Who is in
control of our children's education?
This shift to the Common Core is a huge lurch away from bottom-up, local control to top-down, centralized control. Common Core is about creating a single pathway to supposed economic and educational success. Think about it, 45 states all adopting the same standards at the same time. 45 states all implementing Common Core testing, nationwide, at the same time. All the publishers and teacher training courses aligning to Common Core at the same time. And, what about college? the ACT and SAT? They, too, will be aligning to Common Core. What are the options should you object, as a parent, as a school, as a district? What are the options if we decide, once we have full implementation and actual experience to back up the Common Core experiment, that we made a mistake? How do we amend? How do we turn back? A few years from now, it will be too late. We have just signed on to a system to eliminate, through attrition, virtually all other options in public education.
This shift to the Common Core is a huge lurch away from bottom-up, local control to top-down, centralized control. Common Core is about creating a single pathway to supposed economic and educational success. Think about it, 45 states all adopting the same standards at the same time. 45 states all implementing Common Core testing, nationwide, at the same time. All the publishers and teacher training courses aligning to Common Core at the same time. And, what about college? the ACT and SAT? They, too, will be aligning to Common Core. What are the options should you object, as a parent, as a school, as a district? What are the options if we decide, once we have full implementation and actual experience to back up the Common Core experiment, that we made a mistake? How do we amend? How do we turn back? A few years from now, it will be too late. We have just signed on to a system to eliminate, through attrition, virtually all other options in public education.
And who made this decision about what our kids will
learn? Five people with a nod from Bill Gates and a couple of DC
lobbying groups, were able to get their untested vision implemented
via financial and legal incentives, as well as disputed promises of
'greater rigor', 'college and career readiness', and 'international
benchmarking'. We have decided to go down this path due, in part, to
incentives, but also to the idea of not being left behind the rest of
the states. That, somehow, Utah wasn't capable of taking care of our
own. It shows a supreme lack of confidence in the people, teachers,
and principals of Utah that our State Board thought they needed to
rush to adopt the Common Core, along with other states to get the
federal money, instead of allowing the debate, discussion, and
involvement of local Utahns in this process.
People will say, “It
doesn't matter where we get it, the ends justify the means.” We
must reject that notion. What we are saying, in effect, is that the
principles we stand for don't matter. That parents and local
communities don't matter—only the opinion of the so-called experts
matters, as long as our kids learn what the experts want them to
learn. Why would we want to encourage a system where the people are
not involved in creating the best schools? Instead, we have a system
where we trust the experts to tell us what 'the best' actually means.
And in this case, those 'experts' are in control.
In 1816, Thomas Jefferson wrote a
letter about education and linked it to the proper role of
government. In it, he articulates two important principles. He
said, “if it is believed that these elementary schools will be
better managed by the governor and council, the commissioners of the
literary fund, or any other general authority of the government, than
by the parents within each ward, it is a belief against all
experience. …
No, my friend, the way to have good and
safe government, is not to trust it all to one, but to divide it
among the many, distributing to every one exactly the functions he is
competent to.”
Jefferson goes on to say,“What has destroyed liberty and the rights of man in every government which has ever existed under the sun? The generalizing and concentrating all cares and powers into one body...”
This is EXACTLY what Common Core does.
We are at the crossroads. We can
abdicate our parental and local responsibilities to the so-called
experts and the rich philanthropists, or we can reclaim bottom-up,
parent-controlled education. In the end, I will stand on the side of
parents, local teachers, and local communities deciding what is of
most worth to pass on to their own children.