Saturday, September 21, 2013

Arizona Changes Name Of Common Core Standards

I posted earlier this week about a movement across the country, from Arizona to Maryland, to rename the Common Core State Standards something else in order to try and quash the political controversy that is arising around the implementation of the standards.

It seems Common Core proponents think Common Core critics and opponents are too stupid to figure out that all education reformers are looking to do is change the name Common Core State Standards to something less controversial, not actually change the standards themselves to something less controversial.

The Arizona Daily Star reports the great state of Arizona has gone ahead with name change:

PHOENIX — Gov. Jan Brewer ordered her agencies to stop using the term “Common Core’’ when referring to new education standards, in response to hostility from critics over what they see as a federal intrusion.

In an executive order, the governor said she was “reaffirming Arizona’s right to set education policy.” Her order spells out “no standards or curriculum shall be imposed on Arizona by the federal government.”

But it concedes the standards adopted by the state Board of Education in 2010 already are being implemented. And Brewer herself referred to them as Common Core in her State of the State speech and her budget request to the Legislature.

Press aide Andrew Wilder said the order changes nothing except the name, which going forward will be “Arizona’s College and Career Ready Standards.’’

The move comes amid mounting opposition by some, notably tea-party organizations, to what members contend are standards being imposed on Arizona by those outside the state. State Rep. Carl Seel, R-Phoenix, one of the foes, said he believes Brewer is trying to blunt the opposition by confusing the issue.

He said people now call state agencies to ask them the status of Common Core standards. With Brewer’s action, he said, callers will be told that Common Core no longer exists, lulling them into believing the new standards have been scrapped .

“This is just changing the window dressing,” said Diane Douglas, a Republican running for state school superintendent. She remains convinced that, whatever the name, the standards being implemented are essentially being forced on Arizona by the federal government.

If you tried to make this stuff up in a novel, you'd get criticized for dealing in caricature, not real characters and events.

But no, this is real.

The state of Arizona now says the Common Core State Standards "no longer exist" in the great state of Arizona, that Governor Jan Brewer has reaffirmed "Arizona’s right to set education policy" and made explicit that “no standards or curriculum shall be imposed on Arizona by the federal government.”

Except that the Common Core does still exist in Arizona, it is still being implemented in Arizona classrooms, and even the governor's press aide admits that the executive order signed by Brewer changes nothing about Common Core except the name.

Do these people really think critics and opponents are going to be thrown off the trail by a name change?

It's like they think critics and opponents are all Elmer Fudd's asking a disguised Bugs Bunny which way the wabbit went.

That this is the strategy these so-called Best and Brightest have come up with to push back against Common Core opponents shows you just how much damage the attacks against them have done and how bereft of ideas the reformers are to defend their own agenda.

5 comments:

  1. And they're all gonna get away with it, too. They know full well that in order to get rid of the CC, popular movements will have to take root and affect change with the state legislatures. Changing the brand (which worked with United Fruit in the 1950s and with Cingular during the oughts) well deflect anger enough that lobby efforts to change them will fall flat and the new status quo will remain.

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    1. I don't think is the case it will work so well. A name change doesn't seem to be fooling many of the more prominent opponents, like the tea Party pols in the state or the Glenn Becks or Michelle Malkins who have been ringing the bell against the standards. I have a difficult time seeing them halt their opposition just because of a name change. If anything, this may inflame the opposition because it is such a cynical and desperate ploy.

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  2. Hocus Pocus in Arizona!

    In my district, we have Core Knowledge aligned with the new standards. I had the privilege of teaching, "This Little Piggy Went to Market" with a kindergarten class. By the time we got done with all the text analysis, I was heartbroken. The fun is gone and the kids never learned the rhyme. And I have fond memories of reciting it with my mother more than fifty years ago!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hocus Pocus in Arizona!

    In my district, we have Core Knowledge aligned with the new standards. I had the privilege of teaching, "This Little Piggy Went to Market" with a kindergarten class. By the time we got done with all the text analysis, I was heartbroken. The fun is gone and the kids never learned the rhyme. And I have fond memories of reciting it with my mother more than fifty years ago!

    ReplyDelete