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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
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February 5, 2005
Clinton Education Agenda Being Pushed in
Minnesota
Senate Republicans refuse to sign on
If Minnesota is any indication, Marc Tucker's new for-profit National
Center for Education and the Economy (NCEE), will be coming to your state.
In Minnesota, Tucker will be conducting a private briefing for
legislators-only on what is being billed as "transformational issues and
trends affecting public education today." "Transformational education" is
understood to mean what the
McGraw Hill
textbook website defines as existing for the purpose of "the
transformation of society."
Less than twenty-one months after the Minnesota legislature overwhelmingly
repealed the Profile of Learning, Marc Tucker a close Clinton ally and
recognized architect of the federal education take-over (Minnesota's
Profile of Learning), is privately selling his curriculum to state
legislators, beginning Feb. 9th. No media, no staff, and no public are
allowed into three nights of private wining and dining by Tucker and his
associates from the National Center for Education and the Economy.
Background
Marc Tucker is known for his
infamous
letter [this is a pdf link] to First Lady-elect Hillary Clinton after
the 1992 presidential election in which Tucker wrote:
"We [will] have a national system of
education in which curriculum, pedagogy, examinations and teacher
education and licensure systems are all linked to the national standards
[federal curriculum]..." [p. 3]
Tucker and his NCEE organization have been
key players in the development and implementation of transformational
education in our country, largely through his influence in the crafting of
the Goals 2000 and School-to-Work legislation of 1994, his America's
Choice curriculum, and his New Standards Project. Tucker's letter to
Hillary Clinton proposed a plan which,Tucker explained, came from a
meeting of key players he brought together. One of those participating in
his planning meeting was Lauren Resnick, a partner in his New Standards
Project, and another speaker at the private briefings to Minnesota
legislators.
In his letter to Hillary, Tucker described his plan for transforming
education this way:
"to propose concrete actions that the
Clinton administration could takebetween now and the inauguration, in
the first 100 days and beyond... We took a very large leap forward in
terms of how to advance the agenda on which you and we have all been
workinga practical plan for putting all the major components of the
system in place within four years, by the time Bill has to run again."
[p. 1]
All this laid the foundation for Goals
2000, School-to-Work, and the radical national standards (federal
curriculum) in civics, history, social studies, geography, and math. (See
the book FedEd.)
Tucker's NCEE changes to "for-profit".
According to an article in
Education Week, November 17, 2004, Tucker's star is fading under the
Bush administration. Federal grants that were "once lavished on it" are
harder to come by. As a result, last year, Tucker's NCEE reinvented itself
as a for-profit company, with Tucker himself as the majority shareholder.
The EdWeek article states:
"Like other nonprofit initiatives
involved in comprehensive school reform, America’s Choice no longer can
attract the large sums of money that foundations and the federal
government once lavished on it for research and development. Instead,
it sees its future tied to the delivery of services to help schools
improve... That growing market niche for services has been richly
supported by federal grants and by funding distributed by states. Some
states have endorsed and steered districts toward specific improvement
programs or lists of programs...Mississippi, for example, has a contract
with America’s Choice..."
Tucker went on to explain to EdWeek that
America's Choice needs new money to expand to serve thousands of schools,
rather than hundreds. Tucker's group has used more than $100 million of
foundation and federal grant money over the past 15 years to develop its
curriculum and training materials. Now those resources "have largely dried
up," Tucker stated.
How did Tucker get a private presentation to MN legislators?
St. Paul Superintendent Pat Harvey is a protege and former employee of
Marc Tucker. She has aggressively promoted America's Choice in St. Paul
schools, and next week she keynotes Tucker's
national conference
on America's Choice in Orlando, Florida. Harvey's office also played
a key role in getting Tucker's group three private briefings with the
legislators.
In a slick insider job, an employee from Pat Harvey's St. Paul School
District headquarters approached the Democrat Senate Majority Leader and
the Republican Speaker of the House with a proposed letter to be sent out
to all legislators signed by the legislative leaders, directing
legislators to attend three evening forums and receptions in February.
Called "the Capital Forum Series 2005," the forums are sponsored by the
Minneapolis Foundation, which also receives hundreds of thousands of
dollars in government grant money ($390,000 in 2003).
The forums are about "transformational" education. As the letter to
legislators stated, the forums are about "transformational issues and
trends affecting public education today that may have significant impact
on into the future." Transformational education is all about changing
society, not about educating the student. (See
McGraw Hill
textbook website.)
The forums are also about changing Minnesota's laws and schools. The
letter to legislators stated that the forums will "reflect on
educational policies we can enact now that will affect long-term outcomes
for Minnesota's children." The first forum features Marc Tucker
himself on Feb. 9th. On Feb. 16th and on Feb. 23rd, two other close Tucker
associates are featured, one of them being Lauren Resnick (see above). In
other words, Tucker is pushing his radical transformational agenda.
Senate Republicans refuse to sign on.
Tucker maneuvered himself and his new NCEE into being personally
promoted by Minnesota legislative leaders. Three of the legislative
leaders were quick to sign the letter. The Republican Senate minority,
however, refused.
If Tucker and the NCEE make their appearance in your state, make sure your
legislators know who they are, and insist that knowledge-based education
be given least equal time.
Julie M. Quist
EdWatch Director |