ALOHA, Ore. – Parents of students at an Oregon’s Aloha High School are questioning a recent “white privilege survey” that was assigned to students as homework.

The assignment tasks students with rating different statements with a score of five for “often true,” three for “sometimes true,” and zero for “never true,” KATU reports.

MORE NEWS: Know These Before Moving From Cyprus To The UK

The statements are prefaced with “Because of my race or color …

“I can be in the company of people of my race most of the time.

“If I should need to move, I can be pretty sure of hassle-free renting or purchasing in an area in which I would want to live.

“I can be pretty sure that my neighbors in such a location will be neutral or pleasant to me.

“I can go shopping alone most of the time, pretty well assured that I will not be followed or harassed.

“I can turn on the television or open to the front page of the newspaper and see people of my race widely and positively represented.

“When I am told about our national heritage or about ‘civilization,’ I am shown that people of my race made it what it is.

MORE NEWS: How to prepare for face-to-face classes

“I can be sure that my children (or children from my family) will be given curricular materials that testify to the contribution of their race.”

Jason Schmidt, whose son is a senior at Aloha High School, doesn’t think the survey is appropriate, and encouraged school officials to focus on academics, rather than a political agenda.

“The way that this is read, it almost wants to shame you for being white,” Schmidt told KATU. “I feel like he should be learning actual education and not be a part of some social experiment or some teacher’s political agenda.”

Beaverton School District officials told the news site that lessons delving into race, sexuality and religion are designed to inspire conversations, but Schmidt isn’t buying it.

[xyz-ihs snippet=”NEW-In-Article-Rev-Content-Widget”]

“With the amount of money we pay for schools, they should be educating not indoctrinating our students about the latest political fad or political agenda a teacher wants to get across,” he said.

The Pacific Educational Group, a radical left consulting company that promotes the white privilege perspective on society through six figure teacher training sessions, once listed the Beaverton School District among hundreds of school district clients on its website.

PEG scrubbed that list from its website last year after EAGnews exposed the millions of public tax dollars spent on the white privilege lessons.

The white privilege teacher training sessions are based on the theory that America’s white supremacist system is hopelessly stacked against minorities and the only way white teachers can reach black students is to acknowledge their privileged status and repent for their skin color.

“As a black man I can say that they are hurting black kids,” former St. Paul public school teacher Aaron Benner told EAGnews last spring. “I’ve never seen anything as idiotic as PEG. Everything we do, PEG is at the forefront.

“It’s so comical. PEG says shouting out in class is a black cultural norm, and being on time is a white cultural thing. It’s so demeaning, so condescending to black kids. If a white person were making claims like this, black people would be in an uproar.

“You are not doing kids any favors by making excuses for them because they are black. It’s not a matter of culture if you’re talking about norms that all cultures need to abide by – you cannot throw things or attack your teacher, regardless of your race.”

Another PEG client, the Hillsborough County Schools in Florida, also came under fire from parents this spring when students came home with a quiz they were given on privilege. That assignment asked students to circle the race, skin color, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, and disability that applies to them in an effort to place themselves on the privilege spectrum, WTSP reports.

That assignment was sent out in Spanish class.

Local parent Regina Stile didn’t appreciate the school questioning her 12 year old daughter about whether she’s straight, homosexual, bisexual, asexual or pansexual.

“She’s 12,” Stile told the news site. “Some of these things should be taught at home.”