Necessary for the
shift from academics to limited learning for lifelong labor “It is one of the happy incidents of the
federal system that a single courageous state may, if its citizens
choose, serve as a laboratory; and try novel social and economic experiments
without risk to the rest of the country.” — Justice Louis
Brandeis, 1932
In 1972, Florida’s
Associate Commissioner of Education, Cecil Golden, said: “What we’re doing should soon become very visible.” However,
he estimates it will take seven to ten years before the program is completely
operational.…
“Golden says it may sound like a lot of gibberish at this point, but “when we bring it all together” it should produce a more flexible and relevant educational system.… “He said many people in the State Department of Education are working independently on various facets and aspects of the program and, like those assembling the atom bomb, “very few of them understand exactly what they are building, and won’t until we put all the parts together.” “Schools to Try New Program,” The Ledger (Tallahassee), 7/27/72 [bold added] [Continue reading]
“Golden says it may sound like a lot of gibberish at this point, but “when we bring it all together” it should produce a more flexible and relevant educational system.… “He said many people in the State Department of Education are working independently on various facets and aspects of the program and, like those assembling the atom bomb, “very few of them understand exactly what they are building, and won’t until we put all the parts together.” “Schools to Try New Program,” The Ledger (Tallahassee), 7/27/72 [bold added] [Continue reading]
Was Florida “one single courageous state” (a pilot) or
were there many others? And did the citizens of Florida vote on this monumental
change which would affect education forever? Commissioner Golden was talking
about the use in education of the computerized Planning, Programming,
Budgeting System (PPBS), being implemented nationwide today. However,
Golden was too optimistic about anyone figuring it out “until we put all the parts together.”
Evidently there were many traditional administrators
and teachers who had figured it out and who resisted this total shift from
academics to PPBS and its Skinnerian outcomes/performance-based education!
The parts have been put together since 1985, at least. However… still… nobody,
except a handful of academically-oriented teachers and administrators, understands exactly what they are building!
Or “wants to understand what they are building?”
How is it possible that since 1972…over a period of 52
years. nobody, except a few teachers and administrators, has yet figured
“it” out?
Martha Spaulding, researcher of educational and constitutional
issues from New Hampshire, has figured “it” out and she hit the jackpot with
discovering the Justice Brandeis quote. Martha wrote to me:“…I wanted
to make sure you see the analogy that I made to the concept of “New Federalism”
[block grants] and Outcome Based Education and Skinner’s laboratory rats
being the people in the States. “I wasn’t aware of the term New Federalism
until you mentioned it, Charlotte. Here’s what I found about Nixon’s “New Federalism”:
“’New Federalism is a political philosophy of devolution,
or the transfer of certain powers from the United States federal government back to the states. The primary
objective of New Federalism, unlike that of the eighteenth-century political
philosophy of Federalism, is the restoration to the states of some of the autonomy
and power which they lost to the federal government as a consequence of President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal.’
“’As a policy theme, New Federalism typically involves
the federal government providing block grants to the states to resolve a
social issue. The federal government then monitors outcomes but provides
broad discretion to the states for how the programs are implemented. Advocates
of this approach sometimes cite a quotation from a dissent by Louis Brandeis in
New State Ice Co. v. Liebmann:’
“’It is one of the happy incidents of the federal system
that a single courageous state may, if its citizens choose, serve as a laboratory;
and try novel social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of
the country.’ “Isn’t it interesting that they
seem to be using outcome-based “Federalism” with the states being their laboratories
for their experiments on “New Federalism”? “They are treating states and the
people in America like rats in a cage used for experimentation and Justice
Brandeis proudly used this analogy in a U.S. Supreme Court decision.
Wouldn’t B.F. Skinner be proud?”
I responded to Martha that now she could research PPBS, especially
by reading my book the deliberate dumbing down of America where I included much documentation on the Skinnerian
outcomes-based system first developed by Russian Wassily Leontief. This
system would be implemented by Robert McNamara, when he was President of
Ford Motor Company, and shortly thereafter it was used by federal government
(U.S. Office of Education and Dept. of Defense during the Vietnam War.)
