It seems if you write for the
NY Times you must about why Common Core is wonderful. I don’t know why. Sunday Frank Bruni wrote a column about
how today’s kids are coddled. I couldn’t agree more. Every game ends in a tie. No one can walk anywhere by
themselves. Now I am done agreeing with Bruni. Here is some of the nonsense he
wrote:
I behold the pushback against more rigorous
education standards in general and the new Common Core
curriculum in particular. And it came to mind when Education Secretary Arne
Duncan recently got himself into a big mess. Duncan,
defending the Common Core at an education conference, identified some of its
most impassioned opponents as “white suburban moms” who were suddenly
learning that “their child isn’t as brilliant as they thought they were, and
their school isn’t quite as good.”
So, this is absurd.
Common Core is being fought against because it means school is testing testing
testing and what is being tested
it boring at best and basically stultifying.
If you follow the fevered lamentations
over the Common Core, look hard at some of the complaints from parents and
teachers, and factor in the modern cult of self-esteem, you can guess what set
Duncan off: a concern, wholly justified, that tougher instruction not be
rejected simply because it makes children feel inadequate, and that the impulse
to coddle kids not eclipse the imperative to challenge them.
More nonsense. People
are fighting because mathematics is being rammed down the throats of kids who
will never use it. Because science has been reduced to rote memorization and
because reading has been made in to a painful activity.
The Common Core, a laudable set of
guidelines that emphasize analytical thinking over rote memorization, has been
adopted in more than 40 states. In instances its implementation has been
flawed, and its accompanying emphasis on testing certainly warrants debate.
NO. They emphasize
memorization and testing. How would like to take test sall day Frank? How would
like to learn things that you didn’t want to learn just because some testing
companies have realized that that
stuff is easy to test?
What’s not warranted is the welling hysteria: from right-wing alarmists,
who hallucinate a federal takeover of education and the indoctrination of a
next generation of government-loving liberals; from left-wing paranoiacs, who
imagine some conspiracy to ultimately privatize education and create a new
frontier of profits for money-mad plutocrats.
Come on. Common Core
is not right wing issue any more that it is a left wing issue. It is a business
issue. Bill Gate is behind it and big money is at stake. The idea that kids can
learn what interests them to learn is out the window. How is that a political
issue?
Then there’s the outcry, equally
reflective of the times, from adults who assert that kids aren’t enjoying
school as much; feel a level of stress that they shouldn’t have to; are being
judged too narrowly; and doubt their own mettle.
That is a weird idea.
Kids should enjoy learning. Of course not. Terrible idea right Frank?
Aren’t aspects of school supposed to be
relatively mirthless? Isn’t stress an acceptable byproduct of reaching higher
and digging deeper?
No, stress and
learning are unrelated. Were you stressed from writing this column Frank? Did
you learn anything from writing it? Will you learn anything from what I am
writing? Will you find it stressful?
Before we beat a hasty retreat from
potentially crucial education reforms, we need to ask ourselves how much panic
is trickling down to kids from their parents and whether we’re paying
the price of having insulated kids from blows to their egos and from the
realization that not everyone’s a winner in every activity on every day.
This has nothing to do
with the Common Core issues. The curriculum is awful. See if you can pass any of
the tests.
David Coleman, one of the principal
architects of the Common Core, told me that he’s all for self-esteem, but that
rigorous standards “redefine self-esteem as something achieved through hard
work.”