Georgia
Senate Bill 167 is a bill that needs a "rally at the State Capitol." If you are familiar with Race to the Top and
the Common Core Standards for K-12, then you know the potential impact on
Christian schools and home schools. SB 167 will void the adoption of this
curricula, and prohibit state education agencies from entering into any
commitments relating to the federal Race to the Top program.
The full Senate Education and
Youth Committee will consider the bill on Thursday, Feb. 28 in the afternoon
(1:00 or 2:00 p.m.). It is not necessary to have people to speak at the Committee meeting, but it is important to show
a large group of supporters. There may be a Press Conference in the morning where
it would be good to have a crowd of supporters, too.
There are Talking Points to help
you understand this issue. I included links below for further information,
including the impact on private and home schools. This website has much information:
stopcommoncore.com . Also attached
is a list of the Senators on the Committee that is meeting on Thursday. If your
school, or school families, are in any of their districts, please contact them.
Of course, feel free to contact any and all of them.
Here are the links:
Affect of Common Core on Private
school/home school
Legislator wants state to back
out of Common Core curriculum (newspaper article about SB 167)
Common Core K-12 hits home
(affect on home school)
MEMBERS of SENATE EDUCATION COMMITTEE
Sen. Lindsey Tippins Chairman
404-657-0406 lindsey.tippins@senate.ga.gov
John Wilkinson 404-463-5257 john.wilkinson@senate.ga.gov
Freddie Powell Sims 404-463-5259 freddie.sims@senate.ga.gov
Dean Burke 404-656-0040 Dean.Burke@senate.ga.gov
Vincent Fort 404-656-5091 vincent.fort@senate.ga.gov
Chuck Hufstetler 404-656-0034 chuck.hufstetler@senate.ga.gov
Donzella James 404-463-1379 donzella.james@senate.ga.gov
Fran Millar 404-463-2260
Donna.Nealey@senate.ga.gov
Butch Miller 404-656-6578
Caroline.Howard@senate.ga.gov
Jesse Stone 404-463-1314 jesse.stone@senate.ga.gov
Horacena Tate 404-463-8053 horacena.tate@senate.ga.gov
General Talking Points
Common Core Standards Talking Points
• We reject nationalized
standards and centralized educational control across the nation.
• We will not surrender our
constitutional right to control Georgia's educational standards and curriculum
to Washington, D.C. bureaucrats and corporations masquerading as non-profits.
• We demand world-class,
state-directed standards through a transparent, democratic process. We do not
have to settle for a "one-size fits all" Common Core developed behind
closed doors.
• Collection of personal data on
our students from pre-school, through college, and into the workforce for
government planning and research is an invasion of our privacy and our
constitutional rights.
• The computer-generated testing
of the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC)
will become a straightjacket for classroom instruction. Even students in
charter schools will have to take the PARCC tests. This means that charter
schools, like traditional schools, will have to teach the CCSS-aligned
curriculum.
• We require legislative
accountability and up-front cost analysis of all federal grant programs which
push unfunded mandates down to state and local systems.
Objections Based on Constitutional/Federalist/Legal Considerations
• The U.S. Department of
Education coerced states into adopting the Common Core State Standards (CCSS)
by tying their adoption to a chance to compete for Race to the Top grants.
• As explained by Robert Eitel
and Kent Talbert, former deputy general counsel and general counsel,
respectively, of USED, the point of standards is to drive curriculum;
therefore, through CCSS, the federal government is violating these three
statutes: the General Education Provisions Act, the Department of Education
Organization Act, and the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. These
statutes prohibit the U.S. Department of Education (USED) from directing, supervising,
or controlling school curriculum.
• Because PARCC admits that it is
using some of this federal funding to develop "curriculum
frameworks," USED support of PARCC also violates the three federal
statutes.
• In some smaller Georgia school
districts, lack of funds for purchasing new textbooks means that teachers are
directly teaching the CCSS - as one South Georgia superintendent said,
"The standards are the curriculum."
Objections Based on Loss of State Control Over Standards
• Georgia and other states were
required to adopt CCSS word for word - they may not change or delete anything,
and may add only a small amount of content (which will not be included on the
PARCC assessments and therefore probably will not be taught in the classroom).
• There is no defined system for
governance of CCSS in the future - CCSS is owned and copyrighted by NGA and
CCSSO, so those trade associations can determine how much - or how little -
input states will have into future revisions. How can parents, teachers,
citizens, or even legislators have input into this undemocratic, unaccountable
process ?
Objections Based on Cost
• No cost study was done before
Georgia adopted CCSS.
• Georgia's Race to the Top grant
totaled $400 million over four years - much less than the cost of CCSS implementation
and testing. Unfunded mandates and long-term maintenance will cost Georgia
taxpayers far more than the grant money received. Georgia's taxpayers already
pay $13 billion in state and local taxes
for K-12 education every year. A mere $400
million federal grant, over four-years, should not usurp state and local control.
Source: Georgia Home Education
Association Ken Patterson
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