Common Core in Mississippi might be on the chopping
block if Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves has his way. Reeves told Mississippi
Watchdog in a phone interview Monday he supports scrapping Common
Core and replacing it with another
curriculum.
The Republican said he wants to form a task force of
parents, teachers and business leaders to investigate a new curriculum
to replace Common Core, which has been under fire in the state by the Mississippi
Senate Conservative Coalition and others.
Reeves said he’s inspired to junk the curriculum because
of Oklahoma’s experience with Common Core. The state lost its waiver from
the most onerous standards of the 2001 No Child Left Behind Act for returning
to its old curriculum, but later appealed and got its waiver back.
“Oklahoma was the straw that broke the camel’s back,”
Reeves said. “They (the federal government) was going to penalize
Oklahoma’s kids because their leaders wanted a better approach. That final
decision by the U.S. Department of Education that convinced me what
started as a state-led initiative has been hijacked by the Obama administration.
I just don’t believe we can accept this heavy-handedness from Washington.”
The move aligns Reeves, who could face a primary challenge
from the right in 2015, with other Republicans in the region. Mississippi
Gov. Phil Bryant has stated his opposition to the curriculum and signed an executive
order in 2013 to ensure the state and not
the federal government would be in charge of developing a new curriculum. Louisiana
Gov. Bobby Jindal has taken his state off the new standards.
Mississippi adopted the new standards for math and
science in 2010 — one of 46 states participating — and testing of students
was to begin in 2015. The Mississippi Department of Education said in a statement that junking Common Core would be “changing the playbook
in the middle of the game” and could be costly. Last year, the state spent
$694,000 implementing Common Core.
The Reeves-led Senate defeated an amendment added
by Conservative Coalition members to the education funding bill
to defund the implementation of Common Core. The measure was defeated
by a 39–11 vote.
Reeves was quick to correct any notion he was changing his
views on Common Core.
“I don’t believe I’ve changed my position,” Reeves told Mississippi
Watchdog. “My position has been for numerous years now that I felt like we
should monitor the implementation (of Common Core), but I don’t think
you’ll find me quoted anywhere saying that I supported it.
“My argument was let’s see what the implementation looks
like and ensure that there was no overreach by the federal government
within that implementation.”
The move drew praise from Grant Callen, president and
founder of Empower Mississippi, a school choice advocacy group.
“I am a firm believer in the notion that education decisions
must be made locally, by those who know a child the best, which is why I’m such
a strong advocate for education choice,” Callen told Mississippi Watchdog
in an e-mail. “Parents know their children best and they ought to be the ones
making decisions about what school they attend.
“The inevitable result of Common Core, or any national curriculum,
is that education decisions about education will be made at the national
level instead of the local level or by parents. So I applaud the Lt. Governor
for his decision to work to end Common Core in Mississippi and am especially
encouraged to hear that he wants to include parents on the study committee
charged with coming up with new standards.”
Also, Reeves told the Stennis Capitol Press Forum on Monday
he intends to support the Special
Needs Bill, which died in the House near the
end of last year’s session. The bill would create a voucher system to
enable parents of children with special needs to send them to a private
school with a certified and specific program unavailable in public
schools.
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Filed Under: EducationSource:http://agenda21news.com/2014/12/lt-gov-lets-scrap-replace-common-core-mississippi/
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