EDUCATION FOR A FREE NATION
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January 16, 2006
With the push across the country for universal pre-school
and all-day kindergarten, this article by a home school mom and activist
is timely. The Minnesota organization,
Ready4K
, has a clone in every state. The issues are the same. Other articles on
this topic:
Just Whose Children Are They?
By Karen Bryant
We all know that a square peg cannot fit into a round hole. But
did you know that a sphere apparently cannot fit into a round hole?
It was that time of year when the government rounds up all the preschool
age children they can find in order to screen them for school
readiness. My friends grandson went through this assembly
line process only to be labeled unprepared for kindergarten. The
reason? He could not adequately stand on one foot and he did not
give the predetermined answer to a question. When shown a ball and
asked what it was, the boy replied that it was a sphere with air in
it. That answer was incorrect according to the preschool screening
guidelines. The passing answer was ball. Although this
child had all the U.S. Presidents memorized in order of their terms, he
was judged to be unprepared to enter kindergarten. This is a true
story and a classic example of what we get when bureaucracies try the one
size fits all approach with our children.
On Monday, November 14, a community initiative promoted by Ready 4 K,
Minnesotas School Readiness Campaign, was held at Alexandria Technical
College. This was one of several meetings held by Ready 4 K around
the state with the goal of mustering up community support for expanded
early childhood development programs (preschool). There were
approximately 50 in attendance, most of whom were stake holders in early
childhood education and development. Our local legislators, Senator
Dallas Sams, Representative Torrey Westrom, and Representative Mary Ellen
Otremba served on the panel, which District 206 Superintendent Ric
Dressen facilitated. In addition to our local legislators, Senator
John Hottinger, from District 23 in the Mankato area attended.
Senator Hottinger chaired the Early Childhood Policy and Budget Division
of the Senate Finance Committee. Expansion of government education
seems to be a major interest of Senator Hottinger.
After researching some of the reports that organizations such as Ready 4
K use as their foundation for building a case for program expansion,
which translates into increased tax dollars, it became apparent to me
that early childhood development expansion is simply the next step in the
transformation of our education and economic system. Once fully
implemented, this transformation will leave our nation unrecognizable as
a constitutional republic and free market society.
This transformation really began to take hold with the passage of Goals
2000. That federal mandate initially was recognized at our state
level in the form of the infamous Profile of Learning. The terms
Goals 2000 and Profile of Learning have been wiped off theslate, but
their structures are essentially in place and are continuing to be built
upon. The first goal of Goals 2000 states All Children
Will Start School Ready to Learn. Notice the word all?
That is a rather grandiose and invasive goal, as admirable as it may
appear on the surface. Ready 4 K appears to embrace that
goal. Its literature states, Only one-half of Minnesota children
start kindergarten fully prepared for success... I suppose my
friends grandson falls into this category. It also states
that its solution is a five year plan that puts in place well-connected
early care and education services for all families and targets more
intensive services to those children and families most in need.
This sounds like an all inclusive solution to an isolated problem.
From their testimonies and comments at the November 14 meeting, it
appears that Ready 4 K, Senator Hottinger, and many of the early
childhood stake holders think that parents just are not doing a good
enough job in preparing children to learn. While I recognize those
early childcare providers who serve children and families with a sincere
heart of compassion, and I acknowledge that there are indeed children
whose school readiness is thwarted by their high risk living situations,
I do not see the hard evidence that demands a massive expansion of early
childhood learning. A study just released by Stanford University
and the University of California on November 5, 2005 states that For
example, children spending long hours or more months in center care each
year exhibit greater problem behaviors, including elevated levels of
aggression and less effective impulse control, compared with children
attending fewer hours each day. (Bates, Marvinney, Kelly, Dodge,
Bennett, & Pettit, 1994; Belsky, 2001; NICHD ECCRN, 2003) The
crisis as defined by organizations such as Ready 4 K, Minnesota Early
Learning Foundation, etc...only serves as a vehicle to usher in the
predetermined solution that promotes the agenda of increased government
regulation.
I would venture to say that the real crisis is not so much a bunch of
kindergartners unprepared to learn, but rather a state that wants to
simply produce pre-trained laborers, which can best be ensured by gaining
access to children at the youngest possible age. Take into account the
fact that the Ready 4 K literature fortresses its arguments with A
Proposal for Achieving High Returns on Early Childhood Development by
Rob Grunewald and Arthur Rolnick of the Federal Reserve Bank of
Minneapolis. What interest does the Federal Reserve have with our 3
and 4 year olds?
