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Dear Tom, Thank you for your excellent article responding to recent Nobel Prize winners' comments linking intelligence to race. While James Watson has repudiated his comments (NYTimes October 19 2007), the damage has been done. I applaud your challenge to the adult literacy community to dispel these racist allegations by fighting "against the ideological foundations of racism that stigmatize adult literacy education in general and the literacy education of African-American adults in particular." My experience with the adult literacy community teaches me that we not only reflect the dominant culture's continued belief in the "science" of intelligence measures, but that many of us approach African-American students with the erroneous - yet often unexamined --belief that they really cannot learn as well or as much as
others. The statistics you cite indicating a decline in the number of African-American adult education students - even as those very students are being pushed out of high schools at record rates - flash a warning signal that our biased assumptions are having disastrous results. Many years ago (in 1963), Thomas Gossett wrote Race: The History of an Idea in America, in which he traced how the false notion of racial hierarchies (with white on top) infected every branch of Euro-American thought. His description of the "discovery" of IQ tests, and how they have been used ever since to uphold racist ideology, should be required reading for us all. I believe that the adult literacy community needs to turn the mirror around and look at our own field honestly. We need to examine both our personal and our institutional biases, understanding where they come
from and how they're kept in place. With such an understanding, we can begin to speak with a prophetic voice, calling the larger society to account for generations of inequitable education. We have a potential base of over 40 million people. With strong, anti-racist leadership, we can be a major force in transforming our educational system so that serves all its citizens. Margery Freeman tsticht@xxxxxxxx wrote: October 17, 2007
Genes, Intelligence, Literacy, and Racism
Tom Sticht International Consultant in Adult Education
The 2003 National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL) found that, as with most general literacy and other broadband cognitive assessments of the last century, African-Americans
scored well below White adults. Perhaps for most people, this signifies that greater efforts are needed in the education of African-Americans. But for some others, this may simply reinforce the belief that African-Americans are genetically lower in intelligence compared to Whites and this shows itself in the differences in literacy scores.
According to an article on the web site for The Independent news service in London, England for 17 October 2007, online at http://news.independent.co.uk/sci_tech/article3067222.ece, James Watson, a Nobel Prize winner for work on DNA and genetics, thinks that Africans are less intelligent than Westerners. The article states that in a recent interview Watson "claimed that black people were less intelligent than white people and the idea that "equal powers of reason" were shared across racial groups was a delusion." According to The Independent, Watson said that "Western policies towards African
countries were wrongly based on an assumption that black people were as clever as their white counterparts when "testing" suggested the contrary. He claimed genes responsible for creating differences in human intelligence could be found within a decade."
In an earlier interview in 2005, another Nobel Prize laureate, this time for economics, James Heckman discussed his ideas about cognitive skills and their malleability in later life with members of a presidential commission consisting of former U.S. senators, heads of federal agencies, tax attorneys and academic economists. In his comments Heckman expressed his belief that "IQ is basically formed by age 8, and there are huge differences in IQ among people. ? I think these observations on human skill formation are exactly why the job training programs aren't working in the United States and why many remediation programs directed toward disadvantaged young adults are so
ineffective."
That these kinds of beliefs by Nobel Prize winners are more widespread and influential in affecting policies and funding for adult literacy education is illustrated in a Forbes Magazine article for October 2, 2000. Written by Dan Seligman, a widely read commentator, the article discussed the National Adult Literacy Survey (NAL) of 1993 and argued that the test was not about literacy and said, "The cluster of abilities being examined is obviously a proxy for plain old "intelligence." Remarking then about the "familiar old bell curve" Seligman says, "?do not tell us that government or any other institution is going to transform this situation." This clearly reflects the belief that the literacy test was actually a test of intelligence, that the latter is genetically based, and was not going to be changed by adult literacy programs.
These sorts of comments by Nobel prize laureates and well-placed popular writers
are not good for adult literacy education. They can convince policymakers and funding organizations that investments in adult literacy education are not worthwhile. For instance, the New York Times for January 20, 2000 published an article by Kevin Sack about a gift of $100 million being given to schools in Mississippi to promote the teaching of reading to children. The article says that the philanthropist giving the money and "many experts are less than bullish on the prospects for attacking adult illiteracy." The philanthropist is then quoted as saying, "What this program says is that we can't solve the adult literacy problem but we can work with the children."
In addition to the deleterious effects of these types of comments on adult literacy education funding, they foment racist thinking and the denigration of African-Americans and others whose performance on various standardized tests are below those of Whites. For these
reasons it is important for the adult education field to challenge these beliefs with renewed commitments to educational practice. The National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL) of 2003 showed that 67 percent of African-American adults scored at the Basic or Below Basic literacy levels for prose tasks. Unfortunately enrollments of African-Americans in the Adult Education and Literacy system of the United States fell by 13,073 from 548,562 in fiscal year 2000-01 to 535,489 in fiscal year 2003-04, the last year for which I have found data for the nation. Concerted efforts are needed to attract adult African-Americans with underdeveloped literacy skills into adult literacy education programs and to provide the best education possible.
>From researchers in the field of adult literacy education, help is needed in dispelling these ideas about intelligence. Even discussing conceptual frameworks such as "multiple intelligences" may
give some the impression that there is something "real" about various intelligences with which one could be genetically endowed. This includes verbal and quantitative intelligences of the sort generally used in developing IQ tests and pointed to as factors distinguishing African-Americans as inferior to Whites in intelligence. Despite 15 years of federally funded adult literacy research centers, I have yet to find any research by adult literacy researchers with which to counter the arguments by the Nobel Prize winners, mal-informed popular journalists, and philanthropists cited above, and others not cited. This suggests that there is an urgent need for adult literacy researchers to fight against the ideological foundations of racism that stigmatize adult literacy education in general and the literacy education of African-American adults in particular.
NOTE: For an extended discussion of issues related to ideas that
marginalize adult literacy education see the last of my papers at http://adulted.about.com/od/adultbasiceducation/a/sticht.htm This paper deals with issues of IQ, brain science, adult literacy and debunks myths that hold adult literacy education back.
Thomas G. Sticht International Consultant in Adult Education 2062 Valley View Blvd. El Cajon, CA 92019-2059 Tel/fax: (619) 444-9133 Email: tsticht@xxxxxxxxx
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