By Michelle Malkin • September 20, 2013 09:18 AM
Here’s
a new installment of my Rotten to the Core series on education and
curriculum. See below for previous columns and background links. The
fight for local control, limited government, and fiscal accountability
and the fight against Big Governnment/Big Business/Fed Ed elites
continue. Press on!
Jeb Bush’s latest Common Core snit fit
by Michelle Malkin
Creators Syndicate
Copyright 2013
by Michelle Malkin
Creators Syndicate
Copyright 2013
This
is priceless. Former Fla. GOP Gov. Jeb Bush, consummate politician and
2016 presidential aspirant, has now bitterly accused opponents of his
federal education schemes of possessing “purely political” motives.
Projection, anyone?
Having
previously suggested that critics of the so-called Common Core
standards program are crazy, ignorant and lying, Bush piled on at a
National Press Club appearance this week. Jeb the Insult Comic Dog did
not hold back. Not only is the growing anti-Fed Ed movement of parents, teachers, school board members, academics, privacy advocates and state legislators of all stripes “purely political,” Bush sniped, but the Common Core backlash that’s causing him conniption fits is also opposed to academic excellence.
Yep.
If you question Jeb Bush and his Big Business/Big Government cronies,
you stand foursquare against student achievement and intellectual rigor.
Pay attention, all you informed moms and dads who have raised pointed, carefully researched questions about the costs, quality, validity, constitutionality and intrusiveness of Common Core. Bush thinks you are “purely political” beasts who are recklessly harming your own kids’ scholastic advancement.
“If
you’re comfortable with mediocrity, fine. I’m not,” Bush hissed at
Common Core critics. “(W)e’re not going to be able to sustain this
extraordinarily exceptional country unless we challenge every basic
assumption on how we do things.”
Translation: Don’t you know Jeb Bush cares more about your children than you do?
Bush
is all for challenging how we do things, unless you’re challenging how
the Common Core machine does things. He reiterated Common Core peddlers’
claims that their standards are internationally “benchmarked” and
“world-class.” But that’s pure horse-hockey. And it’s not “political” people who are calling out the Common Core racket.
Stanford University professor James Milgram, a prominent dissenting member of the Common Core math standards committee, has exposed how the muddled standards would leave American students at least two years behind the rest of the planet.
University of Arkansas education professor emeritus and Massachusetts school standards architect Sandra Stotsky, who sat on the language arts validation panel, has documented how the English standards will result in:
1) teachers spending at least 50 percent of their reading instruction time on “informational texts” at every grade level.
2) reduced emphasis on analytical skills involving complex literary works.
3) a depleted fund of content knowledge that will leave students unprepared for basic college coursework.
Both
Stotsky and Milgram repeatedly asked their panel colleagues for the
names of the countries the Common Core standards were allegedly
“benchmarked” to, but they never received an answer.
Furthermore,
Christopher Tienken of Seton Hall University notes that much of the
“evidence” and “empirical research” that the Common Core crowd cites
comes from … the Common Core crowd. “When I reviewed that ‘large and
growing body of knowledge,’” Tienken reported, “I found that it was not
large, and in fact built mostly on one report, Benchmarking for Success,
created by the NGA (National Governors Association) and the CCSSO
(Council of Chief State School Officers), the same groups that created
these standards. Hardly independent research.”
Jeb Bush routinely has dismissed those
who protest Common Core’s increasing federalization of local control
over schools as conspiracy-mongers. But it’s President Obama and
Education Secretary Arne Duncan who’ve made common cause with Bush and
corporate elites in foisting Common Core standards, tests, technology
and data-mining boondoggles on local school districts. Obama, Duncan and
Bush have been meeting with deep-pocketed CEOs in Washington, not with
ordinary parents outside the Beltway.
Dr. Bill Evers
of the Hoover Institution succinctly debunked Bush’s repeated
insistence that 45 states voluntarily adopted the irresistibly rigorous
standards:
“(S)tates
weren’t leaping because they couldn’t resist the Core’s academic
magnetism. They were leaping because it was the Great Recession — and
the Obama administration was dangling a $4.35 billion Race to the Top
carrot in front of them. Big points in that federal program were awarded
for adopting the Core, so, with little public debate, most did.”
Can you spell b-o-o-n-d-o-g-g-l-e? Remember: Bush’s educational foundation, the Foundation for Excellence in Education, is tied at the hip to the federally funded testing consortium called PARCC
(Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers),
which raked in $186 million through Race to the Top to develop
nationalized tests “aligned” to the top-down Common Core program.
One of the Bush foundation’s behemoth corporate sponsors is Pearson,
the multi-billion-dollar educational publishing and testing
conglomerate. Pearson snagged $23 million in contracts to design the
first wave of PARCC test items. The company holds a $250 million
contract with Florida to design and publish its state tests. Pearson
designed New York’s Common Core-aligned assessments and is also the
exclusive contractor for Texas state tests.
And in Los Angeles this summer, Pearson sealed a whopping $30 million taxpayer-subsidized deal to supply the city’s schools with 45,000 iPads pre-loaded with Pearson Common Core curriculum apps. That’s $678 per iPad, $200 more than the standard cost, with scant evidence that any of this shiny edu-tech will do anything to improve the achievement bottom line.
As with all political posers who grab
power under the guise of doing it “for the children,” don’t read their
lips. Follow the money.
***
Previous:
Rotten to the Core: Jeb Bush’s Crony Republicans Against Higher Standards
Rotten to the Core, Part 1: Obama’s War on Academic Standards
Rotten to the Core, Part 2: Readin’, writin’ and deconstructionism
Rotten to the Core, Part 3: Lessons from Texas and the Growing Grassroots Revolt
Rotten to the Core, Part 4: The Feds’ Invasive Student Tracking Database
Time To Opt Out of Creepy Fed Ed Data-Mining Racket
Rotten to the Core: Reader feedback from the frontlines
My child’s Common Core-aligned Algebra book is crap
Rotten to the Core: Conservatives spearhead drive at RNC meeting to stop Common Core
Today: Twitter rally to stop Common Core
Who’s tracking your children?
Rotten to the Core, Part 1: Obama’s War on Academic Standards
Rotten to the Core, Part 2: Readin’, writin’ and deconstructionism
Rotten to the Core, Part 3: Lessons from Texas and the Growing Grassroots Revolt
Rotten to the Core, Part 4: The Feds’ Invasive Student Tracking Database
Time To Opt Out of Creepy Fed Ed Data-Mining Racket
Rotten to the Core: Reader feedback from the frontlines
My child’s Common Core-aligned Algebra book is crap
Rotten to the Core: Conservatives spearhead drive at RNC meeting to stop Common Core
Today: Twitter rally to stop Common Core
Who’s tracking your children?
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