The report opens with the following comments regarding economic
development, If using public subsidies to influence the location
decision of private companies is the wrong way to promote economic
development, what is the right way? Invest in human capital.....In
addition, most successful economies are associated with a high-quality
workforce which includes workers with formal education as well as
experienced workers with on-the-job training. (Grunewald, Rolnick
p. 5) In other words they need some professionals with college
degrees, but they also need individuals content with skilled labor.
The private business owner is noticeably absent from the picture.
They also state, Economically there are important benefits available, if
we find cost-effective ways to improve early childhood development.
These include avoiding the burdens of social chaos, such as crime and
welfare costs, getting more from our existing investments in K-12
education and capturing gains from social capital
investments such as more skilled workers and higher incomes. (p
4) Higher incomes for the individual translates into more tax
revenue for the state and federal government, as admitted in the
Minnesota School Readiness report, Winning Start: A Plan for Investing
Wisely in Early Childhood Development, where it lists increased tax
revenue as one of the benefits of early childhood development. (p.
16)
What they call human capital, we call our children. When a
society views its citizens as human capital and funnels them into a
program that serves the needs of the states planned economy over the
individuals right to pursue happiness, it takes the shape of
governmental systems that historically have failed miserably in other
countries.
In order to promote this ideology, government needs access and a
structure to regulate its citizens starting at birth and continuing
through the individuals lifetime. With that understanding in mind,
we raised a concern at the November 14 meeting that program expansion to
serve at risk children would soon morph into universal preschool.
While Senator Hottinger tried to allay our concerns, he failed to mention
that he sponsored legislation in 2005 that would have set the stage for
universal preschool in Minnesota and increased government regulation and
oversight of our children. He authored SF 2124, a bill which would
have lowered the compulsory attendance age from 7 to 5. In
addition, Senator Hottinger authored a bill that would add intrusive and
subjective mental health screening, socioemotional development, to the
already existing preschool screening. In fact, the totality of the
individual legislative pieces introduced in the 2005 session would have
created a comprehensive early childhood development project that would
have cost taxpayers 480.7 million dollars!
Another significant aspect to the proposed plan to expand early childhood
development is to create and implement a rating system for childcare
providers - both public and private. Winning Start: A Plan for
Investing Wisely in Early Childhood Development which is the Policy Task
Force Report submitted December 9, 2004 identifies the following
necessary elements in early childhood development reform:
Early childhood assessment based on agreed upon early learning
standards for children ages 0-5
These early learning standards for outcomes for children ages 0-5
should be used by all early childhood care and education
teacher/providers; ...
Competition between public and private, profit and nonprofit,
teachers/providers should be encouraged,....
Informed parental choice should rest on outcomes-based
indicators, ... establishing a quality rating system for evaluating
results that different teacher/providers achieve, publicizing
teacher/provider ratings and equipping parents to choose on the basis of
cost-effective results.
This means that the state will establish standards for all children age 0
- 5, it will assess children according to those standards, both public
and private providers will be accountable to the states standards and
assessments, and providers will be rated according to their
achievement. The effectiveness of each provider will be published
publicly, so parents can identify which providers the government defines
as successful. This should sound familiar to school districts which
are currently trying to jump through the hoops created by the federal No
Child Left Behind Act in order to be in good standing for funding.
While the task force touts competition among public/private providers as
being an important element, it confines competition within the limits of
producing outcomes as defined by the governments standards. That
is hardly the competition that makes a free market strong and encourages
creativity and ingenuity.
In summary, while there may be some children at risk for entering
kindergarten unprepared for success, adequate evidence is lacking to
demand a massive government expansion of early childhood
development. Children most at risk may indeed benefit from some
type of intervention, but there is no agreement among professionals as to
what type of intervention serves those children best. Although
universal preschool is not overtly stated as part of the current
community initiatives which are being promoted to convince the public of
a crisis and need for government solution, the concept of universal
preschool is indeed sweeping across the nation. Children are
precious creations by God that are placed in the care and jurisdiction of
their parents, not the government. A childs development
should be determined by the parent, who is the most highly motivated
person to ensure that decisions are made in the childs best interest,
not the states best interest. If a sphere doesnt fit in a round
hole, then maybe the hole is broken - not the child.
Karen Bryant and her husband, Mac, live in Alexandria,
Minnesota. They have home educated their two children from the
preschool years through grade 12. Karen received a baccalaureate
degree in Social Work from Minnesota State University -
Mankato. She and her husband currently serve on the board of
directors for the Minnesota Association of Christian Home Educators
(MACHE). She serves on the organization's Legislative/Legal
Committee and has presented workshops on the standards movement in
education, tax-funded virtual schools, and Minnesota homeschool
law. In addition, she coordinates MACHE's communication and service
to local homeschool support group leaders.
Karen also enjoys working regularly with a special needs child, owning a
hobby business for collectible model trains and taking her three dogs for
walks.
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