1. Goal 1 of Federal Goals 2000
Remember "Goal 1 of Goals 2000 comes to
Minnesota," our all points
alert of January, 2001?
EdAction, parents and taxpayers around the state successfully held
off that massive, expensive, and dangerous expansion of government
intrusion into families, but that plan is here in the
2005 legislature in a big way!
The 2001 alert is again relevant in 2005. For example,
our 2001 alert stated:
- The next giant step of the federal Goals 2000 agenda is being
unveiled to the legislators and to the public: Goal 1, All Children Will
Start School Ready to Learn.
- The nearly 1/2 billion dollar proposal,
"The Action Plan for Early Care and Education in Minnesota," would
establish a comprehensive Early Childhood Education (ECE) "system" in
Minnesota complete with assessment measures. It is intended for "every
child." It would "tie the two worlds of pre-K and K-12 together
systemically and universally." It would establish an appointed "School
Readiness Council" in every school district to oversee preschool needs in
the district, under the supervision of the state Department of Children,
Families and Learning.
We went on to say, "Some refer to it as Baby Ed,
defined clearly by Marc Tucker, one of the chief architects of the new
education system when he said, "What is essential is that we create a
seamless web of [education]...that literally extends from cradle to grave
and is the same system for everyone..."
[Marc Tucker's
letter to Hillary Clinton, November 11, 1992] Not coincidentally, Marc
Tucker was invited by legislative leaders (Sen. Dean Johnson, House Speaker
Steve Sviggum, and House Minority Leader Matt Entenza) to speak to
legislators in a closed door briefing last month. EdWatch
alerted the public,
and your calls scuttled that event.
These issues are a high priority once again in the 2005 legislative
session. A number of separate pieces of Early Childhood legislation are
moving through the legislature. Together they form a massive financial and
structural expansion of state authority over our youngest children. They
would move our state a long way toward Tucker's "cradle to grave" education
system. These bills have strong momentum. All-out opposition will be
necessary to stop them. Here are the components of the plan:
- Adopt and implement government early childhood standards, a
set of controversial standards for children from birth through four that
include social and emotional learning, sex-education, gender identity,
diversity training, vocational issues, and social activism (SF 592 / HF
1192 and SF 1278 / HF 1323);
- Establish a state rating system for preschool programs based
on these standards (SF 592 / HF 1192);
- Test the students for compliance with those standards in the
state pre-kindergarten "screening" and lower the age requirement for
"early screening" to three-year olds (SF 906);
- Include mental health screening for all children three and older
in the early learning assessments (SF 1365 / HF 1513).
- Bribe districts into screening early by granting progressively
more state money the earlier they screen (SF 1278 / HF 1323 and SF
1365 / HF 1513);
- Assign a state data tracking number to each child when
they are first screened (S.F. 1278 / HF 1323).
- Expand state funded "school readiness" programs from
"eligible" children to all children three or older (S.F. 1278 / HF 1323);
- Combine Health, Social Services, and Education programs with Early
Care within the state bureaucracy (SF 905);
- Link public health services with Early Childhood programs (SF
905);
- Visit the homes of all low income families with children ages 0
to three (SF 905);
- Increase state funding for early education programs (SF 673 /
HF 152 and SF 949 / HF 58)
- Establish and fund a non-profit foundation to develop
oversight measures for early care and to market the government plans (SF
907 / HF 1419);
In this alert, Part I, we will discuss the Early Childhood Standards. In
Part II, we will discuss the testing, mental health screening, and how the
pieces are part of a package. In Part III, we will discuss what you can do
to stop this.
2. Early Learning Standards SF 592 / HF
1192
Senate authors: Kierlin; Kubly; Robling; Scheid; Pappas
House authors: Davnie; Slawik; Welti; Ruud; Sieben
The proposed system of standards for preschoolers resurrects the failed
Profile of Learning through excessively vague, subjective, non-academic,
and psychosocially inappropriate indicators that usurp parental authority
These standards have an inordinate emphasis on social and emotional
development. Among other things, they do the following:
- directly interfere with families raising their children;
- give more authority to teachers and to care-givers than to parents in
controversial areas, such as teaching gender identity;
- bring back all of the controversial areas of the Profile of Learning,
such as multiculturalism, diversity training, emphasis on careers.
over-emphasis on environmentalism, and turning children into activists of
the left with "service learning." These would be imposed on our youngest
children;
- specifically reference the National Association for the Education
of Young Children (NAEYC) and its radical and controversial
Anti-Bias Curriculum. The NAEYC Anti-Bias Curriculum, for example,
contains such information as:
- § Witchcraft: “Kay sets up...a 'witch-healer' table, where
the children can make their own potions.” (p. 9)
- § Homosexuality: Definition of “Homophobia: A fear and
hatred of gay men and lesbians backed up by institutional policies and
power that discriminate against them.” (p. 3)
- § Sexual Identity: “...the purpose of these activities is to
enable preschoolers to develop a clear, healthy sex identity through
understanding that their being a girl or boy
depends on their anatomy, not on what they like to do.…“Make copies of
an outline of a
body as drawn by a preschooler, and in small groups,
ask children to fill in all the body parts, and to show if the person
is a girl or boy.” (p. 53)
- § Activism with Young Children: “Young children have an
impressive capacity for learning how to be activists if adults provide
activities that are relevant and developmentally appropriate.” (p. 77)
NAEYC Standards
Are NAEYC standards relevant to The Minnesota Early Childhood
Standards? NAEYC has endorsed them. The Minnesota affiliate of NAEYC (MNAEYC)
helped write them. The NAEYC Anti-Bias Curriculum worldview will be
easily implemented through the vague, subjective, non-academic standards
-- the Early Childhood Indicators of Progress.
