Back in the day, guidance counselors were those helpful (but not unduly intrusive) high school officials who dispensed vocational and career advice, reminded you of college application deadlines, and made sure your transcripts and letters of recommendations got where they needed to go. But like so much else in the 1960s and 1970s, traditional roles fell to radical transformation. A cadre of new and radicalized school counselors appointed themselves “comprehensive” providers of “social and emotional learning,” mental health coaching, and sexual education proselytizing.
And now, all hell has broken loose.
Modern school counselors are zealous social justice meddlers bent on replacing parents and exposing your children early and often to anti-white, anti-American, anti-nuclear family propaganda. Speakers at the American School Counselor Association (ASCA) brag openly about being “master manipulators” of children and train their members on how to “become an LGBTQ-inclusive school.” Intrepid whistleblowers at Courage Is a Habit, an action-oriented group founded by Indiana parent activist Alvin Lui, videotaped multiple seminars held at ASCA’s 2022 national conference in July. They collected conference materials outlining “learning objectives” such as being able to “define transgender, gender expansive and other important terms related to sexuality and gender identity” and “how to identify legal resources” for transgender and gender expansive students.
School counselors at the conference were also told to collect data and snitch on any student “who is not transgender and complains about being uncomfortable” with transgender and gender expansive students—complaints which ASCA deems a form of “bullying and harassment.”
Courage Is a Habit also caught ASCA’s past president and current Ethics Committee Chairman, Carolyn Stone, laughing as she told attendees about a school counselor who took a child to a clinic to obtain contraceptives in defiance of her mother’s wishes. That counselor asked Stone for advice on what to do next. Stone gave a group pop quiz: Do you tell the counselor to tell the child “to tell her parent,” or “two, do you tell the girl’s mother yourself and confess,” or “three,” withhold all information and “hold your breath and pray?” The conference broke out in cackling laughter as they all voted for the third, parental autonomy-undermining choice, at which point Stone exulted that “you are all ready to be part of the ethics committee.”
No wonder ASCA’s conference was titled “No Limits.”
As I’ve reported the past three decades, the overriding agenda of the education elite and their ancillary left-wing allies in the nonprofit, corporate and government swamps is to drive a wedge between parents and children. That’s what the establishment of school-based health clinics was all about—as was “outcome-based education,” Common Core math, the infiltration of Big Tech, critical race theory, and the entirety of “social-emotional learning” conditioning for which school counselors act as “master manipulators.” Their. Own. Words.
As Courage Is a Habit’s founder Alvin Lui told me this week, “One of the biggest hurdles parents face is that schools hire third parties that delivers surveys, SEL lessons, resources, etc., and it’s technically not part of the ‘curriculum.’ So when parents say ‘let me see the curriculum,’ it doesn’t always look so bad but they aren’t aware of all these third parties. For the parents who are aware, they get stonewalled because they say that it’s a third party so the material is proprietary.” In the same vein, school counselors are not a part of any K-12 curriculum or policy, “but they train school counselors in all these highly woke methods and ideas, and the school counselors pass that to children. Unless parents know who ASCA is and really dig, they have no idea where to even look.”
Vampires and cockroaches hate sunlight, so you won’t be shocked to learn that ASCA has taken vicious measures to deplatform Courage Is a Habit for its highly effective, fair-use critiques of the “No Limits” conference. The woke school counselor mafia pressured Lui’s website hosting provider (Carrd), web server provider (Amazon Web Services), and Google Drive to censor links and documents related to their Behind Closed Doors campaign. I’d call such Maoist tactics shocking, but that’s the way end-stage America rolls these days.
Protecting parents and simply demanding transparency has now earned Courage Is a Habit and like-minded groups like Moms for Liberty the label “far-right” by, um, far-left Mother Jones magazine. (Same old, same old: That’s what the Southern Poverty Law Center called us nearly a decade ago when we resisted Common Core). But as always, catching flak equals over the target. Lui and his crew are doing incredibly vital work arming parents with information about what’s going on “Behind Closed Doors” in the schools. More importantly, they provide concrete action plans on how to fight back against groomers and brainwashers turning children against their families.
