Tell me this isn’t just politics
January 14th, 2010
Texas refuses federal school funds
But Perry said Texas “reserves the right to decide how we educate our children and not surrender that control to the federal bureaucracy.”Perry’s objections seem to center on the fact that the grant rules give preference to states that sign on to a push for national curriculum standards. Perry and Scott have been critical of the Common Core Standards Initiative, a state-led effort coordinated by the National Governors Association Center for Best Practices and the Council of Chief State School Officers with support from the Department of Education. Texas and Alaska are the only two states that have not joined the initiative.
So the grant rules giver “preference” to those who sign on for national standards–why not apply anyway and see what happens? And isn’t “local control” the basis of Texas public education? So why isn’t the state supporting districts (if any) that are implementing such standards on their own?
Are there potential negative consequences of national standards? Of course there are. But national standards or no, Texans, parents, students, and citizens, deserve to know why over 80 percent of students in the more desirable high schools are considered “college ready” but only half of them can meet the minimum SAT/ACT scores required by state colleges to enroll in schools without remediation.

See also:
- Clearly thinking is not a requirement for school management (February 18th, 2010)
- But no guarantees about course availability (February 18th, 2010)
- So it’s not about reputation or prestige afterall (January 31st, 2010)
- Do you think he’ll write a book on successful management techniques? (December 29th, 2009)
- Because most people can still master the material even if they don’t under a third of it… (December 27th, 2009)

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