Obama taking-over our nation’s public schools? Is a United Nations
agenda infiltrating America’s K-12 classrooms? No, not exactly. Not Yet.
But the so-called “Common Core” public education agenda could be
paving the way for some serious trouble.Here are a few basic assumptions
that people are making about Common Core – along with the facts of the
matter.
Assumption # 1 : “Common Core” is a set of educational curriculum
requirements being imposed on the states by the Obama Administration.
Technically speaking, this is false. “Common Core,” whose official name
is the “Common Core State Standards Initiative,” is not, itself, about
curriculum. It is a set of academic standards that students in the
various grade levels are expected to achieve. It has not been created
by the Obama Administration, but rather, it is actually an effort that
first emerged at the state level, undertaken by state governors and
state superintendents of education nationwide. The official sponsoring
organizations of the initiative are the National Governor’s Association
(“NGA”), and the Council of Chief State School Officers (“CCSO”).
Attempts to impose academic standards on public educators date back to
the early 1980’s. In the 1990’s it became a state-driven matter, while
The federal No Child Left Behind Act, signed in to law by President
George W Bush in January of 2002, required the states to create their
own academic standards, and then to achieve them, in order to receive
federal education funds.
During the past decade, state Governors and state education
Superintendents began to collaborate in an effort to bring uniformity to
their respective states’ academic standards, and today, there are three
primary organizations that advance the Common Core agenda. The NGA and
the CCSO, as noted above, remain as the official sponsoring
organizations of the initiative. Separately, a group called Common
Core, Inc., a non-profit, 501 (c) 3 organization based in Washington,
D.C., writes curriculum (not academic standards) that is intended to
help educators comply with Common Core Standards.
Assumption #2: The Common Core State Standards Initiative receives
bipartisan support around the country. This is true. Both right-leaning
and left-leaning individuals and groups across the U.S. support the
Common Core initiative. The left-leaning American Federation of Teachers
and the Fordham Institute, both champion the Common Core effort, as
does the Foundation for Excellence In Education, an organization
headed-up by the Republican former Governor of Florida, Jeb Bush.
Similarly, both Republican and Democrat Governors - including Governor
C.L. “Butch” Otter (R-Idaho), Governor Jerry Brown (D-California), and
Governor Duval Patrick (D-Massachusetts), all support the Common Core
effort.
Yet just as Common Core receives bipartisan support, it is also subject
to bipartisan opposition. The conservative-leaning Heritage Foundation,
along with libertarian leaning groups like the Pioneer Institute of
Boston, opposes the Common Core effort. Glenda Ritz, a Democrat who
currently serves as Indiana’s State Superintendent of Education, also
opposes the Common Core initiative.
Ritz’ election in the heavily Republican state of Indiana is often cited
as evidence of Common Core’s unpopularity. In November of 2012, Ritz
unseated Indiana’s incumbent Republican State Superintendent, Dr. Tony
Bennett, in part by campaigning against the Common Core initiative and
claiming that Indiana’s adoption of the Common Core standards would
result in a loss of state sovereignty. Ritz ended up receiving more
votes in that election than did the new (and popular) Governor of
Indiana, Mike Pence.
Assumption #3: The Common Core Initiative allows the U.S. Federal
Government to directly control educational content nationwide. This is
false. However, a scenario like this could come about indirectly.
Federal law prohibits the federal government from dictating educational
curriculum content to the nation’s public schools. In fact, according
to independent legal research conducted by the Pioneer Institute, no
less than three separate statutes prohibit this from happening.
Yet on President Barack Obama’s watch, there has been a concerted effort
within his administration to control public education with the Common
Core agenda. Back in 2009 and 2010 when the administration was
distributing so-called “stimulus” funds, the U.S. Department of
Education devised what was called the “Race To The Top” initiative.
Public schools could apply for and receive the stimulus money, but they
had to meet specific criteria.
One of the criteria was for schools to adopt teacher evaluation
procedures (this was a good thing, despite the outrage to the idea from
teachers’ unions). Another criteria was for school districts to adopt
higher “college and career standards” for students. And it just so
happened that, in order to qualify for the stimulus funds, many states
chose at that time to adopt the “Common Core” academic standards as a
means of qualifying for the funds.
Interestingly, when the state of Massachusetts first applied for the
“Race to the Top” stimulus funds in the first round of funds
disbursements, the state had not yet officially adopted the Common Core
standards, and ended up ranking only 13th among the 17 states that
qualified for the “extra” funds. Later, after Massachusetts officially
adopted the Common Core academic standards, the state received a #1
ranking when it next applied for the funds.
The lesson from Massachusetts was pretty clear. Adopt Common Core
standards, and you’ll get more money from Washington. The Obama
Administration could technically and legally mandate educational content
to the states, but it has successfully used a “third party entity,” of
sorts – the Common Core initiative – to have its way with the states.
Given this precedent, it’s not difficult to see how the feds could
eventually begin requiring certain types of curriculum for kids
nationwide.
Many of the nation’s Governors and state school Superintendents who
support Common Core still like to remind their constituents that the
initiative is a “state thing,” not a “federal thing” – and, therefore,
it’s a good thing. For them, to reject the agenda is to ignore their
brilliance.
But all Americans should heed the warning: when a majority of the
states begin to all do the same thing in terms of public policy, we, the
people, become an easier target for federal control.
http://townhall.com/columnists/austinhill/2013/05/05/common-core-and-the-alltoocommon-tendencies-of-heavyhanded-government-n1587366/page/full
Obama is no kings don’t like to be constrained. But all government should be.Obama is Pathological Liar, He is an Ideological Liar because the true objectives of his fundamental transformation of the United States are incompatible with American democracy and tradition Obama devotion to the Machiavellian dictum of "the ends justify the means" and lying as an instrument of government policy have been the tools of political extremists throughout history.
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