Teachers allegedly told to favor black students in ‘racial equity’ training

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In controversial “implicit bias” training, New York City’s public-school educators have been told to focus on black children over white ones — and one Jewish superintendent who described her family’s Holocaust tragedies was scolded and humiliated, according to firsthand accounts.

A consultant hired by the city Department of Education told administrators at a workshop that “racial equity” means favoring black children regardless of their socio-economic status, sources said.

“If I had a poor white male student and I had a middle-class black boy, I would actually put my equitable strategies and interventions into that middle class black boy because over the course of his lifetime he will have less access and less opportunities than that poor white boy,” the consultant, Darnisa Amante, is quoted as saying by those in the room.

“That’s what racial equity is,” Amante explained.

Mona Davids, president of the NYC Parents Union, was appalled.

“It’s completely absurd — they want to treat black students as victims and punish white students. That defeats the purpose of what bias awareness training should be,” said Davids, who is black.

DOE spokesman Will Mantell would not say whether Carranza supports Amante’s statement about favoring black children.

“Anti-bias and equity trainings are about creating high expectations and improving outcomes for all of our students,” Mantell said in a statement. “These trainings are used across the country because they help kids, and out-of-context quotes and anonymous allegations just distract from this important work.”

The DOE’s anti-bias training — a $23 million mandatory program for all DOE employees — has irked some administrators, teachers and parents who contend parts are ugly and divisive.

Four white female DOE executives demoted under Carranza’s new regime plan to sue the city for racial discrimination, claiming whiteness has become “toxic,” The Post revealed last week.

At a monthly superintendents meeting in the spring of 2018, shortly after Carranza’s arrival, members were asked to share answers to the question: “What lived experience inspires you as a leader to fight for equity?”

One Jewish superintendent shared stories about her grandmother Malka who told of bombs falling in Lodz, Poland, and running from the Nazis in the wee hours by packing up her four children and hiding in the forest, and her grandfather Naftali, who spent nearly six years in a labor and concentration camp, where he witnessed the brutal execution of his mother and sister.

“My grandparents taught me to understand the dangers of ‘targeted racism’ or the exclusion of any group, and the importance of equity for all people. This is my core value as an educator,” the superintendent told colleagues.

“At the break, I stood up and, to my surprise, I was verbally attacked by a black superintendent in front of my colleagues. She said ‘This is not about being Jewish! It’s about black and brown boys of color only. You better check yourself.’”

“I was traumatized,” the Jewish educator said. “ It was like 1939 all over again. I couldn’t believe this could happen to me in NYC!”

However, two other superintendents — one black and one Dominican — defended the Holocaust comments as valid and vouched for their colleague as one who fights to level the playing field for all students.

In Manhattan, a middle-school teacher with her own kids in public schools, said the DOE training “is a catalyst for hate and division.”

“I have colleagues who won’t participate during ‘Courageous Conversations’ (the DOE protocol for implicit-bias workshops) because they don’t feel safe.”

She cringes at training phrases like “replacement thinking” and the disdain for “whiteness.”

“My ancestors were enslaved and murdered because of their religion, I am now being forced to become ‘liberated’ from my whiteness. I am being persecuted because of the circumstances of my birth. I was not aware that I needed to be liberated from how God created me.”

Despite Carranza’s contention that those who complain about the training need it the most, she said, “I will never be brainwashed by Richard Carranza and his minions. I cannot support a schools chancellor who is implicitly biased against me and my children.”

Emboldened by his support, some of Carranza’s top managers openly use the expression “disrupt and dismantle” as a new battle cry for equity.

In her training session in February 2019, consultant Amante told DOE higher-ups to face the fact that issues of race, power and privilege will rise to the forefront and shake things up.

“Through this process of moving towards racial equity, we will have to pull layers back on who we are. You are going to have to talk about your power and your privilege. You will need to name your privilege,” Amante is quoted as saying.

She also warned that jobs in the new climate may be shaky.

“You are going to have to acknowledge that you will have to step back. You might fear losing your job. When we get to true racial equity you will have to define new institutional policies. This might feel dangerous because you are going to have to talk about race daily.”

Amante, a lecturer at Harvard University Graduate School of Education, is CEO of Disruptive Equity Education Project, or DEEP, a group aimed at “dismantling systemic oppression and racism,” it says. She did not respond to emails seeking comment.

The DOE’s Office of Equity and Access has contracted DEEP for $175,000. Another anti-bias consultant, Glenn Singleton, the author of “Courageous Conversations,” which includes a critique of the “white supremacy culture,” has a $775,000 contract.

