PHOTO: MARY ALTAFFER/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Critical race theory may resemble a serious academic discipline, but it’s really just a fancy argument for racial preferences. Jason Riley writes:
A majority of American fourth- and eighth-graders can’t read or do math at grade level, according to the Education Department. And that assessment is from 2019, before the learning losses from pandemic school closures.
Whenever someone asks me about critical race theory, that statistic comes to mind. What’s the priority, teaching math and reading, or turning elementary schools into social-justice boot camps?
Given that black and Hispanic students are more likely to be lagging academically, it’s a question that anyone professing to care deeply about social inequality might consider. Learning gaps manifest themselves in all kinds of ways later in life, from unemployment rates and income levels to the likelihood of teenage pregnancy, substance abuse and involvement with the criminal-justice system. Our jails and prisons already have too many woke illiterates.
[Jason Riley, "Critical Race Theory Is a Hustle,” The Wall Street Journal, July 13]