April 11, 2024
Troy D. Smith
“Stop the death march of education in this state”
This weekend I spoke with Matthew Hawn (for reasons I
will explain below). When comparing notes, we realized we both graduated from
Tennessee Tech twenty years ago next month, and that we had many of the same
professors and were even in some of the same classes, so we must have crossed
paths. I was a History and English major and he was an Education major, so we
may not have traveled the same social orbits… but we are aware of each other
now, and the fact we have so much in common makes that even more noteworthy.
Matthew spent sixteen years teaching at the Sullivan
County High School, including a class he taught for over ten years called
“Contemporary Topics.” He was beloved by his students, and had never given
anyone cause for complaint. Until the Tennessee General Assembly passed the
so-called “critical race theory” and “divisive concepts” laws, and he actually
discussed race (and assigned a reading by noted African American author
Ta-Nehisi Coates) to his high school students. He became the first Tennessee
educator to be fired under those laws (making national news -as is usual for
Tennessee lately, not in a good way).
Tennessee is not the only state with such laws (but
all the ones who do can accurately be described as red states). There are
several. Other legislation has been put forward all around the country seeking
to muzzle public educators, both in K12 and higher ed, and control what they
teach and how they teach it where race, gender, or really almost any kind of
minority status, are concerned.
Several concerned individuals and groups in Tennessee
-including the Tennessee Conference of the American Association of University
Professors (AAUP) and the Tennessee chapter of the American Indian
Movement-Indian Territory -have come together in recent months to create an
informal organization called the Tennessee Coalition for Truth in Education (TCTE)
with the goal of educating Tennesseans about these laws and their consequences.
One of their first actions was a webinar (which was recorded and can be found
on youtube by searching the organization’s name) featuring a couple of legal
experts.
A larger, nationwide group has also formed recently
-with members including AAUP chapters, higher ed unions, and student
organizations from across the country -with the goal of organizing a “National
Day of Action for Higher Ed for the Public Good” on April 17. Campuses in
multiple states will be involved, directing interested parties to view a
national live “teach-in” at 4pm Central that day, and/or other events geared
toward local needs.
That’s where Matthew Hawn comes in.
The TCTE (check above if you get your acronyms
confused, I’m slinging around a lot of them!) is sponsoring, at 6pm Central on
April 17, a live educational webinar that will be promoted by participating
organizations across Tennessee. The webinar will feature Hawn, telling his
story, giving context, and answering a couple of questions. Really interested
parties could watch both the 4pm national event and (or) the 6pm state one. You
can learn more about the national teach-in at www.dayofactionforhighered.org
, and about the Matthew Hawn presentation at www.facebook.com/TN.Coalition.4Truth
.
Here is a
quote from the Day of Action group: “Institutions of higher education serve to
educate the public and to help generate the reliable information, broad-ranging
knowledge, and reasoned analysis that a democratic society requires. Colleges
and universities are spaces where research and ideas—including challenging
ones—are subject to rigorous study and critical evaluation. In the interest of
democracy, our educational institutions must be allowed to function free from
interference by politicians, CEOs, and lobbyists seeking to repress inquiry.”
The folks who cry the loudest about
so-called “cancel culture” want to cancel any educational, intellectual, or
philosophical discourse that makes them uncomfortable -when making people
uncomfortable is what education is FOR. If all it does is make you comfortable,
it is not education, it is indoctrination.
I’ll close with a quote from the
TCTE: “We are the only people who can stop the death march of education in this
state.”
Get involved. Ask questions.
Pressure your politicians. Be prepared to CHANGE your politicians if they
continue to hamstring the education of our young people.
--Troy D.
Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at
Tennessee Tech and serves on the executive committee of the Tennessee
Democratic Party. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.
Buy the book A Liberal Dose: Communiques from the Holler by Troy D. Smith HERE
You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE
A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE
Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com
The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE
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