curriculum, to "deconstruct dominant views of society" on the basis that the Australian community is riven with "privilege and marginalisation".

In Western Australia, as evidenced by the Curriculum Framework document, students are told they must value "the perspective of different cultures" and "recognise the cultural mores that underpin groups and appreciate why these are valued and important".

The curriculum policy of the South Australian branch of the AEU is underpinned by "five core values". One of the underlying values is that there should be respect for diversity and "no discrimination on any grounds".

The contradictions and weaknesses evident in the way multiculturalism has been taught in schools are manifold. Tolerance, the rule of law and a commitment to the common good are the very values needed if people are to live peacefully together.

Cultural relativism and an uncritical acceptance of diversity deny such values and lead to what Robert Hughes terms, in his book The Culture of Complaint, the balkanisation of society.

It's also the case that Australia's legal and political system, while imperfect, best safeguards such values. Instead of denigrating Australian society, students should be taught the benefits of our Anglo-Celtic culture: a culture strongly influenced by the Judeo-Christian tradition and from which our laws and morality have grown.

Much of the way history and politics is now taught also centres on the rights of the individual. Instead of emphasising responsibilities and giving allegiance to what we hold in common, individuals are free to define themselves how they will and to act as they wish.

By defining Australian society as socially unjust and divisive there is also the danger of promoting a victim mentality. Whereas past generations felt part of a wider community and believed that hard work would be rewarded, recent generations see only inequality and their right to be supported.

Nobody should condone the violence in Cronulla perpetrated by those wearing the Australian flag or the actions of young Lebanese Muslims abusing women, destroying property and burning churches. But we also need to recognise that the PC approach to teaching multiculturalism in schools in part underpins the recent violence.

As the American liberal historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr has argued: "The militants of ethnicity now contend that the main objective of public education should be the protection, strengthening, celebration and perpetuation of ethnic origins and identities. Separatism, however, nourishes prejudice, magnifies differences and stirs antagonisms."

  • Kevin Donnelly is author of Why Our Schools are Failing (Duffy & Snellgrove, 2004). This article first appeared in The Australian, December 19, 2005.

 
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