PPBS is related to Management By Objectives (MBO) and Total Quality Management
(TQM). It subsequently extended its totalitarian tentacles into all federal,
state and local departments/agencies—very useful for current UN Agenda 21 (Regionalism
which is Communism). I told Martha to be sure to read Mary Thompson’s great
speech in 1972 regarding PPBS in my book, pages 110–111.
Now, take a look at the following very recent excellent
article related to the role of the late Robert McNamara in the installation
of “THE INPUT/OUTPUT MANAGEMENT AND CONTROL SYSTEM” we are looking at today.
From a report titled “The Dictatorship of Data: Robert McNamara epitomizes
the hyper-rational executive led astray by numbers,” by Kenneth Cukier and
Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, May 31, 2013, in Technology Review we can learn:
“Big data is poised to transform society, from how we diagnose
illness to how we educate children, even making it possible for a car to
drive itself. Information is emerging as a new economic input, a vital
resource. Companies, governments, and even individuals will be measuring
and optimizing everything possible.
“But there is a dark side. Big data erodes privacy. And
when it is used to make predictions about what we are likely to do but
haven’t yet done, it threatens freedom as well. Yet big data also exacerbates
a very old problem: relying on the numbers when they are far more fallible
than we think. Nothing underscores the consequences of data analysis gone
awry more than the story of Robert McNamara.
“McNamara was a numbers guy. Appointed the U.S. secretary
of defense when tensions in Vietnam rose in the early 1960s, he insisted on
getting data on everything he could. Only by applying statistical rigor,
he believed, could decision makers understand a complex situation and
make the right choices. The world in his view was a mass of unruly information
that—if delineated, denoted, demarcated, and quantified—could be tamed by
human hand and fall under human will. McNamara sought Truth, and that Truth
could be found in data. Among the numbers that came back to him was the
“body count.”
My friend Martha Spaulding might have wondered what all of
this has to do with Common Core and the restructuring of education into
the Soviet Poly Technical global workforce training system that spins off
profits for the global elite. So I told her some important history about how
it all came about.
President Reagan, who had run on a platform promising
to get rid of the U.S. Dept. of Education, appointed T. H. Bell of Utah as
Secretary of Education (even though Bell had in 1978 testified before Congress
in favor of the creation of the U.S.
Dept. of Education!) Needless to say, the U.S. Dept. of Education
still exists and controls the whole show, including Common (Communist)
Core, lifelong workforce training, and tax-funded school choice/charters
with no elected voter representation on school boards. (See the many articles
on my blog abcsofdumbdown.blogspot.com where I’ve written on this topic.)
All of the above nefarious/treasonous activity could not
have taken place without the implementation in the nation’s schools of McNamara
and T.H. Bell’s PPBS and its accompanying computer technology to “measure”
and “remediate” (based on Skinnerian operant conditioning methods)
your children’s and their teachers so that they would exhibit the prescribed
state-sanctioned thoughts, actions, and beliefs. This is all spelled out in
Prof. Benjamin Bloom’s book All Our Children Learning” (see page
180). Each citizen’s potential importance to the corporations would be
assessed to determine how useful they would be to the UN “technocrats/ change
agents” involved in changing America’s Capitalist system to a Communist
planned economy. (Go to www.americandeception.com and type in the word “Conclusions” in the search box to
download the Carnegie landmark book Conclusions and Recommendations
for the Social Studies, 1934, which calls for using the schools to change
America’s Capitalist economic system to a planned economy, and in some
instances for the seizing of private property.)
