A new report shows the University of Texas at Austin’s School of Education is riddled with critical race theory and other leftwing ideologies.
Last year, a state law took effect that requires universities to dismantle diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) offices and eliminate discriminatory hiring and training programs. It does not apply to instruction.
Nonprofit research organization DeepAudit analyzed 450 UT education syllabi using a machine learning algorithm and identified courses with the highest concentration of CRT and DEI material.
Seven of the ten courses ranked most ideologically-driven fall under the university’s curriculum and instruction department.
DeepAudit’s algorithm scanned for courses that emphasize “equity, diversity, social justice, critical pedagogy, critical consciousness, [and] identitarian political activism.”
According to the nonprofit’s website, its machine learning tool “can help institutions comply with state and federal mandates by using semantic analysis” to assess meaning and context beyond simple keyword searches.
“A reporter investigating DEI and CRT in schools of education would typically have to review every course individually,” reads the report. “Such a process is a barrier to analysis as many schools offer hundreds of education courses.”
“While many have heard reports of critical race theory in schools, few realize how widespread the problem is,” Jonah Davids, a founder of DeepAudit told Texas Scorecard. “These ideas are rarely expressed so openly, and instead are often hidden under labels like ‘culturally-responsive teaching’ and ‘social-emotional learning.’”
“Most legislators, parents, and taxpayers who fund universities have no idea this is happening,” Davids said. “We only looked at one college in one university—who knows how much is out there?”
Foundations of United States Schooling, the UT course that contained the most leftist bias, is required for education majors. It touches on the “development of public schooling in the United States in the context of processes of settler colonialism, racial capitalism, and contests over the meaning of democracy.”
An online summary of the course also says it “examine[s] the politics and policy of education, with special attention to the consequences for students of color, Indigenous students, LGBTQIA students, immigrant students, and students with disabilities.”
Required course readings involved transgender advocacy, decolonization, and critical pedagogy.
According to DeepAudit, the ten UT Austin education courses most infused with CRT are:
EDC312 Foundations of United States Schooling
EDC319 Qualitative Inquiry and Education for Social Change
EDC385G Seminar Program Development and Research
EDP382G Cultural Diversity and Individual Differences
EDC380F Sociocultural Foundations
ELP354S Social Awareness and Critical Consciousness in Student Affairs
EDC395T Learning Technologies
ELP354D Equity and Diversity Issues in Education
EDC395L Language and Literacy Studies
EDC391G Gender and Race in Education
When ranked by department, curriculum and instruction were found to have the most CRT and DEI, followed by education leadership and policy, educational psychology, and general education.
“Courses such as these take fresh, impressionable undergraduates and teach them to view the U.S. education system as a fundamentally racist, sexist, homophobic, and imperialist institution,” concludes the report. “It’s no wonder that so many teachers are bringing far-left ideologies into the classroom: they have been trained that teaching about the systemic hostility of the education system is core to education.”
While lawmakers have banned DEI in hiring and training, the same rules have not yet been applied to instruction. New legislation has been filed to further extend the ban on DEI in higher education.
Texas public universities are overseen by boards of regents appointed by Gov. Greg Abbott and confirmed by the Texas Senate.