Who Controls at the Local Level?
I recently received the following query
from an individual. These questions
have been asked by many parents. My
response follows.
Here is something I've
long wanted to know: Just what
control do public school teachers have over the curriculum they teach and the
methods they teach by?
Who determines the curriculum? Is it the legislature? The SPI (Superintendent of Public Instruction)? The school board? The Principal? The teacher?
And ditto for the teaching methodology.
These are good questions, which I shall
attempt to answer.
If you ask a state legislator these
questions, they will tell you that curriculum is local. Nothing could be further from the
truth. But one would not know that
unless one understands the system.
I shall endeavor to explain.
Education reform is based on systems
philosophy or general
systems theory. Without getting
into specifics, systems philosophy says that we can create our future by
building systems and leveraging those systems into balance with all other
systems in a conceptually wholistic model, (also referred to as systemic
change) using a system infrastructure that is analogous to all
systems. Scientists refer to
systems philosophy as a syllogism — how to bring about planned
change systemically. Under systems
philosophy, the system and leveraging of the system into balance with all other
systems, is paramount above all else.
That leveraging is achieved via analyzing DATA FEEDBACK attained from
the subjects of the system established, be it an agency (school), a classroom,
or an individual. This explains the
privacy invasive databanks being built on all systems — health care, education,
justice (law enforcement, criminal, juvenile, drivers…),
military… (This is also the
weakest point of the system). Systems philosophy
is based on humanism and the tenets of it, with the spiritual dimension
based in New Age thought and practice.
Under systems philosophy, you start out
by developing your vision of the created future. In the case of education reform, that
vision is that every child shall exit the education system with mastery
of…
the new basic skills —
teamwork, critical thinking, making decisions, communication, adapting to
change and understanding whole systems. (High Skills,
High Wages, Workforce Training and Education Coordinating Board, WA
State, 1994, page 65).
The vision is then
defined in terms of exit outcomes.
In the case of education reform, the exit outcomes are the state
essential "academic" learning requirements (EALRs). With this in mind, look back at the new
basics and I think you can readily see why the EALRs
are academic in name only.
The EALRs do not focus on the teaching of
objective material or on teaching children to think, how most parents would
define academic. In the Schools for the 21st
Century (the foundation of education reform in Washington state and the basis of American 2000) resource document, content
is defined as excellence in terms of the change agenda; process
as the product … the destination … what learning is about;
and emotionality and affectivity as the means by which content
and process will be achieved. This
explains why the EALRs are so very subjective in
nature.
From the exit outcomes, you then design
down (sometimes referred to as backmapping). In the case of education reform, you
design down by designing curriculum, instruction and teaching methodologies
such that in their use and application, the child is moved to mastery of the exit
outcomes.
The measure of that mastery is the assessment. In the case of education reform, such is
the WASL
(Washington Assessment of Student Learning). The WASL
was developed by Riverside
Publishing Company and scored by National Computer Systems, owned by Riverside Publishing
and a subcontractor to National
Center on Education Statistics under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Education. If the greater number
of children fail the assessment, the curriculum, instruction and
teaching methodologies are revisited and adjusted. If a few children fail the assessment,
they are remediated to bring them in line.
The assessments also assess classroom teachers. The assessment provides DATA FEEDBACK to
the system, which is one reason why parents should not allow their children to
take the WASL.
The goals are state defined, and the
curriculum that must be used to teach the state goals is also, therefore, state
defined in that a school district whose children consistently fail the WASL will be taken over by the state. Call the Office of the Superintendent of
Public Instruction (OSPI) and tell them you want the
duplicating masters for the EALRs for all subject
areas and all benchmark levels.
What they will send are curriculum guides to teach the EALRs and how to assess those activities for mastery. Take a good look at the activities and
the rubrics (standards usually defined on a 1-4 point scale) used to assess
those activities. You will discover
that they are looking for process — does the child demonstrate the
wanted behavior/procedure (how Richard Stiggins,
president and founder of the Assessment Training Institute, who is involved in our state
assessments, defines process) in relation to the given prompt.
The state, as condition of receipt of
Goals 2000 grant money, MUST comply with the requirements of Goals 2000, MUST
agree to implement those laws and procedures necessary to attain the FEDERALLY
defined goals as outlined in Goals 2000.
Receiving other federal monies has also been tied to compliance with
Goals 2000. Thus, if a state does
not comply with Goals 2000, the state stands to lose other federal monies. This is the carrot (otherwise known as
coercion) that is forcing states to buy into Goals 2000.
So, who is responsible? Our Congressman for
passing Goals 2000? Our state legislature in passing ESHB
1209? I would answer that
both our Congressman and our state legislature are responsible as they have the
constitutional charge to pass laws.
Who determines the curriculum? Our Congressman in passing Goals 2000
that established the systems philosophy, and our state legislature in passing ESHB 1209, bringing to the state the systems philosophy of
education that necessitates a narrowly constructed curriculum to attain the
exit outcomes that they legislatively authorized the Commission on Student
Learning (CSL) to establish. ESHB 1209
placed on the legislature the final acceptance or rejection of the EALRs.
The feds and the state determined the
WHAT; the local school district only determines HOW they will achieve the
federal and state mandated WHAT.
There is no local control of anything.
So, you ask, why all these meetings at
the local level? The philosophy is
simple: if you foist something on
people, they will not only reject it, they will probably avidly oppose it; if
you make them think it is their idea, they will embrace and support it. There are two primary reasons behind the
consensus
building activities (focus forums billed as public meetings):
1.
to move the greater number of people
away from the Christian world view of right and wrong to the humanist world
view that right and wrong are a matter of perception, therefore relative; and
2.
to make the greater number of people present think the predetermined
outcomes are their idea.
If such can be accomplished, those
pushing reform go forth and proclaim that they have the support of the
people and they are doing the will of the people, never mind that
focus forums are not comprised of elected individuals and represent no
one. This whole concept is
governance by appointed bodies (democratic societies and participatory democracies), not
elective bodies and is totally antithetical to our Constitution and Bill of
Rights.
© August 1999; Lynn M
Stuter
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