The Georgia Public Policy Foundation is an independent think tank that proposes practical, market-oriented approaches to public policy to improve the lives of Georgians.
Since 1991, the Georgia Public Policy Foundation has conducted scholarly research and analysis of state public policy issues and worked to educate citizens, policy-makers and the media. The Foundation is state-focused, independent, non-partisan and market-oriented in its approach. Its philosophy is that good public policy is based upon fact, an understanding of sound economic principles and the core principles of our free enterprise system – economic freedom, limited government, personal responsibility, individual initiative, respect for private property and the rule of law.
Sherena Arrington of the think tank aptly and correctly describes what the standards are, how they were adopted with little legislative interest, and the enormous amount of unfunded mandates they will cost states. If you are a resident of a state that adopted the standards, much of what she writes will be applicable to the cost and control the Federal Government and the Educational Consortia wields over your state's educational delivery and content.
Wouldn't you think other political think tanks espousing the tenets of Federalism would craft their own paper on the absolute illegality of Common Core standards, longitudinal data systems and other states making educational decisions for another state?
Bravo to Ms. Arrington for her clear analysis of these unconstitutional, unproven, untested, and unfunded mandates foisted on the American taxpayer.
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An Uncommon Approach to
Costly Common
Core Education Standards
By Sherena Arrington
Joseph
Califano, secretary of health, education and welfare in the
Carter
administration declared that “in its most extreme form, national
control of
curriculum is a form of national control of ideas.” That was in
1977. This
month, syndicated columnist George Will cited Califano's warning
in a column
bemoaning the Obama administration's latest education
intervention through the
Common Core Curriculum State Standards Initiative.
Almost
every state in the nation has rushed to join the Common Core
curriculum movement
with hardly a thought of the cost, financial or otherwise. In
most cases, however,
the “states” have barely been involved. Simply put, massive
educational
bureaucracies have signed on to the Common Core and have
expected, and
generally received, no interference from the three branches of
government. Whatever
happened to that adage, “Look before you leap?”
In
fact, states signed up for Common Core standards without even
knowing what
those curriculum standards would be. This seismic shift in
education governance
is quietly moving forward without so much as a whimper from most
legislative
bodies. State legislatures have been left in the dark.
In
Georgia,
where education already consumes half the state budget,
taxpayers should know
that the Legislature did not even receive a fiscal note on the
cost of
implementing Common Core standards. The appointed members of the
State Board of
Education voted in July 2010 to adopt Common Core standards and
approved $1.3
million for fiscal year 2011 and another $1.27 million for FY
2012, but the
Legislature has no awareness of the total costs that the state
will incur in
the long run. There has been no open debate about the cost and
about the
direction it would take the state.
Just
who is in charge of the Common Core? The quick answer: primarily
unelected educational
“experts” who have no direct accountability to the people are
the creators of
the Common Core curriculum standards.
Two organizations take
credit for developing the Common Core "on behalf of" the states,
declaring, "These English language arts and mathematics
standards
represent a set of expectations for student knowledge and skills
that high
school graduates need to master to succeed in college and
careers." These
organizations, both based in Washington, D.C., are the National
Governors
Association’s Center for Best Practices (NGA Center) and the
Council of Chief
State School Officers (CCSSO) along with considerable advice
from Achieve,
Inc., ACT, the College Board, the National Association of State
Boards of
Education and the State Higher Education Executive Officers.
The
federal government is quite careful to avoid any credit for the
Common Core
because such direct meddling into the curriculum of the states
would actually
be illegal, according to several federal laws. Instead, the
federal Department
of Education pushes the Common Core onto the states through the
constitutional
power of the Spending Clause. The letter of the law is met when
states agree to
conditions attached to grants, in this case embracing all the
strings attached
to the Race-to-the-Top grant and accepting the waiver conditions
tied to No
Child Left Behind. Such federal grants frequently are carrots to
get states to
voluntarily commit to federal educational goals, which end up
costing states
more money to administer than they ever receive in federal
funds.
Citizens
are expected to trust in this educational consortium and allow
the Common Core
full sway over their state's curriculum. A state may supplement
the standards,
but those additional standards may not exceed 15 percent for any
content area and
states cannot omit or change any of the other 85 percent.
Are
legislators unable to lead a good debate on federalism or demand
an accounting
of the economic long-term costs to the citizens they represent?
What about just
old-fashioned liberty? Are legislatures ready to yield the very
heart of the
educational system, the standards that drive the curriculum, to
unknown
bureaucrats who are spread far and wide having virtually no
accountability to
state taxpayers? Or, what about the bare bones minimum of
legislative
oversight?
Educational
bureaucracies seem to operate as if they are the fourth branch
of government.
They want the money appropriated by the legislature and to be
left alone to do
with it as they please. A shorter rein, constant accountability
to the people
and reducing educational dependence on federal grants would go a
long way to
ensuring that the people of each state retain control of their
educational
systems that are paid for with their tax dollars.
Texas
opted
out in part because of the exorbitant cost of implementation:
according to Lone
Star state estimates, the cost would be upwards of $3 billion to
implement new
standards, devise new tests and purchase new textbooks to
comply. Virginia,
too, has opted out due to the additional costs and burdens.
Other
states are starting to question their commitment to the Common
Core. South
Carolina is now attempting to apply the brakes, but not just due
to costs. Governor
Nikki Haley stated recently, “Just as we should not relinquish
control of
education to the federal government, neither should we cede it
to the consensus
of other states.”
Federalism
matters. As Founding Father James Madison explained, federalism
provides the
constitutional backbone of liberty. Governor Haley recognizes
that South
Carolina has a duty to its citizens to protect their Tenth
Amendment power over
education. It remains to be seen whether the Legislature agrees,
but now its
people have an opportunity to weigh in on the decision. That is
more than can
be said for Georgians.
The
Common Core provides a perfect example of how quickly a state
can lose control
of its K-12 educational system. Obviously, curriculum is central
to education. With
Georgia supposedly locked into the Common Core as a condition of
the Race to
the Top federal grant as well as the No Child Left Behind
waiver, it appears
the state will simply become the administrative agent for a
nationalized
curriculum through the adoption of nationalized standards, and
the citizens
will pick up the expensive tab.
This
is what should be called, “education without representation.”
Such a hands-off
approach to K-12 educational policy is an abandonment of the
Legislature’s
constitutional duty to keep the agencies of state government
accountable to the
people, especially so when it comes to an agency whose mission
consumes at
least $7 billion in state taxpayer funds and $6 billion in local
taxes
annually.
Sherena Arrington, a
political consultant and policy researcher, wrote this
commentary for the
Georgia Public Policy Foundation, an independent think tank that
proposes
practical, market-oriented approaches to public policy to
improve the lives of
Georgians. Nothing
written here is
to be construed as necessarily reflecting the views of the
Georgia Public
Policy Foundation or as an attempt to aid or hinder the passage
of any bill
before the U.S. Congress or the Georgia Legislature.
©
Georgia Public Policy Foundation (March 16, 2012). Permission to
reprint in
whole or in part is hereby granted, provided the author and her
affiliations
are cited.
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