Why Common Core Failed and What You Can Do to Keep it
From Coming Back By Edwin Benson
A recent article by Dana Goldstein in the New York Times about the Common Core displays a
common tendency among liberals. They never acknowledge that their pet programs
can fail. When a “progressive” proposal fails, the left never goes back to
construct an entirely new scheme. They return to their overriding goals, tweak
the old plan a bit, and hang a new name on it.
Dana Goldstein is
unashamedly leftist, but she does have some grasp of reality. Her 2014
bestseller, The Teacher Wars: A History of America’s Most Embattled Profession,
adroitly mixes her admiration for the philosophy of John Dewey with respect for
the plight of many America’s teachers.
The subtitle to the Times article illustrates the leftist tendency to cling to bad
ideas. “It was one of the most ambitious education efforts in United States
History. Did it fail? Or does it just need more time to succeed?”
Whence Came Common Core?
Common
Core is an offspring of John Dewey’s socialist system of education which he
branded as “democratic.” At first, his system kept a local agency in charge.
However, later elaborations shifted power to the states and the national
government when the inherent defects of egalitarian socialism came out.
American parents and taxpayers listened to slogans like “a world-class
education” and promises of being “in the vanguard of education reform.” Those
parents wanted the best for their children, and the “experts” promised it.
Between
about 1950 and today, those experts controlled the show. They have convinced
parents that Dewey’s new methods will produce better results than the classical
education of the past. When the radicals of the sixties entered the scene, they
introduced programs of social change to further a socialist agenda.
Actual learning became secondary.
At the same time, parents and
the general public noticed that young people often knew less than their elders.
Parents discovered that their children could not write a sentence correctly.
Young store clerks could not make change. Work habits deteriorated. Parents and
taxpayers began to question the quality of increasingly expensive schools.
The
bureaucrats sprang into action, attempting to justify their salaries by
creating ever more cumbersome “programs.” Each failure spawned a more
“comprehensive” response. Common Core was one of the later results of this
process.
Fortunately,
parents rejected Common Core, and it is now in its death throes. The program
generated a wave of criticism rarely seen in education. The experts are taking
a step back.
Abandoning Common Core – and
Simultaneously Embracing It
One
thing is sure; the phrase “Common Core” is gone. However, the ideology that
created Common Core will continue. Winning this battle does not mean overall
victory. No one yet knows what they will call the next plan, but it will come.
Goldstein
points out that the state of Kentucky was the first to adopt the Common Core.
In 2017, it left the fold. However, the repeal did not mean repudiation.
Kentucky drew up a similar program, calling it the Kentucky Academic Standards.
Then, the bureaucrats and legislators can assure voters that the hated Common
Core is gone, all the while knowing that its spirit marches on.
The Times article
mentioned one reason why Common Core was unpopular. Parents could not
understand it. They could not figure out, for example, the calculation methods
of “unbundling” and “number bonds.” The author mentioned that “Both methods are
commonly used in high-achieving nations. But to many American parents sitting
at kitchen tables and squinting at their children’s homework, they were prime
examples of bureaucrats reinventing the wheel and causing undue stress in the
process.”
Goldstein’s thinking is typical
of leftist analysis. First, she indicated support for the overall ideas by
appealing to a source of authority (those in high-achieving nations) that
cannot be verified. Then she looks down on parents who can’t figure the math
out. Last, she presents the right-wing backlash as products of the frustrations
of the unenlightened.
The Lesson
The
good news is that the program shook the education establishment. The experts
and their bureaucrats have never been more threatened. The defeat of the Common
Core is significant. Parents and taxpayers are increasingly willing to question
the experts.
Four
generations of parents and students have faced an arrogant education
bureaucracy that holds them in contempt. The Common Core marks the first time
that an education program was abandoned through massive public rejection.
It
is long past time for those parents to recover the sense that they know what is
best for their children. It is time to challenge that bureaucracy – over and
over again.
Asking the Right Questions
The
best challenge may be to ask simple questions. When you notice something that
raises concern, you have the right to an answer. School officials should be
able to explain what they are doing in words that you can understand. They will
try to take refuge in jargon or professed good intentions. Members of the
public cannot afford to allow the bureaucrats to escape so easily. If they can’t
justify their ideas in words you can understand, then you can’t trust them with
the education of your children.
Concerned
parents can also find allies within the schools. The enormous amount of testing
that Common Core – and previous “reform” programs – created is still a fixture
of school life. Such tests have a place, but they should consume no more than
three to four days a year.
Herein
lies an opportunity. Most teachers and school site administrators hate the
testing regimes as much as students and parents do. The cost of these tests –
and it is considerable – is often borne by cash-strapped local school systems.
State boards of education
mandate many of these tests. These boards are subject to oversight by state
legislators. Even the most leftist state legislators will respond if their
offices get twenty-five or fifty calls on a single subject.
The
end of Common Core is encouraging, but it is not enough. Bringing sanity back
to education is possible. The future hangs on the people’s willingness to get
involved – and not be tricked by responses that they do not understand.
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