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Jun 30, 2026

Stop radicalizing California teachers — teach the basics instead

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Stop radicalizing California teachers — teach the basics instead

By Josh Weiner Published June 29, 2026, 8:33 p.m. ET

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The California Department of Education recently hosted a webinar entitled the “Black Student Achievement Series.” One might assume its contents would be about student achievement –– reading and math, strategies to close persistent learning gaps or new interventions based on the state’s recently adopted “Science of Reading” curricula. 

That’s not what California’s students and parents got.

Instead, a webinar titled “Culturally Sustaining Practices to Recruit and Retain Black Teachers” represented a jarring bait-and-switch.

Rather than offering tools for academic readiness, the program focused on dismantling what it described as the “oppressive system” of public education, advocating for “liberatory learning,” and dragging teachers into a rabbit hole of divisive, identity-centered ideologies.

An adult woman showing a rainbow flag to a group of children.
Stock image of teacher holding a Pride flag to young students. Getty Images/iStockphoto

We sent a letter to the state Department of Education requesting comment about these trainings –– noting our concerns that they violated several legal protections across various administrative, statutory and constitutional frameworks –– but have yet to receive a response.

This tragic misuse of state resources is business-as-usual for California’s education bureaucracy, which has been captured by teachers unions and their allies.

California officially requires teachers to integrate Culturally Responsive Education (CRE) in the classroom. 

On paper, CRE appears to focus on a virtuous goal: augmenting student engagement by connecting students’ backgrounds to classroom lessons.

The reality is this: The benign-sounding language of CRE is being used to smuggle radical activist training into public education.

The core problem lies in a deliberate distortion of priorities. Culturally Responsive Education is traditionally built on three pillars, the first two of which are cultural awareness and academic success. Yet, state-sponsored bureaucrats often disregard these in favor of the third pillar: “critical consciousness.”

This pillar pushes an activist framework that tells teachers to view every classroom interaction through the lens of power dynamics, privilege and institutional oppression. 

When teachers return from state webinars steeped in these ideas, the practical outcome is not a sudden surge in reading scores.

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Instead, we see educators who teach young children that their most salient characteristic is their racial, ethnic and/or religious identity.

Those subscribing to CRE use this identity-first approach to promote a highly politicized and contested view of society –– one that assumes every interaction, historical fact and contemporary issue be viewed through the lens of power and grievance. 

Students are encouraged to see existing institutions as oppressive systems they have a duty to challenge, dismantle or overthrow.

While cultural sensitivity is important, especially in a state as diverse as California, these frameworks promote the misguided notion that students can only succeed if their teacher shares their exact identity. The premise that effective learning depends entirely on matching lived experiences is fundamentally flawed.

What’s more, every dollar spent training a teacher to view public education as an oppressive system is a dollar not spent helping children read, write, do math and think independently.


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