New Charter School Focuses on Free Speech and Individual Achievement

Twenty years ago, who would have ever thought that this type of curriculum would have been a new direction, controversial or necessary? FAIR reports:

Ian Rowe believes in teaching students four cardinal virtues: courage, justice, wisdom, and temperance. These qualities make up the core curriculum at his forthcoming International Baccalaureate public charter high schools in the Bronx, set to open in 2022. A product of New York City’s public school system himself, Rowe is determined to give parents an option that promotes classic ideas about equality that many still believe can work.

“The schools will be grounded in the ideas of equality of opportunity, individual dignity and our common humanity,” says Rowe. “They’re schools that will be dedicated to this idea of democratic discourse, our ability to debate across differences, where we won’t reduce kids to individual, immutable characteristics. We won’t reduce kids to just characteristics like race or gender, but instead treat each student as individual human beings with great capacities to achieve.”

Rowe’s program seeks meaningful progress in the ability of students to survive in the real world:

“I think a lot of [these debates are] a massive distraction from some fundamental issues facing kids of all races in our country,” said Rowe. “It’s still the case that less than 40 percent of all kids in our country are reading at grade level. This is a massive literacy crisis. Things like Critical Race Theory and DEI have nothing to do with improving outcomes for children and take attention away from important factors like family structure, having school choice, the ability for parents to choose great schools, really empowered curricula that’s rigorous in nature, the science of reading. You know, these are the factors that really determine whether or not kids are going to be successful.”

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Erich Vieth

Erich Vieth is an attorney focusing on civil rights (including First Amendment), consumer law litigation and appellate practice. At this website often writes about censorship, corporate news media corruption and cognitive science. He is also a working musician, artist and a writer, having founded Dangerous Intersection in 2006. Erich lives in St. Louis, Missouri with his two daughters.

This Post Has One Comment

  1. Avatar of Bill Heath
    Bill Heath

    I am impressed that he used the word “justice” without a qualifier. When one qualifies the word, such as with “social justice,” or “environmental justice,” it loses meaning.

    I predict it will fail. No diversity, inclusion, equity.

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