KinderCare Wants Parents To Talk About ‘Diversity, Equity, And Inclusion’ At Home With Their Six-Week-Old Children

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
KinderCare, a child care network headquartered in Portland, Oregon, is telling parents that “it’s never too early” to teach children about “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (DEI) in the home. The organization’s DEI homepage promised to introduce students to “culturally responsive teaching,” which places students’ identity and emotions at the center of their education.

“Whether your child is six weeks old or in the sixth grade, they’re ready to learn how to practice empathy, compassion and understanding,” the DEI homepage reads. “And everything they do — from reading books and making art to even having lunch — can be experienced through an anti-bias lens.”

KinderCare’s DEI page includes resources for bringing DEI lessons into the home. Parents with babies are encouraged to read books that “show different cultures, identities, and characters,” listen to new music genres, and share “little tastes of food” from “different cuisines.” According to the website, naming feelings for a baby can also “help interrupt the development of biases.”

Parents of pre-school children were told to “point out stereotypes and biases” in the media and books. The graphic cites the example of pointing out “who is and isn’t represented in roles like doctors, lawyers, firefighters, villains, and heroes.”





Change the order of the letters



Diversity
Inclusion
Equity
 

frequentflier

happy to be living
If parents start this crap at six WEEKS old, as suggested, I question when they should have had a child and hope they don't produce more.
 

SamSpade

Well-Known Member
PREMO Member
Fortunately they have no authority to COMPEL parents to do this.

One thing our media has CLEARLY taught us, is that it perfectly ok to hate, demonize and marginalize people you don't like. Because they do it all the time and justify it.
 

kom526

They call me ... Sarcasmo
You can easily teach your child kindness, compassion and empathy, as well as PEMDAS, civics and the use of the Oxford comma. You just don't devote as emphasis on the former.
 
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