Secretary Bell wrote a book about the need for Educational
Systems Management in 1974. According to the head of the Utah Education
Association, who was a close associate of Bell’s in the early 1970s, if the
Senate Committee that confirmed T.H. Bell as Secretary of Education had
read Bell’s A Performance Accountability System for School Administrators,
it is unlikely Bell would have been confirmed. Bell’s book stated:
“The Need for a Management System
Under the pressure of the free-enterprise system and the unremitting demand that large corporations earn profits and pay dividends to stockholders, management efficiency through orientation to results has led to development of management systems such as the one described in this book. Most of the successful corporations in the United States now use annually adopted objectives as a means of focusing the energies and efforts of managers on the attainment of goals that are widely known and broadly accepted. Although the problems of educational management are obviously quite different from those of the private sector, there is much to be learned from industry’s systems approach in gaining more efficiency in educational management. The outcomes are quite similar…. (p. 21)
Under the pressure of the free-enterprise system and the unremitting demand that large corporations earn profits and pay dividends to stockholders, management efficiency through orientation to results has led to development of management systems such as the one described in this book. Most of the successful corporations in the United States now use annually adopted objectives as a means of focusing the energies and efforts of managers on the attainment of goals that are widely known and broadly accepted. Although the problems of educational management are obviously quite different from those of the private sector, there is much to be learned from industry’s systems approach in gaining more efficiency in educational management. The outcomes are quite similar…. (p. 21)
“Use of Tests in Needs Assessments
The economic, sociological, psychological and physical aspects of students must be taken into account as we look at their educational needs and accomplishments, and fortunately there are a number of attitude and inventory scales that can be used to assess these admittedly difficult to measure outcomes….
The economic, sociological, psychological and physical aspects of students must be taken into account as we look at their educational needs and accomplishments, and fortunately there are a number of attitude and inventory scales that can be used to assess these admittedly difficult to measure outcomes….
“Most of these efforts to manage
education try to center in one place an information center that receives
reports and makes available to all members of the management team various
types of information useful to managers….
“School management by objectives demands more use of educational
tests and measures.” (p. 33–35) [emphasis added] For those who may doubt the
legitimacy of longtime education researchers’ concerns over this computerized
PPBS educational management system, read on…
In 1984 Schooling and Technology, Vol. 3, Planning
for the Future: A Collaborative Model, An Interpretive Report on Creative
Partnerships in Technology—An Open Forum by Dustin H. Heuston, World
Institute for Computer-Assisted Teaching (WICAT) was published (Southeastern
Regional Council for Educational Improvement: Research Triangle Park,
North Carolina, 1984) under a grant from the U.S. Office of Education, HEW,
National Institute of Education. An excerpt from “Discussion: Developing
the Potential of an Amazing Tool” in Schooling and Technology follows:
“We’ve been absolutely staggered by realizing that the
computer has the capability to act as if it were ten of the top psychologists
working with one student.… You’ve seen the tip ofthe iceberg. Won’t it be wonderful when the child in the
smallest county in the most distant area or in the most confused urban setting
can have the equivalent of the finest school in the world on that terminal
and no one can get between that child and the curriculum? We have great
moments coming in the history of education.”
So, thank you Martha for your astute observation regarding
the changes in our governmental structure partially due to Justice
Brandeis’s 1932 ruling and to its ramifications (unwanted experimental
purposes) from President Nixon to present-day President Obama.
These are changes which have basically ignored the wishes
of the American people by first requiring the sending of their tax money
to the federal level and then, gratuitously, the returning it to us with
strings (regulations) attached!
This is surely not the Federalism about which President
James Madison so eloquently wrote.
For more information, please refer to following additional
entries in my book the deliberate dumbing down of America regarding Planning, Programming and Budgeting Systems
(PPBS). Just use the index and you will find a wealth of information. You can
download a copy of my book online for free at www.deliberatedumbingdown.com. Stay in touch with current education reform agendas by
reading my blog, with its timely daily updates: abcsofdumbdown.blogspot.com.
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Source:http://agenda21news.com/2014/11/common-cores-global-management-system/#more-3737CommentsEducation in the US is toast. Dismantling it from the top is a start. It turns out that Homeschooling is the only thing that works. It was used successfully until 1900. It even worked after the little schoolhouse was built by volunteers and a teacher hired from a nearby college. In 1930, US literacy was the highest on the planet. After the government took over, it went downhill fast. Any questions ?Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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