Saturday, May 4, 2013

Rotten to the Common Core


Common Core: Another Johnny-come-lately, one-size-fits-all national standard that
attempts to fix a problem created by the original national standard; our public school
system. Rotten to the Common Core By Matt Shipley Thursday, May 2, 2013
 
Common Core, an education program developed with funding from the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation to improve academic standards in public schools,
will fall far short of its stated objective.
 
Its promoters tout it to be a “state-led effort to establish a single set of clear
educational standards for English-language arts and mathematics…”to provide
teachers, parents and students with a set of well defined expectations and
“high standards that are consistent across states…”
 
Underlying these statements is the proposition public schools are not performing
very well or completely failing to educate students to a necessary standard. Based
on the fact SAT scores, since 1962, have twice been adjusted downward to
artificially depict higher scores among students taking the exam but have continued
to decline and national literacy scores
continue to decline as a percentage of the United States population it is difficult to
refute the dysfunctional public school proposition. Their solution to this very real
problem, however, is like putting a gang green infected band aid on a gangrenous
open wound.
 
Common Core is just another Johnny-come-lately, one-size-fits-all national
standard that attempts to fix a problem created by the original national standard;
our public school system.
 
America’s modern public school system is the manifestation of its founder’s vision,
the father of American public education, Horace Mann. Horace Mann, a Unitarian Massachusetts school board member in the 1840s, wrote twelve annual reports
on public education that was to become the foundation of every public school in
America. Mann prototyped his “Common Schools” in his reports on the Prussian
school system.
 
Prussia was the first European state to institute public schools, from which every
other country in Europe modeled their public schools. So it is no coincidence Mann
modeled his “Common Schools” off the ones he observe in Prussia while visiting
schools in Europe. Neither is it a coincidence Prussia, known for its autocratic and
dictatorial society that ultimately unified the other German states under its control,
would impose an uncompromising uniform standard upon its population.
 
In his seventh report, Mann ironically claimed, “we do not desire to copy or to study
the systems of foreign nations, usually so different from our own,” but then he went
on to say “surely we may copy his [the Prussian school system’s] modes of teaching these elements, without adopting his notions of passive obedience to the government.
” Evidence of Mann’s lack of success in adopting the Prussian model without
instituting its passive obedience to the government is found in America’s modern
myopic obedience to the national government.
 
That America has become passively obedient to the national government can be
seen throughout the 20th and the 21st Century in that Americans sit passively by
or actively cheer when: Congress passes laws violating the Constitution, Presidents
exceed their limited authority by issuing orders not supported by any law passed by Congress and the Supreme Court, when asked to interpose on behalf of we the
people, uphold these things through the most ridiculous, convoluted, humanistic
and illogical arguments a human mind can conjure. One only need compare the
grievances listed in the Declaration of Independence to similar modern occurrences
to see contemporary American society does not have the political will of its
forefathers.
 
For America, that was founded on and has celebrated its diversity of ideas,
extensive government control and standardization of any kind seems counter
intuitive. The framers of the Constitution were careful to preserve the
independence of the States by only delegating finite powers to the national
government. This allowed the citizens of each State to preserve their cultural
diversity and pursue their own happiness.
 
Now, control over students in what and how they learn has been institutionalized
in America by Mann via public schools. Mann, through his Common School
system, was able to undo what so many sacrificed in the War of Independence
to acquire and the founders carefully guarded in both the Articles of Confederation
and the Constitution. This centralized control over public school students continues
to grow and its latest adaptation is the voluntarily imposed Common Core
curriculum. Strips parental oversight of what children should be taught
 
Common Core is rotten to the core, because no one can justify its expense by any
potential gains in scholastic improvement, it strips parental oversight of what
children should be taught, and it is a one-size-fits-all program that will not serve
any child to their maximum potential.
 
First, according to the Pioneer Institute and the American Principles Project, which conducted a state by state comprehensive cost analysis[1] of implementing
Common Core, in Pennsylvania alone the extra cost of implementation was
estimated to be $645 million. As of January 2012, Pennsylvania was set to receive
only $40 million in Obama’s Race to the Top funds, which were contingent upon
adoption of Common Core standards, student Longitudinal data collection, and a
teacher evaluation program.
 
