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February 6, 2007
Writing the Tucker Plan into Law
By Allen Quist
Bills are
being introduced in Congress that, if passed, will write much of the
Marc Tucker
education plan into law. The most significant of these bills so far
is the SPEAK Act (S 224, HR 325), also referred to as the Dodd-Ehlers
bill. Future bills will likely be forthcoming to implement other
features of the Tucker plan.
What does
Tuckers plan hope to accomplish? The focal point of his proposal, says
Tucker, is to to adopt internationally benchmarked standards for
educating our students and workers
[
Executive Summary of the Tucker Report, paragraph 1, emphasis
added]. He says again that in order to improve education, we must enable
students to succeed against internationally benchmarked education
standards
[
Executive Summary, p. 12].
What are
internationally benchmarked education standards? In the field of
education, the word standards means two things. (1) It means content
standards, or curriculum, the subject matter schools are to teach, and
(2) it means achievement standards, the level of accomplishment
regarding the curriculum that students must achieve as measured by tests
of some kind. Benchmarks are the detail of the curriculum and the
tests. So the term internationally benchmarked education standards
means international curriculum and international tests.
What
international curriculum and tests does Tucker have in mind? He clarifies
on page 87 of his Report that he favors the
PISA (Program for International Student
Assessment) tests and curriculum. PISA are the politically-correct
international tests and curriculum favored by the postmodern left. They
focus on fuzzy math instead of traditional math, and they disregard
errors in spelling, punctuation and grammar while they ignore reading
fluency and comprehension in favor of students being able to construct
and reflect on what they have read.
Not
surprisingly, PISA tests give far different results than knowledge-based
tests. When Tucker calls for internationally benchmarked standards, he
wants to give the impression he is speaking of high expectations on
academic knowledge and skills. Nothing could be further from the truth.
The PISA tests are all about political-correctness and the leftist
worldview; they do a poor job of measuring knowledge and skills.[Footnote
1] (For an analysis of fuzzy math and the damage it is doing to our
children, see the authors
America's Schools: The Battleground for Freedom
.)
All
educational curricula and achievement tests are based on a political and
educational philosophy. The philosophy of the PISA tests Tucker prefers
is not consistent with the worldview and wishes of most parents and other
citizens in the United States. Perhaps that is why his plan also
calls for the elimination of locally elected school boards.
International Education
The international
PISA tests and curriculum are consistent with the international education
system already being followed by the United States. President George Bush
Sr., on behalf of the United States, signed the international education
agreement known as
The World Conference on Education for All (EFA) (1990), an
accord overseen by UNESCO. This international agreement required the
United States to establish a national system of education as opposed to a
state and local system -- a feat largely accomplished by the Goals 2000
Act of 1994.
The
updated version of EFA was formulated in 2000 and is known as
The Dakar Framework for Action. It was signed by President Bill
Clinton before he left office. This second international agreement,
commonly known as Dakar, is an expansion of the 1990 Education
for All agreement.
On October
3, 2003, in a speech to UNESCO, U.S. Education Secretary Rod Paige said:
Education for All is consistent with our recent education
legislation, the No Child Left Behind Act. Paige also said that
the United States and UNESCO were pursuing a common strategy and were
implementing joint action in education policy. The reason No Child
Left Behind is consistent with Dakar is because it (NCLB) was structured
to meet the requirements of the international agreements. [Footnote
2]
The Content (Curriculum) of International
Education
The
Education for All
website explains the international curriculum participating countries
are expected to teach. Paragraph 58 says education should: strengthen
respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms as proclaimed in the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights [UDHR] (Article 26). And
what does Article 26 of UDHR say? It says education shall further the
activities of the United Nations. In other words, at Dakar the
United States agreed to design an education curriculum that promotes the
activities of the UN including treaties and documents America has not
signed such as the UDHR, the Treaty on the Rights of the Child, Kyoto,
the UN Treaty on Biodiversity, the Earth Charter and the treaty
establishing the new UN Criminal Court, to name just a few.
Like PISA,
the curriculum required by the UN documents and treaties focus on
attitudes, values and worldview, not high knowledge-based
expectations. The Earth Charter, for example, calls for legalized
abortion, gay marriage, income redistribution within nations and between
nations, military disarmament and education in Pantheism along with
numerous other positions of the hard left. Dakar requires the United
States to promote the political agenda of the UN in its education
curriculum.
Do these
international education agreements have the force of law in the United
States? No. Since the agreements have never been ratified by the Senate,
they do not have the force of law in and of themselves. The signatures
of U.S. Presidents on these agreements, however, mean the agreements are
now the education policy of the executive branch of government. Since
the Department of Education is an arm of the executive branch, it is
expected to comply with the international agreements -- and it does.
In
addition, Goals 2000, School-to-Work and NCLB have written key features
of the international agreements into our law. The Tucker plan does
more of the same. Following is a description of how it will
work.
