DeWeese Report Attacks Failed Federal
Education Policy
"Our once great educational system
is almost unrecognizable," says Tom DeWeese, president of the
American Policy Center, in the August issue of The DeWeese Report.
"The problem is the curriculum; programs dictated from Washington,
devoted to social engineering instead of basic academics."
The Center is a grassroots, activist
think tank headquartered in Herndon, VA. DeWeese is an expert on
educational issues. In an extensive commentary titled, "The Failed
Federal Education Policy", DeWeese offers a scathing analysis of the
federal intervention that has catapulted education as the major issue of
the 2000 elections.
"If Congressional leaders took the
time to actually study what is happening in the classrooms of America,
they would understand the problem is not lack of money, not lack of
qualified teachers, and not classroom size," says DeWeese. As worried
parents, often forced to spend their own money to help their children
master basic academic skills, struggle to understand the failure of the
nation’s educational system, DeWeese attacks the "restructuring of
the classroom" brought about by federal dictated programs such as
"block scheduling, group learning, or so-called cooperative
learning."
DeWeese points to the way, in one school,
math, science, health, and physical education "has been combined in
the belief that children can learn all these different subjects by working
on a class project." Despite the obvious fact that none of the
complex individual skills required can be learned in such a manner,
"children who can’t keep up are supposed to be helped along by
other children in their group." This is an educational policy
designed around the lowest common denominator of success "and it’s
doomed from the start."
This "kids helping kids"
approach is denounced as "nothing more than a classroom management
technique that provides a convenient hiding place for bad teachers and
under-achieving students. The student who doesn’t care to learn or has
failed to grasp a concept allows the rest of the group to do the work, yet
he gets their grade!" Students, says DeWeese, "coming out of
such classes cannot perform math problems, recite multiplication tables,
conjugate a verb or structure a sentence."
Worse yet, this educational restructuring
has been underway for the past forty years, says DeWeese, noting that
"the pace has excelerated under the Clinton administration through
programs such as Goals 2000, School-to-Work, the Careers Act, block grant
programs like Title 1 and Title IV, and many more." The latest folly,
says DeWeese is "a do-nothing program called the "Straight A’s
Act (H.R. 2300)."
Schools throughout America are totally
dominated by federal programs, imposed and adopted by the States.
"Children have been turned into commodities to be manipulated so that
States can get more federal money," says DeWeese. "It must stop!
In every community in America, school boards and parents must wrest back
control before yet another generation is dumbed down to the point where
this nation will lose its most precious resource, an educated population
capable of responding to the technological demands of a new era."
Excerpt from the August
issue, The DeWeese Report
THE FAILED FEDERAL
EDUCATION POLICY
After forty years of almost non-stop
federal programs, particularly in the past decade, an invasion by an army
of psychologists, dumbed-down tests and an abandonment of the teaching of
basic academic skills, our once great American education system is almost
unrecognizable.
As a result of all of this federal
attention, children are coming out of public schools unable to perform
even basic math at a cash register. Their communication skills are little
more than tribal gibberish. They have no interest in civics and they
can’t find their hometown on a map. Colleges and employers have to
provide remedial education programs to high school graduates just to
assure they can get into college or fill out job applications.
If congressional leaders took the time to
actually study what is happening in the classroom, they would understand
the problem is not lack of money, lack of qualified teachers or classroom
size. In fact, a classroom could consist of one student and one highly
paid teacher, the student would still suffer if the teacher used the same
teaching methods and curriculum now used in classrooms across the nation.
The problem is the curriculum; programs dictated from Washington devoted
to social engineering instead of basic academics.
RESTRUCTURING THE
CLASSROOM.
It comes under many names; block
scheduling, group learning, cooperative learning, but it’s all part of a
radical change in the way children are taught in today’s classrooms.
Rather than teachers teaching, children
are paired with others for group grades. Individual achievement is
de-emphasized. Under block scheduling a number of subjects are
tied together in one long class. For example, in one school, math
science, health and physical education have been combined. Children
are supposed to learn these skills by working on a class project, such as
launching an imaginary rocket to the Moon.
Presumably when faced with various
problems in building their rocket, students will seek out the necessary
information. They’ll need math to calculate the projectory, science to
find out where the Moon is and health to know what to feed the astronauts.
Apparently physical education will teach them how to get the astronauts in
shape. Children who can’t keep up are supposed to be helped along by
other children in their group. It’s called "kids teaching
kids."
This so-called "cooperative
learning" is nothing more than a classroom-management technique that
provides a convenient hiding place for bad teachers and under-achieving
students. The student who doesn’t care to learn or has failed to grasp a
concept allows the rest of the group to do the work, yet he gets their
grade. Students coming out of such classes cannot perform math problems,
recite multiplication tables, conjugate a verb or structure a sentence.
MEANINGLESS SOLUTIONS
AND POLITICAL POSTURING
This education restructuring has been
underway for the past forty years, but the pace has excellerated under the
Clinton Administration through programs such as Goals 2000,
School-To-Work, The CAREERS Act, block grant programs like Title I and
Title IV, and many more.
As the situation grows worse, politicians
scramble to provide solutions. They call for stricter standards, more
assessments of students, and of course, more money and smaller classrooms.
Congress has suggested about every solution except the one that will do
away with the problem; eliminating federal intervention in schools.
LEGISLATING FOLLY.
The latest folly to excite Republicans is
a do-nothing program under the cute little title "Straight A’s Act
(H.R.2300)." Of course the sound bites assure us all that the program
is completely "voluntary" in the same way they represented Goals
2000. The program, they say, will give the states and parents the power to
choose if they want to participate in federal programs. They promise
higher test scores, school discipline, and a "brighter future for our
children." Isn’t that what the same politicians promised with Goals
2000?
"Straight A’s" promises to
cut red tape and bureaucracies. Yet, in order to keep the federal funds
flowing, all accountability continues to go to the federal government. The
strings are still there; the programs are still in place.
Under the Act, states must have in place
standards and aligned assessments, just like Goals 2000. Students must
meet certain federal standards, just like Goals 2000. Throughout the Act,
words like "states must assure...must implement...must have in
place..." are used to dictate federal guidelines in order for states
for states to qualify for the federal dollars. Where is the change in
policy? Where is the new found freedom for the states? Where is the answer
to improving education?
Worse, across the nation, federal
guidelines have become state law. Now there are state level Goals 2000 and
School-To-Work programs in place. These programs are run by an entrenched
state bureaucracy that answers to and is in alignment to the federal
Department of Education. They control the flow and use of the money. They
implement the programs.
Nothing will change under
"Straight A’s" Act. It is a flimflam. It is an attempt by the
Republicans to pretend they are doing something about education while they
leave the system intact.
The only hope Americans have that
education will improve will happen when someone in Congress finally begins
to understand that any program that controls federal money is the enemy.
Abolish the Department of Education,
leave education dollars in the states instead of laundering them through
Washington D.C., and get the federal government out of education. Then the
problem will solve itself. Any other solution is a worthless Band-Aid that
plays into the well-financed hands of the education bureaucracy that
created the crisis in the first place. That is the reason academic
skills are falling.
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