Some parent leaders support Carranza’s campaign.

“We agree with the chancellor that those who do not see the value in this work are the ones who must look inward harder,” said Shino Tanikawa, a parent in Manhattan’s District 2 and member of Mayor de Blasio’s School Diversity Advisory Group.

“This work requires everyone, including people of color, to look inward and confront prejudices we all harbor. For some of us, this work also requires us to acknowledge the privilege bestowed upon us by the power structure. It creates a great deal of discomfort but that is the nature of the work. Disrupting the system is difficult and sometimes painful.”




https://www.google.com/amp/s/nypost...-black-students-as-victims-punish-whites/amp/
 

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I am going to guess that Darnisa Amante is a black, unfuckable, feminist... who hates the world and believes that the whole US is racist and thats whats holding the black community back. Instead of their own culture decisions.
 

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I am going to guess that Darnisa Amante is a black, unfuckable, feminist... who hates the world and believes that the whole US is racist and thats whats holding the black community back. Instead of their own culture decisions.

Yup......they always blame the white man instead of looking at parenting & how the kids are brought up.
 

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You're one simple asshole... What do you do productively?


HaHa...Because he posts a story from a legitimate source? It's not like he wrote the article himself...He simply re -posted from a newspaper that is read daily by millions of people...So him sharing it makes him an asshole? Ok...
 
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I am going to guess that Darnisa Amante is a black, unfuckable, feminist... who hates the world and believes that the whole US is racist and thats whats holding the black community back. Instead of their own culture decisions.

How'd ya know?
 

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Jesus christ do we need stories involving race every fucking day in here? Is the Fox News message board down or what?
 

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Makes you wonder why Jim Beam Black is the worlds highest rated Bourbon

:think2:
 

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Jesus christ do we need stories involving race every fucking day in here? Is the Fox News message board down or what?
who fucking cares... right large marge...if you're tired of these stories...why click on to them...and then respond??...could it be because... it's whites that are being discriminated against??...doesn't fit your world view??
 

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All goes back to the ((source)) of who is pushing this..... same as gay shit, transgenderism...

Same old, same old.
 

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21-1n009-toxicwhiteness-2.jpg
 

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I totally hate this affirmative action BS. Sure blacks were mistreated in the past, even taken as slaves,but that was still probably a better life than living in freaking Africa !

Discrimination will always exist, you discriminate when choosing anything from a date to a wife, job, place to live,what car to drive, what restaurant to eat at, the list is endless.

Blacks certainly received the short end of the stick for a long time, but so did many others !

The Irish were often discriminated against in the early 20th century, as in

No Irish need apply !

Japanese -Americans were imprisoned during WW2, after Pearl Harbor

I have some Polish ancestry, Poles were discriminated against like the Irish at one time. My name used to end in kowski, some ancestor changed it to a 5 letter generic name, not sure who did it ,or when it was done, about all I know of it is my paternal grandmother kept the kowski surname, I have my father's military discharge papers from WW2, so it was changed sometime before the war.

I've actually considered changing it back, but don't want the hassle of doing that
I hate my last name, I won't publish it but will give an example...if you have a surname like Stevens, you will be addressed as Steven or Steve endlessly, I'm not Steven, my first name is Doug as, I'm fine with Doug, I'm not Mr Douglas either !...I get this dozens of times a week, two extra letters would solve make Stevens into Stevenson, Johns into Johnson, Roberts into Robertson, etc.

I'd take back the kowski in a heartbeat, if not for the hassles involved

I implore you people especially the colored folk, don't give your keeds some misspelled, unpronounceable first name, you can be creative but don't go to extremes !
 
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2 biggest shit good for nothing posters. Bith wear oversized shorts that coke off their waist and an over sized t shirt and say “ sup” often

1. Mobgobbler
2. Marge/vitterd
 

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You two think about me nonstop now I can see. I’m in your head in the am, afternoon, and night. I bet you whisper my name while watching interracial porn together. Enfuego is definitely the bottom bitch
 

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Bombshell suit claims DOE execs demoted in Carranza’s ‘toxic whiteness’ purge




Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza’s crusade against “toxic” whiteness at the city Department of Education created an “Us vs. Them’’ culture that saw three longtime officials demoted in favor of less-qualified persons of color, a blockbuster $90 million lawsuit claims.

