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Re: David Wasserman II
Pwmjoy's arguments strike me more as more aking to rantings on AM radio
than the mature comments of an educator.
Can anyone seriously argue that George Bush's silver-tongued rhetoric
about childrens is learning hoodwinked political neophytes like George
Miller and Ted Kennedy into signing on to NCLB and continues to
enthrall them into supporting it?
NAACP may have signed the Joint Statement, but the fact remains that
NAACP argued in federal court that states should enforce the "letter
and spirit" of NCLB" and it specifically identified NCLB's
accountability and improvement requirements among the provisions that
should be enforced.
La Raza says, "The National Council of La Raza (NCLR) believes that
English language learners (ELLs) must be included in the No Child Left
Behind Act’s (NCLB) system of assessment and accountability.Prior to
enactment of NCLB, ELLs received little attention from the education
community, outside of Title VII directors and other bilingual education
advocates. NCLB has raised the visibility of ELLs among policy-makers
and educators." MALDEF says "Federal, state, and local school
officials must ensure that ELLs are fully and appropriately included in
NCLB accountability systems so that schools focus upon meeting the
academic needs of ELLs." So whle both organizations welcome
constructive changes in NCLB, both support NCLB's accountability
provisions in their widest outline. It is wildly unbelievable to
suggest, as pwmjoy does, that George Miller, Ted Kennedy, NAACP, LA
Raza, MALDEF, and other leading civil-rights and advocacy organizations
are so stupid and so corrupt that they don't recognize a a "fascist"
plot against children right under their noses.
What changes would I like to see in NCLB? For starters, I would like
to see recourse for parents and children when districts and states fail
to meet their obligations to improve schools. Listen for the howls.
Art
-----Original Message-----
From: pwmjoy@earthlink.net <pwmjoy@earthlink.net>
To: arn-l <arn-l@interversity.org>
Sent: Sat, 3 Nov 2007 6:36 pm
Subject: [arn-l] David Wasserman II
The following delusional, silly, wacky, vapid, ignorant statement from
this
off-the-cuff commentator regurgitates more of the same half truths and
denial
that fill ARN space and time much too often: “NCLB is "fascist?" This
must be an
example of serious conversation about assessment that Monty tells me
that ARN
is about. I think just about everybody would like to see significant
changes to
NCLB. But only in the delusional world of ARN are NCLB's accountability
provisions a "fascist" tool to privatize public education. La Raza, the
Mexican-American Legal Defense Fund, and leading progressive and legal
advocacy
organizations support NCLB, in its widest outline if not in every
detail. Kind
of hard to paint them and George Miller and Ted Kennedy as "fascists."
Except,
of course, in the wild, wild world of ARN.”
In fact, it is NCLB’s accountability provisions that have been
criticized by the
NAACP, signer to the “Joint Statement on NCLB”. Here’s a piece from the
statement:regarding concerns about NCLB: “Among these concerns are:
over-emphasizing standardized testing, narrowing curriculum and
instruction to
focus on test preparation rather than richer academic learning;
over-identifying
schools in need of improvement; using sanctions that do not help
improve
schools; inappropriately excluding low-scoring children in order to
boost test
results; and inadequate funding.”
LaRaza’s openness to changes in NCLB was made clear by its president,
Raul
Gonzalez, who said: “..we¹re very open to a constructive conversation
about how
we should approach renewal of NCLB. We¹re really not wedded to any
specific
policies or strategies right now (underlining is my own) and would love
to hear
from outside-the-beltway experts about how we can achieve better
instruction,
curriculum development, and assessment for ELLs”
(
http://sdkrashen.com//pipermail/krashen_krashen_sdkrashen.com/2006-Septe
mber/000608.html).
This same web reference ends with a response from Jim Crawford, Stephen
Krashen,
and Kate Menken who point out that what LaRaza wants from NCLB cannot
be
delivered by it without a major overhaul. One must conclude that, like
the NAACP
and given its openness to discussing changes in NCLB, it too will see
the light
and sign the “Joint Statement”.
It is now cavalier of the off-the-cuff silly-willy commentator to admit
that
there must be “significant changes to NCLB”, something absent from many
earlier
rants of this naïve huckster. What “significant changes” does this
non-deluded,
non-wild, wild world stalker of absolute truth have in mind? Such
should be his
commitment to the readers of ARN to post . He probably won’t for fear
of echoing
the very people he has so maligned.
As for his difficulty with the connection between NCLB and fascism: (1)
Individuals of all kinds make mistakes. Miller and Kennedy signed on to
the
spirit of NCLB only to find its implementation far short of the desired
outcome.
They are responsible for mistakes they made supporting it and are
currently
attempting to correct them. On November 1, 2007, Kennedy stressed the
importance
of the arts in education in a talk at Walnut Hill School. He said that
“A
student whose life is enriched by the arts has a better chance of
staying in
school, achieving in school, and succeeding after he or she graduates
from
school. Academically and socially, through self confidence and improved
communication skills, a young mind is broadened and a life enriched."
(
http://kennedy.senate.gov/newsroom/press_release.cfm?id=C2791749-BA10-49
62-B953-6F2635E6B102.)
The tragedy of NCLB is the reduction and elimination of art, music,
dance, and Oimpulse to support NCLB, a lie that emerged from all the
fakery that went on in
the Houston, Texas, school system which is well documented for those
who care to
look. (2) The classic definition of fascism is the wedding of
corporations with
the state. This administration is the most fascist government we have
ever had.
Everywhere one looks, there is a corporation ruling the government
roost with
Bush et.al doing corporate bidding, e.g., Blackwell in Iraq, the
Exxon-Mobil
fiasco in California, and the recent veto by Bush rergarding health
care for
children, something he said the state should not get too involved in,
i.e., this
is the territory of private
enterprise. The same with NCLB, a boondoggle opportunity for
corporate profit
and influence and the pressure to streamline and lock-step the delivery
of
curriculum. This is fascism. It is all around us, and our off-the-cuff
commentator is simply playing ARN for all he can get out of his
misguided and
cliché riddled burps.
pwmjoy@earthlink.net
EarthLink Revolves Around
You.-------------------------------------------------------
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