Adding this up, for the adoption of a national standard, Pennsylvania might receive
up to 6% of the extra costs from the government, but will have to foot the bill for
over a half a billion dollars on their own. None of this makes fiscal sense when
considering if Pennsylvania did not adopt any other new program their education
costs would remain relatively constant.
 
Second, if parents allow the government or any other entity to dictate how their
children must be educated or what they must learn, the parents might as well just
give their children to the government or entity to raise. Even now, parents have
limited control over what children are taught in public schools and everyone has
to pay for public schools whether they have children or not. Common Core will
add more of the same to an already burdensome tax system through another layer
of bureaucracy whose standards, if history is any indication, have limited hope of
being achieved.
 
Third, children are not ginger bread men to be cut out of common dough; they are
unique individuals with unique learning talents, interests and needs. A common
standard may fit everyone, but it will not fit anyone very well and its results will be
as disappointing as the results from the public schools system, which the program
is intended to fix.
 
Furthermore, children in America do not belong to any government, community,
business, or labor consortium. They belong to their parents and to them alone.
Parents, therefore, must decide the values, morals and information from which
their children will most benefit to live in society. To abdicate this responsibility is
to allow someone else to make decisions that will not always be to the benefit of
the children or the parents.
 
Like every other aspect of life, the Bible provides guidance on whose responsibility
it is to teach children. Any government; national, State, or local that dictates what
children must be taught and extorts money through taxation to pay for their vision
has overstepped the bounds of their biblical jurisdiction. Romans 13:3-5 describes
the purpose of government: to wield the sword of justice against evil doers, but  
nowhere in the Bible will you find education as one of its functions.
 
In Proverbs 22:6, one will find the Bible giving responsibility of a
child’s education to parents. The Bible also states in Proverbs 1:7, “The fear of the
Lord is the beginning of knowledge,” and since public schools have completely
pushed Christ out of the classroom it is no wonder their academic performance
has gone with Him.
 
Mann’s utopian pursuit of standardized universal “free education” was the European totalitarian bridgehead into America and it has turned into the coercive failed public
school system America has today. Like all utopias, the only way to achieve them is
through coercion.
 
This coercion is nearly absent from non-publicly funded schools and these schools
most always cost less to operate and produce better educational results in nearly
every measurable way than their publicly funded counterparts. A 1997 study[2]
found home schooled children, on the average, outperformed their public school counterparts by 30 to 37 percentile points on all subjects. These findings were
further supported by Dr. Lawrence Rudner who found children that were
homeschooled all their school aged years had the highest academic achievement.
 
Since uniformity and top down imposed standards have not worked, the solution to deteriorating performance in America’s public schools is simple, return responsibility for education to parents by defunding public schools and restoring parents’ right to
decide where and how to educate their children.
 
Some may argue defunding public schools would deprive many “under privileged”
children of an education, but considering what they receive now, it might actually
be an improvement. Besides, violation of property rights, through taxation for public
schools, or any other violation of the rights specifically mentioned in the Declaration
of Independence is never justified, no matter how noble the cause. Additionally,
it is an individual’s responsibility to be charitable to the under privileged, because
when a government does it through taxation it is called theft or extortion, not charity.
 
Much of the resistance to defunding public schools comes from the fact most people living today, who grew up in America, are a product of a public school, have known no
other system of education, and cannot imagine how another system would work.
Those who think this way are oblivious to the fact that prior to 1840, all American
schools were non-public, biblically based, and produced the founding culture, which
in turn established the most successful nation in the history of the world. The secularized standardization of Common Core, by contrast, is rotten to the core just like the seed
of “Common Schools” from which it was germinated that produced the culture who
voted for the politicians America has today. If people were to take the time to
compare the results of the two systems they too would see for themselves what
Mann has done to education.
 
Source:  Canada Free Press, 5/2/13, Rotten to the Common Core by Matt Shipley http://canadafreepress.com
[1] Pioneer Institute and American Principles Project, National Costs to Aligning
States and Localities to the Common Core Standards, No 82, February 2012.
[2] Dr. Brian Ray, Strengths of Their Own: Home Schoolers Across America.
 
 

 

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