“If you draw a paycheck from DOE … get on board with my equity platform or leave,” Carranza thundered to employees assembled in the rotunda of the agency’s Lower Manhattan headquarters last June, according to the suit, filed Tuesday in state supreme court.

That “totalitarian threat” was just the most direct example of Carranza’s push to overhaul the leadership at the top and attitude throughout the DOE since he took the helm last year, claims the suit, levied against the department and Carranza by the trio of demoted white female executives.

“Under Carranza’s leadership, DOE has swiftly and irrevocably silenced, sidelined and punished plaintiffs and other Caucasian female DOE employees on the basis of their race, gender and unwillingness to accept their other colleagues’ hateful stereotypes about them,” wrote the group’s lawyer, Davida S. Perry, in the filing.

Plaintiff Lois Herrera, who started at the DOE in 1986 as a guidance counselor and worked her way up to lead its Office of Safety and Youth Development, claims in the suit that she saw a sea change almost immediately after Mayor Bill de Blasio appointed Carranza in April 2018.

A month later, LaShawn Robinson, then the executive director of the DOE’s Office of Equity and Access, purportedly told white attendees of a training seminar that they “had to take a step back and yield to colleagues of color” and “recognize that values of white culture are supremacist,” Herrera heard from a fellow administrator, according to the suit.

And that June, Carranza delivered his stay-or-go edict to address a flurry of recent staffing changes among department brass — including Robinson’s promotion to deputy chancellor of School Climate and Wellness.

At another scheduled event, in August, Herrera saw Robinson’s alleged attitude for herself.

“If you’ve been with the DOE for more than 20 years, you are responsible for the problem,” Robinson, who is black, allegedly said.

Robinson is not named as a defendant in the suit.

Despite being Harvard-educated and having been recognized as recently as 2017 for contributing to the “safest year on record” in city schools, Herrera was abruptly stripped of her title and demoted three levels “to essentially the bottom of the … group she formerly led,” the suit says.

Without so much as a formal search or interview process, Herrera was replaced by an African American man, Mark Rampersant, despite him being “demonstrably less qualified,” the suit claims.

Herrera said she was “required” to attend Rampersant’s promotion ceremony. Her repeated requests for a new workstation were met with her belongings being stuffed into boxes and stashed under a headquarters stairwell before she was ultimately transferred to the Bronx.

When Rampersant took Herrera’s spot, another plaintiff, Jaye Murray, the executive director of the Office of Counseling Support Programs, was told that she would now report to Rampersant, representing a demotion.

The only explanation Robinson purportedly gave Murray, who has been with the DOE since 2006, was that the department decided to go “in a different direction” — despite Murray’s own record of developing anti-bias workshops.

It wasn’t long before Murray was demoted another two rungs, ultimately settling below new OCSP head Gillian Smith, who “began a campaign to degrade” Murray by forcing her to report her work every 30 minutes, and, Murray would learn, going over her head and behind her back to direct Murray’s last two subordinates.

The third plaintiff, Laura Feijoo, claims that she was among the earliest casualties of Carranza’s overhaul.

When Carranza was appointing his first deputy chancellor, he tapped Cheryl Watson-Harris, who is black, over Feijoo, who is white and was Watson-Harris’ boss, without so much as interviewing Feijoo.

While Feijoo supervised all 46 other DOE superintendents, Watson-Harris didn’t even have the necessary license to be first deputy chancellor — so Carranza instituted a “transition period” so she could obtain it, the filing says.

Feijoo was not only leapfrogged by Watson-Harris but soon saw her underling replace her with Donald Conyers, who is black, and promote nine employees into a new role, “executive superintendent.”

Some of the nine had no prior superintendent experience. None was a white woman. All were now above Feijoo.

The three plaintiffs declined comment through their lawyer, Perry, who also represents a fourth female white DOE employee with similar claims who might still file a separate suit.

“As opposed to being assessed by their results or their actions, our clients were removed from their respective responsibilities and replaced by less qualified (or not qualified) individuals due to their gender and the color of their skin,” said Perry in a statement.

The Department of Education responded to The Post on Tuesday with the exact statement it gave two weeks ago when asked about the race issue.

“We hire the right people to get the job done for kids and families, and these claims of ‘reverse racism’ have no basis in fact,’ ’’ the department repeated.

Carranza declined to comment on the suit.




https://www.google.com/amp/s/nypost...hiteness-purge-cost-doe-execs-their-jobs/amp/
 

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$90 million lawsuit for reverse racism........they will win this lawsuit.

I can't believe how blatantly forward the reverse racism is.........these people have lost their minds.
 

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