105 Peavey Rd, Suite 116, Chaska, MN 55318
952-361-4931
www.edwatch.org -
edwatch@lakes.com
September 21, 2007
See other comments on the new No Child Left Behind Discussion Draft:
NCLB Draft
Imposes "New Civics" on All Schools
Provides financial incentives for states to
adopt the
National Civics Curriculum Standards (Federal Curriculum) as defined by
the CCE
The federally
authorized and funded civics textbook [the "new civics"]
called,
We the
People: The Citizen and the
Constitution, says:
- "What advantages might be offered by world citizenship?
What disadvantages? Do you think that world
citizenship will be possible in our lifetime?" [p.
203]
In this and numerous other statements written by the CCE (Center for
Civic Education) the federally funded new civics (federal curriculum)
promotes global citizenship and global governance as being superior to
American citizenship and national sovereignty. (See
"Two
Competing
Worldviews.")
A few
weeks ago, the Discussion Draft to re-fund NCLB was released to the
public by the House Education and Labor Committee leadership. Among other
dangerous aspects of this Draft, it expands the reach of Federal
Civics. [For other EdWatch commentaries on the NCLB Discussion Draft,
go
HERE
and
HERE.] The Discussion Draft also includes (in another section)
financial incentives for all states to adopt the new civics--the radical
philosophy of civics that treats American citizenship and government as
inferior to globalist systems such as the UN.
The
centerpiece of the new civics is the federally funded textbook
We the People:
The Citizen and the Constitution (WTP). WTP is created,
published, and promoted by the CCE with grants from No Child Left Behind
(NCLB) and previously from grants associated with Goals 2000. Congress
should bar
federal funding of classroom curriculum--a clear violation of
Constitutional authority reserved to the States. In addition Congress
should bar funding for any materials or programs that undermine or
redefine the American Creed as outlined in the Declaration of
Independence and U.S. Constitution.
The current NCLB law subsidizes the CCE and the use, distribution
and promotion of its new civics philosophy for these activities:
- "Advanced, sustained, and ongoing training of teachers;"
- Textbooks for teacher training and students;
- Project Citizen, which engages students in social and political
activism based on WTP;
- Activities that help students meet the CCE's new civics curriculum
standards;
- Courses of instruction at the middle school level on the CCE's new
civics view of the Constitution and our federal system of government;
- National competition events based on the CCE's new civics curriculum
standards.
The
NCLB Discussion Draft would do all of that, and it would also fund:
- Courses of instruction at the secondary school level on the CCE's new
civics view of the Constitution and our federal system of government;
- Special materials developed for Native Americans, immigrants, new
citizens, and post-secondary adult populations. The CCE has already
developed those materials which they call "culturally
appropriate" content, suggesting that we now have a multicultural
menu of civics--one kind for Native Americans and immigrants and another
for the rest of us.
- An expanded "comprehensive program" to teach the public at
large.
In
other words, the NCLB Discussion Draft vastly expands the power and
influence of the CCE. It authorizes this single, unelected, unaccountable
special interest group, the CCE, which has undermined and redefined the
basic principles of our country, to be the officially designated provider
of what the public should believe and understand about the Declaration of
Independence, the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the courts, and being
a citizen.
The NCLB
Discussion Draft also expands the CCE's tent to include private and
Christian schools, which would become eligible for the new civics
subsidies. Federal law, however, allows the use of federal funds
only for curriculum that is ěsecular, neutral, and nonideological.î
Therefore, a sectarian private school using the new civics subsidy would
be teaching the leftist new civics ideology of the CCE, but it could not
integrate its own religious principles into the course.
The
philosophy of the NCLB-funded Federal Civics is reflected in the article,
"
Teaching Democracy Globally, Internationally, and Comparatively: The 21st
-Century Civic Mission of School," by John J. Patrick. This and
other articles by Patrick are prominent on the
CCE
website. We should imagine, Patrick
writes, a "slow but steady rise to prominence of transnational
conceptions and institutions of democracy." He defines the new civic
mission of schools as teaching "global" democracy.
"In the past
century, " Patrick writes, "the civic mission of
schools, at its best, was an enlightened, open-ended, and
thought-provoking education for democracy in a
sovereign state, such as the United States of America, France,
Japan, or India. The purpose was induction of each new generation into
the democratic culture of a particular society and country in order to
maintain the political and civic order or to improve it on its own terms.
At its worst, the civic mission involved
heavy-handed and mind-numbing inculcation of
uncontested political loyalty to the state and society, democratic
or otherwise."
By
contrast, he writes, this century's education for citizenship will be
global "for a world transformed by globally
accepted and internationally transcendent principles and processes
of democracy." [See
more
"Excerpts of Federal Civics" here.]
The
philosophy of the CCE redefines our nation's founding principles: the
10th amendment is practically non-existent; the 2nd amendment's right to
bear arms is undermined; individual, God-given, inalienable rights are
not taught as genuine or universal, but the UN Universal Declaration of
Human Rights (UDHR) is promoted as both superior and universal. (The UDHR
describes human rights as subject to the purposes of the United Nations.)
Citizenship itself is redefined to transform us all into global citizens.
Federal Civics promotes the "internationally transcendent
principles" of which John Patrick writes.
For these
and for many other reasons, the NCLB Draft legislation should be opposed.
As far as NCLB goes, end it. Attempting to mend NCLB will be a
disaster.
For more information on this subject,
order
FedEd: The New Federal Curriculum and How Itís Enforced
and
"
Textbook Review of We the People: The Citizens and the
Constitution
"
105 Peavey Rd, Suite 116, Chaska, MN 55318
952-361-4931
www.edwatch.org -
edwatch@lakes.com
EdWatch is entirely user-supported. The continuation of our research and
distribution work depends upon individual contributors.
Click here to contribute
to our work. To subscribe or unsubscribe to this EdWatch e-mail service,
mail to:
edwatch@lakes.com. Put "subscribe" or
"unsubscribe" in the SUBJECT of the message.
EdWatch
shopping cart here.