Mark Ousley, an Oklahoma education activist, told me Courage Is a Habit offers “tangible and accessible tools to help parents and advocates like me push back against what is a massive and complicated bureaucratic monster.” That includes the conniving school counselors indoctrinating students in the transgender cult, birth control worship, and white guilt. Even more than a habit, courage is a muscle. Parents, flex it now or surrender your children.
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7 comments
7 Comments
Doug
September 15, 2022, 12:07 am"end-stage America", pray it ain’t so….well done as always, kudos to ‘Courage Is A Habit’
REPLYRobert Miller
September 15, 2022, 3:40 amThis is so far from the way schools function it is laughable. Social emotional learning has a secret agenda? And if parents ask about it the school doesn’t have to explain because it is not part of the curriculum? Just not true.
REPLYSEL is the process of developing self-awareness, self-control, and interpersonal skills that are vital for school, work, and life success.
From effective problem-solving to self-discipline, from impulse control to emotion management and more, SEL provides a foundation for positive, long-term effects on kids, adults, and communities. Who could be against learning to share, deal with emotions, set goals, and so on? That’s how SEL looks in Iowa anyway.
sally L sweet@Robert Miller
September 15, 2022, 12:10 pmI wonder why you would be on this site. There’s nothing intellectual about counselors and teachers weaning children from their parents’ values, and that has been the stated goal for thirty years. I have plenty of documentation of that. When my teacher colleagues and I were urging educators to return to their appropriate role, and when we spoke about educational excellence, we were called the "academic rigor nuts." I wasn’t to teach English grammar, because it was racist, sexist, and classist." Counselors were holding after-school sessions for kids and taking them on weekend camping trips to discuss any questions or uncertainty about their sexuality. They focused on the "at risk, reduced lunch" kids, because there was less scrutiny of trusted school personnel in those homes. I would be thrilled if all the school counselors left schools for other jobs in the social services somewhere. They are destructive.
REPLYsally L sweet@Robert Miller
September 15, 2022, 12:28 pmOur criticism of social, emotional learning is laughable. There’s not secret agenda. Here’s an example. On my teaching planning period, I walk past a classroom with the door closed. My most enjoyable and highly educated colleague is showing a movie, to his class of 6th graders, and I see that some have their heads down on their desks and some are crying. So I enter without knocking. The movie is showing an old Inuit woman being set afloat on an iceberg to drift out and die, because she is no longer useful to the tribe. It’s their culture, and she bravely waves goodbye forever to her family. Her grandchildren wave goodbye. That’s not an American value, and why was it being promoted in a Virginia school? I was outraged. We elicit tears from children as we wear them from their parents’ cultural and religious values. Shame on the WOKE educators who have been dominant for 50 years. VOUCHERS.
REPLYShannen Perez @Robert Miller
September 18, 2022, 8:20 pmKids in first and second grade with curriculum that suggests either having a counselor in the class when taught or aware of a lesson being taught for that day is not ok in any way shape or form. Problem solving, discipline, self control are one thing. Sadness and anxiety are not things young kids should be worried about dealing with at school. I have read several lessons that advise teachers to alert a counselor in regards to how some kids could react.
REPLYDr. Douglas Pietersma
September 15, 2022, 2:51 pmParents are right to be concerned about curriculum content, but much influence can be exerted outside of formal classroom instruction, and nothing seems more nefarious than these behind-closed-door “counseling” sessions which are impenetrable by parents. Even if parents think that their children’s schools aren’t doing this (because they live in a conservative state like mine), there is no way to know for sure. Because of the industry standard (as expressed in this article) of counselors usurping parental authority at every opportunity, no parent can afford to assume that this is not already occurring or shortly to come in their children’s school.
REPLYAshley
September 16, 2022, 9:46 pmThis is literally what I’m experiencing and I have no clue how to stop it.
REPLY