Writing the Tucker Plan into Law
Tucker explains
that his plan will require students to pass new Board Exams. He says:
- Our first step is creating a set of Board Examinations. States will
have their own Board Examinations, and some national and even
international organizations will offer their own. A Board Exam is an exam
in a set of core subjects that is based on a syllabus provided by the
Board. So the point of the exam is to find out whether the student has
learned from the course what he or she was supposed to learn [Executive
Summary of the Report, p. 10].
As
stated by Tucker, these Boards will determine the content that students
must learn and will also write the tests to see if the students learned
what they were supposed to. But Tucker says he is speaking of content and
tests written at three levels of government: state, national and
international. (Tucker also indicates that we need a singular national
curriculum.) How can curriculum and tests written by three levels of
governance be brought into conformity? The answer to that question is
provided in the SPEAK Act (S.224, H.R.325), the Dodd-Ehlers bill.
According to the bill summary of SPEAK provided by the New America
Foundation, this bill does the following:
- Purpose: To create, adopt, and implement rigorous, voluntary
American education content standards in math and science in grades K12
and incentivize states to adopt them. [The bill]: 1. Tasks the
National Assessment Governing Board with creating national content
standards in math and science for grades K-12 [emphasis added].
These
American education content standards in math and science have already
been written. (See
Fed Ed: The New Federal Curriculum and How Its
Enforced.); that
is why the bill says the board can adopt as well as create national
standards (curriculum). (Look for other bills to add in the other subject
areas.) The effect of the Dodd-Ehlers bill is to (1) legitimize
the national education content standards (national curriculum) already
written, (2) authorize the National Assessment Governing Board (NAG
Board) to adopt or change the curriculum, (3) give this non-elected board
the authority to dictate the educational content and tests for all our
schools, and (4) equip the NAG Board to incentivize (translate force)
the states to adopt its curriculum. [Footnote 3]
Non-elected Education Gatekeepers
Since the voting
members of the NAG Board are appointed by the President of the United
States, one non-elected board will now have the authority to dictate the
education content for all public schools as well as the authority to
write the important tests. According to Tuckers plan, the resulting
Board Exams, first given in tenth grade, will determine if a child can
continue in school or not. A second Board Exam will dictate if students
may attend college or not. This non-elected Board, therefore, serving
at the wishes of the President, becomes the education gatekeeper for the
children of our country. As explained above, these Board Exams
will be more interested in measuring the attitudes and values desired by
the hard left than in measuring knowledge-based academic
achievement.
As noted
above, the United States already agreed to teach the UNESCO curriculum
when our Presidents signed Dakar. The Dodd-Ehlers bill gives Dakar the
force of law. In this way the central features of the international
education agreements will become law in the United States without ever
facing hearings or a ratification vote in the U.S. Senate. The
Constitution of the United States will have been effectively
bypassed.
International Baccalaureate as Prototype
The UNESCO
curriculum is now being taught in 680 American schools in the form of the
International
Baccalaureate
(IB)
program. In 1996 the International Baccalaureate Organization (IBO)
formed a partnership with UNESCO to form a pilot program for what the
IBO and UNESCO websites describe as an international education
system. [Footnote 4]
The IB
curriculum focuses on students and faculty becoming what IB calls world
citizens. Faculty and students are expected to memorize the
10 values of world citizenship. (The Ten Commandments have been
replaced with the 10 values of IBO-UNESCO.) These IB values are
vague and non-academic. IBO refers to them as the attitudes and values
that are central to the IBO curriculum. Like PISA, the IBO curriculum
does not focus on knowledge, it focuses on the attitudes and values of
the internationalist left.
The
central theme of these IB values is explained in a power-point
presentation on the IBO webpage. One frame asks the question: Freedom
fighter or terrorist? [According to] Mahatma Gandhi: Honest disagreement
is often a good sign of progress. This frame defines the moral
relativism and multiculturalism that is central to the IBO curriculum ---
terrorists only exist in the minds of some people, its all a matter of
ones perspective. In direct contrast, the United States creed, as
stated in the Declaration of Independence, insists that truth and
morality are real and universal - not mere cultural constructs.
Which Direction Will We Take?
Other details in
the Tucker plan make his agenda easier to accomplish. Those details
include: (1) having teachers be hired by the state, (2) having states
take over teacher certification (3) requiring that teacher education be
based on the Boards curriculum, (4) establishing universal pre-school
(the structure already exists to force the same international curriculum
on pre-school education (see
Quotes
and References from Early Childhood Testimony); and (5)
establishing merit pay for teachers who help facilitate the
system.
The big
question in education reform today is this: What values and
worldview will form the foundation for the curriculum and tests? Will
we follow the fundamental principles of the United States as stated in
our Declaration of Independence and Constitution? Or will the foundation
be the ideology of the postmodern, internationalist left? That is the
question.
