Saturday, December 6, 2014

Common Core going down in Mississippi

Lt. Gov.: Let’s scrap and replace Common Core in Mississippi, Posted on December 4, 2014 Written by watchdog.org
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.
Bryant applauded the move in a state­ment and called Com­mon Core a “failed program.”
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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