Social Predation 
          101: Now showing in classrooms near you
          
          by Andy 
          Donnach
          "When 
          you told me there were social predators teaching at the high school I 
          thought you were a bit nuts -- I'd never heard of such a thing," the 
          district administrator whispered. "But, I've since come to see you had 
          understated the problem." 
          The administrator's discovery process had likely been triggered six 
          months earlier when I used the word "predatory" to describe the 
          practices of activist-teachers who were using their positions of 
          authority in the classroom to recruit children into their personal, 
          political, social, and religious agendas. These "teachers" were using 
          the classroom to promote activism, not academics. Worse, they often 
          exploited children to promote their personal interests by involving 
          them in protests, meetings, and other activities that supported the 
          teacher's convictions. They had become teachers to "make a difference" 
          by using the government education system to indoctrinate children to 
          their personal interests -- not to educate children to be contributing 
          members of society. 
          Using the word "predatory" to describe the practice might seem 
          harsh. But, what better word is there to describe an adult who uses a 
          position of power to realign the minds and actions of an 
          impressionable child with his or her personal interests -- with 
          neither parental permission nor knowledge, and counter to the values 
          of the child or family? Some might consider it predatory, others might 
          consider it harmless, and a few might even prefer it -- as long as the 
          indoctrinator is advocating beliefs and actions aligned with their 
          own. 
          Regardless, people who know children in the government school 
          systems might want to pay special attention to an entrenched movement 
          that advocates social, moral, and political indoctrination of children 
          as a teacher's civic responsibility. Bluntly: the government school 
          system is being used as a recruiting ground for special interests; 
          worse, parents are unwittingly, blindly, or willingly participating in 
          the violation of their own children. Before you dismiss this as "a bit 
          nuts", you might want to see for yourself Alan Singer's tutorial for 
          activist teachers. 
          GETTING KIDS TO "CRITICALLY THINK" INTO A ONE-MIND PARADIGM 
          In "Student Clubs: A Model for Political Organizing" (Rethinking 
          Schools, Volume 17, Number 4 - 
          http://www.rethinkingschools.org/archive/17_04/club174.shtml), Singer 
          outlines for teachers how to promote personal agendas using students. 
          While Singer bases his activist-indoctrinator model o要 his activities 
          as a high school social studies teacher in New York City, similar 
          models are actively used o要 K-12 campuses across the USA. By 
          understanding how Singer's model is implemented, parents can gain 
          insight into how they can recognize predatory practices in their 
          child's school. 
          Singer starts by telling teachers that they have a responsibility 
          to "act as models" for "questioning authority" -- starting with 
          questioning the values by which the students are being raised. He 
          justifies this position by evoking a strange interpretation of 
          "critical thinking". 
          Critical thinking is vital for the lifetime success and survival of 
          an individual; which is why most parents try so hard to implement 
          critical thinking skills into their children. If anything, critical 
          thinking helps the individual recognize right from wrong, the lie from 
          the truth. More importantly, critical thinking helps the individual 
          make correct choices -- even when everyone else is making wrong 
          choices. In other words, critical thought and independent action are 
          vital skills that allow children to stand tall against peer pressure 
          -- and to shield themselves from predators. However, when social 
          predators say "critical thinking" they seem to mean something entirely 
          different. 
          The "critical thinking" that Singer advocates is for students to 
          "consequently question authority (starting with their parents)," and 
          he advises other activist teachers to act as models for helping 
          children to question their values and to accept the values inherent in 
          the teacher's special interest. This is also commonly called "values 
          clarification", a process by which predatory indoctrinators help align 
          the child's values with their own -- for the greater good, of course. 
          So, when activist teachers say "critical thinking", they apparently 
          mean to think more like them -- and less like their parents. 
          Ironically, "more like them" typically means to accept a o要e-minded 
          collectivist philosophy that has zero tolerance for alternative 
          viewpoints. (Which brings up an interesting side-note for people who 
          can think critically: are not critical thought and collectivism 
          mutually exclusive? Collectivism tends to create homogeneous cultures 
          that allow little tolerance for critical thought and independent 
          action.) 
          SOCIAL PREDATION 101: USING OTHER PEOPLE'S CHILDREN TO PROMOTE A 
          TEACHER'S INTERESTS 
          Singer presents workshops and assemblies through which he helps 
          teachers "understand their right to disagree with and protest against 
          government policies" and "involve their students in political action" 
          that promotes the teacher's interests. In other words, Singer seems to 
          be teaching social predators how to use the classroom to recruit 
          children to their personal perspective by supplanting the values 
          taught at home with their own. The values that Singer says teachers 
          should advocate to children are similar to those he promotes in his 
          own classroom, including: 
          - Reproductive freedom, abortion access, and condom availability 
          for minors; 
          - Opposition to laws requiring parental consent for abortions; 
          - Opposition to policies requiring parental consent for exposure to 
          objectionable materials in the classroom; 
          - Opposition to American foreign actions and policies. 
          "One of my primary goals as a high school social studies teacher 
          was to empower young people so that they could become active citizens 
          and agents for democratic social change," Singer writes (For an 
          example of what Singer means by "Democratic Social Change", see the 
          Democratic Socialists of America web site at: http://www.dsausa.org/). 
          "This approach requires that teachers... express views o要 
          controversial issues," and get students to be willing to take action 
          in support of the teacher's values, Singer says. 
          For teachers who express concern that enlisting children for their 
          own causes might jeopardize their jobs, Singer presents "a model [he] 
          was able to use effectively to engage students as activists," while 
          avoiding the legal and ethical issues involved in using the classroom 
          to promote personal interests to children. Following are key excerpts 
          from Singer's model: 
          DEVELOP A STUDENT CLUB FOR ADVOCATING SOCIAL ISSUES. "[Singer's 
          club] provided students who were excited by classroom discussions... 
          with a place where they could further explore their questions and act 
          based o要 their beliefs." 
          Recruit students from the classroom to join the