Monday, October 21, 2013
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Common Core OP-ED Marietta Daily Journal
Thanks To Todd Rehm from Gapundit for bringing this to our attention.
Nancy
Jester: Common Core no path to prosperity
Nancy Jester, the former DeKalb County Board of
Education member whose whistle-blower letter to SACS about financial
irregularities led, ironically, to her removal with the rest of the Board
members who were in office at the time, has penned an
Op-Ed at the Marietta Daily Journal about Common Core.
It's worth reading because it's got
more facts than most discussions of the controversial federal standards, and it
also lays bare some issues with the Georgia standards that predate Common Core.
The National Governors
Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers may have had the
best intentions, but as the process unfolded, political motivations and agendas
took over. A recessionary economy and falling property values created budget
crises in school districts across the country.
Into this situation, President
Obama's Race to the Top grants offered a much needed infusion of federal money
conditioned on adopting Common Core. At that point, Common Core ceased being
voluntary and was no longer an effort to define rigorous standards with broad
acceptance.
Once linked to grant money, the
power over education standards shifted from states and districts to the federal
level.
With Common Core in Georgia, we're
told that the standards are closely aligned with Georgia's existing standards,
as if that should make us all feel better.
In the early 2000s, the Georgia
Department of Education adopted a social studies curriculum that is almost
completely devoid of education on The Bill of Rights in elementary school. Yet,
in third grade, we teach our children about the nine important people who
"expanded rights." Those nine people are: Paul Revere, Frederick
Douglass, Susan B. Anthony, Mary McLeod Bethune, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Eleanor
Roosevelt, Thurgood Marshall, Lyndon B. Johnson, and César Chávez.
The same Georgia Department of
Education asks us to trust them on adopting Common Core standards. The Georgia
DOE that has been at the helm as we performed so poorly as a state on most
education metrics.
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