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EdAction
Maple River Education Coalition PAC
105 Peavey Rd, St 116
Chaska, MN
55318
952-361-4931
http://www.EdAction.org
E-mail
January 5, 2002
Print Version
Deadline Looms for Mpls 8th Graders
"The school is moving out of the business of 'schooling' into
the business of human resource development." -- Shirley
McCune, State of Washington Educational Liaison, and a chief
architect of the new education system.
Minneapolis 8th graders have a looming deadline of January
15th to apply for a career pathway so that they may go
on to high school. Small Learning Communities (SLCs) are being implemented
in many schools across the country. (For example, see Education
World)
Attention parents and taxpayers from every state: Look carefully at
Minneapolis and St. Paul. This is what Small Learning Communities are. The
public relations campaign used to sell this restructuring to the public
will not give you the following information.
Small Learning Communities are first being imposed on inner city school
districts that have higher concentrations of low-income, minority,
immigrant and single-parent households. These communities are especially
vulnerable because they have fewer overall resources to oppose it. They
are also those most in need of genuine academic-based learning, something
SLCs eliminates.
Promotions of Small Learning Communities seldom acknowledge that when a
student enters an SLC, they are entering a career pathway that will
determine their curriculum, work-based learning and narrowed job choices
for the remainder of their schooling. Unstated is that SLCs is another
name for mandated School-to-Work for all. (School-to-Work is the
restructuring of K-12 education entirely around jobs and certification for
entry-level jobs. That replaces our previous system of a broad,
liberal arts education that provides a foundation for a spectrum of
employment opportunities and adult roles every citizen will need over a
lifetime.)
Pushing ahead of even St. Paul's Small Learning Communities (SLCs)
plan, School-to-Work is being forced on every public student in the entire
city in one sweep. Such is the reality behind the benign rhetoric of
"small learning" environments. (See our
update)
"Every public school student will be a member of an SLC/career
cluster in Minneapolis by fall of 2002."
Minneapolis SLC's mandate a career application from among a
limited number of options. The SLCs prevent students from
taking courses outside a given career track. No promises are made that
your first or your second application will be accepted. For students in 8th
grade, this is career tracking, and it closes off student choices at a
tender age. (See "Saying NO to career
tracking,") It forces all students to jobs instead of learning.
Also in the News
| January 2, 2002
Analysis of the newly passed federal education law, by Phyllis
Schlafly, Printed in Townhall.com
|
| Considering the explosive mandates for state
testing, the following USA Today article is significant.
Though it does not even reference Minnesota's testing debacle last
year.
Glitches
Plague Tests
USA Today
Problems arising with education testing:
- In November, Maryland education officials delayed releasing
statewide results, complaining of ''wild swings.'' The
fluctuations in the scores of schools, both up and down, were
too great to be believable.
- In 1999, testing errors felt in six states hit hardest in
New York City, where more than 8,000 students were mistakenly
forced to attend summer school, and another 3,500 were
unfairly held back a grade.
- During the past two years, thousands of Arizona students
were affected by inaccurate math and reading scores on the
state exam.
Source: USA Today research |
The following statements are from the Minneapolis
Public Schools website.
"In order for your teacher or counselor to
process your application by the high school's January 15 deadline, you
need to complete your application prior to January 15."
"Check with your teacher or counselor to find out
when they need your application returned to them."
"Get appropriate teacher recommendation(s) as
noted on the application. Fill in all questions accurately and neatly.
Remember: several SLCs use your application as a sample of your writing
skills. A teacher or counselor is required to sign your application and
assemble your test results, grades, attendance and teacher
recommendation(s) before sending your application to the high school by
January 15."
"You will be notified by February 12 if you were
accepted into the SLC of your choice. If you are not accepted, you will
be able to make another choice on a second choice application form.
Second choice application forms are due February 22 and students will be
notified of their school program by March 1."
"Students who do not submit a high
school application will be automatically assigned to an SLC program that
serves the area where they live." (Emphasis added.
In other words, students who do not submit an application will be
automatically assigned to a career track that government bureacrats have
assigned as 'best' for that locality.)
A schoolboard member from another district put it this way:
(See the
application form requires Adobe Acrobat Reader)
"The [application] form looks more like a college application
than an entrance to a public high school. Talk about competitive
selection, after an era of "don't track for intelligence". Did
they do extensive prep prior to the application? What about the parent
who can't figure the form out? Oh, that's right if you can't complete
the form in required manner and time you revert to default. The district
will choose. Edison High should be flush with cosmetology
students."
It is time for the public to take seriously the statements of the
movers and shakers in educational change:
"What is happening to America today ... is not simply a chance
situation and the usual winds of change. What it amounts to is a total
transformation of our society." (Dr. Shirley McCune, a chief
architect of the new education system, from speech given at the 1989
National Governor's Conference, at which Goals 2000 was first publicly
introduced.)
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