Over the past year our public schools have suffered two pandemics. One has long been evolving; the other hit us suddenly. One burst forth in full fury right here in Minneapolis; the other blew in from China.
Both maladies have hit our schools hard, but in different ways. COVID-19 brought about an abrupt and general school shutdown in spring 2020. The other long-developing condition surged about the same time, accelerating a trend that is transforming our public schools into something that they were never intended to be.
Let's give this second pandemic a parallel name and call it "Wokeness-19."
Because of COVID-19 parents have had to scramble and juggle, while trying to negotiate new and unfamiliar educational avenues. Some have done their best to go with the online flow. Others have turned to private school alternatives. Still others have chosen to home-school on their own or through cooperatives. But no matter the option chosen, parents have had to focus on their children's education much more intently.
All this is a bit like the way COVID-19 also has forced employers and workers to rapidly develop remote-work methods and systems — many of which have functioned well enough that economists expect a large and lasting expansion of the remote-work economy.
Could parents' larger role in education also prove permanent?
If it does, the change will be in part inspired by our second pandemic, Wokeness-19. As luck would have it, the furor over the death of George Floyd last spring came at a time when the state Department of Education was revising standards for social studies in Minnesota schools. The heated left-right controversies over these benchmarks reflect deep divisions among us.
For example, should the central message of American history echo the much-debated New York Times' "1619 Project" with its contention that America's true founding principle was racist, implanting what's called systemic racism at the heart of the American story? Or should the pivotal year remain 1776, with its self-evident truths and systemic distrust of centralized power?