If the
internationalist plan is not what we want, what can be done to stop
it? We must (1) prevent the Tucker plan and the Dodd-Ehlers bill
from becoming law. (2) The United States should withdraw from the
international education agreements. (3) The U.S. Department of Education
should be prohibited from writing a national curriculum, regardless of it
being voluntary or in the form of education standards. (4) The United
States should once again withdraw from UNESCO. (5) Curriculum decisions
must always be in the hands of elected people who are accountable to the
public. (6) Pre-school education needs to be protected from the
ideological and political curriculum being imposed on it, and (7) for
real academic progress, we need to go back to the pre-progressive
education policies that produced far better academic results than we see
today. That includes giving parents much more choice than they have
today.
Footnotes to
"Writing the Tucker Plan into Law"
1. Following is the
first sample reading test question in the Programme for
International Student Assessment (PISA),
supplied on the OECD
website (Organization for Economic
Co-operation and Development):
IN POOR TASTE
Did you know that in 1996 we spent almost the same amount on chocolate
as our Government spent on overseas aid to help the poor?
Could there be something wrong with our priorities?
What are you going to do about it?
Yes, you.
[The second PISA sample question on math is all about global
warming.]
2. Following are some of
the similarities between Dakar and No Child Left Behind (NCLB)
1. Dakar requires that nations bring all students up to
a minimum level of competence no later than 2015. NCLB requires states to
bring
all students up to a minimum level of competency by 2014.
2. Dakar requires that nations eliminate gaps based on race,
ethnicity and economic conditions no later than 2015. NCLB requires
states to eliminate gaps based on race, ethnicity and economic conditions
by 2014.
3. Dakar requires nations to take regular measurements of progress
toward those goals. NCLB requires states to take yearly
measurement of progress toward those goals (AYP).
4. Dakar calls for major increases in early childhood education.
NCLB includes major funding for early childhood education.
5. Dakar stipulates that nations make major increases in education
funding and that rich nations provide debt relief for poor nations. In
describing the international forum that composed the Dakar agreement, the
News In Brief publication of UNESCO reported that Gene Sperling from the
United States announced: at the forum today that his government
will increase by 50% its funding of education this year, and that it
will expand debt relief to countries that make a commitment to basic
education. The UNESCO publication
obviously saw the commitments made by Bush's economic advisor
Gene Sperling as statements indicating the United States would comply
with Dakar.
6. Both NCLB and Dakar have the same twin theme having all students
meet a minimum standard of competence and closing the learning gaps.
Neither Dakar nor NCLB show much interest in helping average and gifted
students.
3. Is the national
curriculum in the Dodd-Ehlers bill voluntary?
The Dodd-Ehlers bill says that the national curriculum will be
voluntary-- just as Goals 2000 and NCLB claimed to be voluntary. But
the bill laments the fact that various states have different standards.
The bill indicates that it exists to solve the problem of differing
standards. The clear intention of the bill, therefore, is to force the
national curriculum on all the states. Just as the federal government
essentially forced Goals 2000 and NCLB on all 50 states, it will force
the national curriculum on all 50 states. It can use the withholding of
federal education funds as well as waivers on the NCLB timelines to do
so. Look for other bills and amendments to provide the teeth for
Dodd-Ehlers.
The
Bill Summary for
Dodd
-Ehlers, provided by New America Foundation, actually said the bill
would authorize the Department of Education to extend the NCLB timelines
for states which adopted the national curriculum. Since the timelines of
NCLB are impossible to meet, that stipulation would give the Department
of Education effective control over having states adopt the national
curriculum. Interestingly, both the incentivizing language and the
extension of NCLB timelines disappeared from the bill by the time the
language became public. It may be that having the enforcement language in
Dodd-Ehlers made it too obvious that this national curriculum would not
be voluntary at all but would be forced on the states. In the case of
Goals 2000, the enforcement language was hidden away in the
appropriations bill, HR6. Look for a similar strategy for
Dodd-Ehlers.
4. UNESCO
international education standards
website
UNESCO now has a website dedicated to its international
education standards.
Following are some excerpts from this website that define what an
international UNESCO curriculum looks like:
- Education shall further the activities of the United Nations
(Art.26 - Universal Declaration of Human Rights) Technical education
standards [shall include]
Sustainable Development [which is defined as follows:] Education is
not only an end in itself, it is also a key instrument for bringing about
the changes in knowledge, values, behaviors and lifestyles required to
achieve sustainability .
That is, the international education content standards written by
UNESCO focus on all the documents and activities of the UN including the
knowledge, values, behavior and lifestyles preferred by the UN.
Allen Quist is adjunct professor at Bethany Lutheran College in
Mankato, Minnesota. He served three terms in the Minnesota legislature
and has authored three books on education:
The Seamless
Web , Fed Ed: The
New Federal Curriculum and How Its Enforced, and
America's Schools: The
Battleground for Freedom .
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