Parent report cards?
February 12, 2003
USA
Today carried an article on
February 6, 2003, stating that parents in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, may be among
the first in the nation to receive a report card from their child's school on
"how involved they are in their child's education."
What does the school mean by this? Does
the school mean how active is the parent in overseeing the education of his or
her child? It would not appear so. Further on in the article, school district
superintendent, Marianne Bartley, is quoted as saying "the goal is to make
sure parents are sending their kids to school ready to learn and keeping on top
of their academic progress."
There's that nebulous term again:
ready-to-learn. How is that defined? According to the article, one parent
stated, "if you take care of your kids, it'll
show up in the report."
So, if you take care of your kids, they
will be ready-to-learn? Think again. It becomes obvious, in reading the
article, that it isn't the parent defining the terms, setting the standards,
deciding what constitutes ready-to-learn, it is the
school. Likewise, it isn't the parent doing the grading; it is the school. So
actually, what we are talking about here, with parent report cards, is parents
being accountable to the school.
Remember when the
"partnership" concept was pushed: parents in partnership with the school?
So, is this how "partnership" is defined: the school sending home a
report card on how well parents are doing in providing to the school a child
deemed by the school to be ready-to-learn? It would appear so. Doesn't this,
then, make the parent the junior or silent partner in this partnership? It
would appear so. Isn't this the very concept that Joseph Fields presented in
his book, Total Quality for Schools
when he wrote, "Parents learn that they must provide the best
ready-to-learn student possible"...? Oh dear you say? Oh dear, indeed!
When parents objected to the
"partnership" concept years ago, at the beginning of education
reform, their concerns were dismissed as the paranoid ravings of the
"religious right." Guess concerned parents were not so paranoid after
all; guess they had good reason to be concerned. How short our memory; how
quickly we forget that parents were lied to, made fun of, ridiculed.
Should parents be "anxious"
about these report cards, as the article suggested some might be? "Anxious"
doesn't come anywhere close to describing what parental reaction to this should
be. Parents should be very concerned and very outraged. Why?
A child that is deemed not
ready-to-learn is considered to be "at risk for failure." Under Goals
2000 and its peripheral legislation, a child at risk for failure must be given
the help he or she needs to alleviate the at-risk-for-failure factors. If it is
deemed the parent is the problem, is obstructing or refuses to do what the
school deems is necessary "in the interests of the child," then
intervention by social and health services, even child protective services, is
indicated. Either of these agencies can remove a child from a home without
cause, without warrant, without due process. This is already happening.
The long and short of this is that the
schools have gained the authority they need to force parents to do what they
want in the raising and education of the child.
Parents should be outraged. Capital
switchboards should be jammed with calls from angry parents. Parents should be
marching in the streets. This is nothing short of the communist polytechnical
system of education in which the child is a ward of the state.
The parental right to oversee the
upbringing and education of the child is an inherent, God given right. That
means no legislature under our constitution has the authority, directly or
indirectly, to infringe on that right.
While the USA Today article tries to downplay the authority the school
has been given over the parent, the implications are very clear:
"... parents who do not live up to any of their responsibilities
would be contacted by an outreach worker who would try to help them become more
involved. And parents who cannot or will not cooperate would have an 'adult
mentor' assigned to their child."
The adult mentor is there in the
interests of the school, not the parent. As such, it is obvious that an adult
mentor will cause alienation of child and parent.
The article goes on to quote
Superintendent Bartley as saying, "If they're just really resistant, they
say, 'Get out of my home, go away,' we still have a responsibility for that
child." That responsibility includes reporting the parents to social and
health services or child protective services.
But this won't happen to you? Don't bet
on it. The list of what constitutes "at risk for failure" covers the
imaginable as well as much that is not.
The parents in East Stroudsburg,
Pennsylvania, whose daughters were given genital exams by the government school
never thought what happened would happen either. The
genital exams were also the outreach of Goals 2000 and readiness-to-learn. The
school was checking the girls to make sure they were not at risk for failure by
having been molested by an adult or parent. It didn't matter that there was no
indication that these girls had been molested. It didn't matter that the
parents were not notified of the exams, did not give permission, were not present when the exams were done. The school was
merely acting on the authority given it to ensure nothing stood in the way of
the school producing "a world class workforce."
That's outrageous? Yes, that's
outrageous. Certainly, it's outrageous! But parents and citizens need to
understand that in dealing with the government schools, they are dealing with a
system that sees the child as a "resource" or "human
resource" to be conditioned to the perceived environment of the
"created future"—the sustainable global environment. If the parent
gets in the way, the child will simply be removed to an environment more
conducive to the conditioning process.
Sources:
Associated
Press; “School district eyes 'parent report card'”; USA Today; February 6, 2003.
Fields, Joseph; Total Quality for Schools; A Suggestion for
American Education; Milwaukee: ASQC; 1993.
© 2003 Lynn M. Stuter
- All Rights Reserved