Gender and Cultural Identity
For example, the Minnesota Standards, Early Childhood Indicators of
Progress, define family responsibility for developing "self-concept" as
the following:
- "Support children’s awareness of and
pride in their cultural heritage."
The Minnesota Standards then define the teacher's responsibility this
way:
- "Support children’s developing understanding of their gender and
cultural identity."
Of course, this is not the proper role of the care provider, at all.
"Gender and cultural identity" issues are core family issues. How will
teachers carry out their responsibility for the gender and cultural
identity of the child? NAEYC's Anti-Bias Curriculum explicitly states:
- "Expanding Children’s Understanding of Gender Anatomy and
Identity:
- Make copies of an outline of a body as drawn by a preschooler, and
in small groups ask children to fill in all the body parts, and
to show if the person is a girl or boy.” (p. 53)
- "Have anatomically correct dolls available…For example, tell a
persona doll story where a few of the dolls ask questions about what
makes them a boy or a girl” (p. 53)
Activism in Young Children
The Early Childhood Indicators of Progress state:
- "Social Systems Understanding: Participate in activities to help
others in the community”
These activities are not simply benign social services, as suggested
by the phrase “help others.” This is where our youngest children will be
trained into social activism. School children are frequently manipulated
to participate in lobbying and demonstrating for social policy and
political change. We've seen this recently at our own Capitol at rallies
for increased education funding. The NAEYC Anti-Bias Curriculum states it
this way:
- "Activism with Young Children: Young children have an
impressive capacity for learning how to be activists.” (p. 77)
Along those lines, a November 14, 2002 Berkeley newspaper article
reported the following:
- "The next generation of Berkeley peaceniks gathered on the steps of
City Hall Tuesday to demonstrate their opposition to a pending war in
Iraq- after school, of course. Armed with protest signs, microphones,
and Harry Potter lunch-boxes, elementary and pre-school children
demanded city leaders contact President Bush and halt his hawkish ‘war
for oil.’” - Steve Sexton 11/14/02
Politicized Environmentalism
We also have the politicized environmentalist agenda finding a home
in the Minnesota Early Childhood Indicators of Progress:
- Social Systems Understanding: Share responsibility in taking care
of their environment”
This is where the one-sided and extreme approach to environmentalism
that so pervaded the Profile of Learning and which is still embedded into
much K-12 curriculum today will be implemented.
Diversity Training
Diversity training was a big part of the Profile of Learning for
K-12. Many of those requirements were repealed when the Profile was
repealed, but advocates for the Minnesota Early Learning Standards intend
insert it into the child care system for our youngest and most
impressionable children. The Minnesota Early Childhood Indicators state:
- "Social Systems Understanding: Recognize and appreciate
similarities and differences between self and others from diverse
backgrounds”
The NAEYC Anti-Bias Curriculum states it this way:
- Homosexuality: Definition of “Homophobia: A fear and hatred
of gay men and lesbians backed up by institutional policies and power
that discriminate against them.” (p. 3)
Mark Kindt, former Assistant Attorney General of Ohio, stated:
- “Most citizens would recognize the anti-bias curriculum as a highly
politicized curriculum which seeks to impose a particular ideological
world-view upon children. Most taxpayers would simply be astounded that
tax dollars are routinely being spent toward the state-by-state
implementation of these apparently politicized standards.” [Improper
Special Interest Influence in Key Contracts: An Analysis with
Preliminary Observations on the Politicized Agenda in Child Day Care ]
The
Action Plan for Early Care and Education in Minnesota states:
- "We believe Minnesota needs to have a
much larger number of ECE programs that meet NAEYC’s standards." (p.
18)
Minnesota's Early Childhood Early Childhood Indicators of Progress
meet the NAEYC standards. The Anti-Bias curriculum is required for
certification of teachers and programs by NAEYC. The Minnesota Early
Childhood Indicators will serve as a basis for evaluating and labeling
toddlers, rating child care centers, training teachers, certifying Child
Care Centers, and teaching parents. They are a breathtaking intrusion
of government into the lives and values of families. Adopting them
would impose the Profile of Learning on our youngest and most
impressionable children. Adopting them would be a brutal betrayal of the
voters who elected this legislature and the children and parents of this
great state.
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Next: Minnesota Baby Ed Alert, Part II
1. Early Screening SF 906
2. A Package Deal: Mental Health Screening for Kids