I�ll focus only on the multiculturalism side, as that is the research I know.
The problem is that Greene and Shock fixate on what is listed in the catalog rather than on what is actually taught. In my own research I found that multiculturalism courses were required in just one of five education programs. The requirement of multicultural education courses, moreover, had no correlation to whether a program was NCATE accredited (which is a whole other research question). And I found that �inclusion,� which they subsume under the multiculturalism label, references special education courses, not �social justice.� Greene and Shock thus inflate their numbers, inaccurately swipe at NCATE, and undermine their own argument when they suggest that education schools are nothing but hotbeds of political correctness. They�re the ones doing the right-wing political correctness thing by jumping (too late and too weakly) on the bandwagon.
Now don�t get me wrong. Ed schools have lots of problems. But David Labaree has written about the current iteration of such problems for over a decade. Greene�s work offers us nothing new. It is sad that a scholar like Greene offers nothing more than a poor repetition of David Steiner�s attack dog work from three years ago, which itself was deeply flawed ($).
No comments:
Post a Comment