The Chamber either needs to mind its own
business or get educated on what Common Core really is.
June 5, 2014 By Joy Pullmann
Several
local Chamber of Commerce members in different states have told me the
organization is turning into its industry’s equivalent of the PTA: A shill for
the establishment rather than a unique voice actively protecting the changing
interests of its constituents.
That’s
clearly the case in Oklahoma, where Gov. Mary Fallin must feel like the prom
queen this week because everyone’s trying to influence whether she signs a bill
to repeal Common Core. You know, the national curriculum and testing mandates
the Obama administration pushed states to sign before they could see what was in them? Yeah, those.
The
Oklahoma Chamber, some local Chambers, and a few similar groups including the
PTA, took out massive ads in The Oklahoman yesterday (June 4). The
headline: “We oppose HB3399 because it jeopardizes our students’ futures.” At
the bottom, the ad says it was paid for by the Collaborative for Student
Success, which appears to be the latest project from Common Core’s primary bankroller, Bill
Gates (with the help of a few oligarch friends).
The
Chamber has also been robocalling people in an attempt to match the grassroots
fury that delivered 8,000 signatures to Fallin this week, asking her to sign
the bill. The bill is far better than the Common Core rebrand Indiana Gov. Mike
Pence signed in April. Among other things, it would require comparing the
state’s new curriculum and testing guidelines to Common Core to ensure the two
are actually different, not largely the same with a different name, like
Indiana’s.
That
puts Fallin in a pincer. She can’t fake it like Pence did. She either has to
actually reject Common Core or actually support it. Either way, she goes
against a key supporter: The business lobby that helped get her elected, or the
grassroots who are all too ready to vote for her Democratic opponent this fall
if she doesn’t. (Gubernatorial candidate Joe Dorman has opposed Common Core from the beginning, rare for a
Democrat despite a recent flurry of union statements against the initiative.)
Her decision will determine whether she stands with business interests or her
constituents at large. Fallin told a parent she would sign the bill if it reached her desk,
but she’s had ample opportunity to follow through on that promise and continues
to stall. Her deadline is Saturday.
Governors
across the country are now making similar decisions. South Carolina’s Nikki
Haley just signed a bill to replace Common Core. North Carolina Gov.
Pat McCrory will likely see a similar bill soon. In Louisiana, Gov. Bobby
Jindal has gotten strident about opposing Common Core, but has yet to
back his words with action. Business interests are also a key Jindal ally,
standing by his side to get statewide school vouchers and weather federal
attacks afterwards. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce even included footage
of Jindal in a promotional video for Common Core.
Locking In the Old Economy
The
question presents itself: Why would business organizations present an
initiative with no track record as the Great White Hope? The answer reveals
that business as an institution, like so many of our great American
institutions, has rot at its core.
Any
business leader who treated his work as the business lobby has Common Core
would quickly find his rear end handed to him, either by the market or by his
boss. For one, Common Core is a completely untested product. It was forced onto
almost every school not even in beta form, but as an untried prototype.
Literally nobody had ever tried Common Core before everybody had to.
If
that doesn’t concern anyone, the research showing Common Core cannot be
effective should. Perhaps the best evidence of this is a 2012 Brookings Institution study showing that the curriculum
mandates people call “standards” have no effect on student performance, no
matter how high or low they set the bar. If not that, perhaps someone looked at
international experiences? Because on the TIMMS international tests in 2007, nine of the 10
lowest-scoring countries in math, and 8 of the lowest-scoring countries in
science have centralized education standards. The same is true for 8 of the 10
highest-scoring countries. That alone should pause the “standards
movement,” if the last 30 years of pursuing it with little improvement don’t
themselves.
Common
Core proponents have spent a king’s ransom ($147 million so far from Gates
alone for Common Core advocacy, by my count) producing reams of advocacy research to justify
their push for nationalizing U.S. education. Independent reviews of this “research” have concluded those dollars would probably help kids more if
handed out as toilet paper.
Business
interests keep telling us they support Common Core because they need kids to
learn something so they can get a job. And nobody disagrees with that desire.
So why does the Chamber trust an air castle to bring it to fruition? Milton
Friedman may have the answer. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xp2eqQ8Msbs
http://thefederalist.com/2014/06/05/is-the-chamber-of-commerce-jumping-the-shark-on-common-core/
http://thefederalist.com/2014/06/05/is-the-chamber-of-commerce-jumping-the-shark-on-common-core/
This
relates in two ways. First, it indicates businesses are all too comfy acting
like the protected class, of which government education is a prime example. So
they have a natural sympathy for bureaucratic non-solutions to social and
political problems. But, second, it shows that the businesses of today want
workers fit for the business they have today, so they don’t have to bear the
pressure of shifting their business to fit tomorrow’s economy. If they can lock
in tomorrow’s labor force to their current structure, they can ensure their
survival through labor force capture rather than shifting continually and
rapidly to serve consumers and their employees.
The
danger to the Chamber of reflexively following this pattern, though, is finding
itself in ten years a has-been that serves old companies, but not that moment’s
new economic constellation. That makes it likely new companies will spurn the
Chamber because it doesn’t protect their interests, ensuring the Chamber’s
current actions equal slow suicide.
In
the end, then, perhaps the business establishment’s support for Common Core proves
families and politicians like Fallin should reject it.
Source:http://thefederalist.com/2014/06/05/is-the-chamber-of-commerce-jumping-the-shark-on-common-core/
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