Common Core Aligned: “Teaching Tolerance” – PT 3

CommonCoreAligned“…to create just these kinds of tests—next-generation assessments aligned to the common core. When the tests are aligned to the common standards, the curriculum will line up as well—and that will unleash powerful market forces in the service of better teaching.”
Bill Gates, 2009 Speech To Natl. Conf. of State Legislatures

The goal is to align everything so that students and the money have nowhere to go but Common Core.


Last week, I started this series on certain Social Activism curriculum claiming to be aligned to Common Core as created by ‘Teaching Tolerance’, a project of the Southern Poverty Law Center.  This is  part three.
[Read: Part one and Part two]

At the end of Part two, I indicated I’d be taking a look at ‘Teaching Tolerance’s’ initiative, “Perspectives for A Diverse America”.  From the Teaching Tolerance site, we see the ‘marrying’ of social justice with the Common Core:

Teaching Tolerance’s Perspectives for a Diverse America is a literacy-based curriculum that marries anti-bias social justice content with the rigor of the Common Core State Standards.

There are  four parts to the ‘Diverse Perspectives’ plan. They include Building your learning plan, Anti-bias framework, Central text Anthology and Tasks and Strategies.

Today, we’ll look at the first two, ‘Building your learning plan’ and ‘Anti-bias Framework’.

A snapshot of the ‘anti-bias framework’, which I’ll talk more about in a bit:

 

Building Your Learning Plan
This section arguably piggy-backs on the Common Core’s inappropriate push on very young learners to read texts that are age and developmentally inappropriate, as well as relying on Common Core’s widely disputed “close reading” method.

Of note in this section is the “Do Something” construct. In my opinion, it might as well read “Do Activism”. Let’s see the definitions ‘Teaching Tolerance’ uses for this construct.

“Do Something for K-2 reads,  “Students apply learning to their own lives through performance tasks that build critical literacy and civic engagement.”

“Do Something” for 3-12 reads, “Students demonstrate their anti-bias awareness and proficiency through their everyday behavior or coordinated social action.”

Anti-Bias Framework (ABF)
This is how the anti-bias framework is described, verbatim, from the website:

Perspectives follows a “backwards design” approach that begins with the anti-bias anchor standards and grade-level outcomes from the Teaching Tolerance Anti-bias Framework (ABF).

The ABF is organized into four domains: Identity, Diversity, Justice and Action. The domains represent a spectrum of social justice education goals inspired by Louise Derman-Sparks’ 1989 book, Anti-Bias Education: Tools for Empowering Young Children (NAEYC).

The ABF includes 20 anchor standards, five within each domain. Each anchor standard has corresponding grade-level outcomes for K-2, 3-5, 6-8 and 9-12. School-based scenarios show what anti-bias attitudes and behavior might look like in students.

Derman-Sparks appears to have made a lucrative career out of pushing social issue items into classrooms.

Let’s take look at those four domains from the description of the ‘Anti-Bias Framework’. Again, this is verbatim from the website:

Identity
Students will understand the multiple facets of their identities, know where those traits come from, and feel comfortable being themselves in a diversity of settings.

Diversity
Students will recognize the diversity of people in the world, be able to identify differences and commonalities, express interest in the lived experiences of others and develop genuine connections with others.

Justice
Students will be aware of bias and injustice, both individual and systemic, will understand the short and long-term impact of injustice, and will know about those who have fought for more fairness and justice in our world.

Action
Students will feel confident that they can make a difference in society and will commit to taking action against bias and injustice even when it is not popular or easy.

Well… There you have it.

A template for creating a generation of social justice activists, starting in kindergarten, based on definitions provided by the far left.

In the next installment, we’ll take a look at ‘Central text Anthology’ and ‘Tasks and Strategies’.

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Common Core, Poltical Correctness, Social Justice | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Teacher Omar Currie Just Doesn’t Get That Controversy Isn’t About HIM (Video)

In my inbox over the weekend was a video of an interview between Efland Cheeks Elementary teacher, Omar Currie, and a NewsMax reporter.

The topic of the video was the reading of a homosexual themed book to 8 year-olds in Curry’s 3rd grade class without notifying their parents. However, Currie used the time to make it all about him.

The book, King and King, has been subject to a Federal Lawsuit (2006) and has been objected to before in North Carolina (2004).

If you haven’t been following this story, get caught up:

Ok, here’s the video clip below. It’s not very long, but Currie manages to use the time to paint himself as a victim… of his own activism.

Shorter: LGBT activist and Teacher, Omar Currie, still knows what is best for your child. Parental rights? HAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!

He also revises his account of the ‘bullying incident‘ for a third time.

“The incident actually occurred while they were in P.E., I dropped my kids off at specials like I normally do every single day and I came to pick them up and uh, there were two students who were… (unintelligible)…
One student was a male student who was being bullied and he said that his peers were calling him ‘a woman’ and ‘a girl’ and that they had used the word ‘gay’ in a way that hurt his feelings…”

Reminder: First Currie claimed the incident was generically a kid being called ‘gay’, then it changed to a boy being called a “girly girl”.  Now, the alleged incident happened in P.E. class and we have ‘gay’ and ‘woman’ being used. Also, a new addition of a little girl crying.

Currie admits in the video that he read the book King and King the same day the incident happened.  So much for informing the parents of the children allegedly involved in the incident, muchless the parents of the rest of the class.

Speaking of the parents, several from the school have reached out to me that he has not spoken to all the parents in his class as he claims to have done in this video.

Don’t miss the spot where Currie was asked ‘why this book?’.

Key quotes:

“3rd grade is full of what we call “girl drama”…most teacher do.. I have addressed “girl drama” in the same exact way – by reading a book.”
(Really, what book was that??)

“That never crossed my mind…”
(With regard to the parents having a problem with the book).

“When we’re learning new things it’s perfectly normal to feel uncomfortable.”
(With regard to a student saying this made him uncomfortable. Remember, Currie has already changed his account of the incident three times…)

Reporter: “Do you think what you did is correct..for a teacher to do?”
Currie: “I think so. I think..the..the telling moment of that is that the kid who was being bullied hasn’t been bullied since. And he was so happy that I read the book that he shared that with a reading specialist at our school.”
(That’s a new claim… do the kid’s parents know that?)

Last question asked was ‘have there been any repercussions, are you considering resigning?’:

“Yes, I’ve definitely considered resigning because of the lack of support I’ve received in my district…ummm..there…have..I expected that my district would be behind my instructional decision, they would come out for it and say that we support Omar’s decision to read this text. But they haven’t done that. It’s made working quite tense honestly.”

Currie makes no mention of the three complaints that have been filed against him by parents as reported by various news outlets.

The very last line really drills it home:

“I appreciate those people who have been sending comments that make me feel like I’ve definitely done the right thing, but I appreciate those people allowing me to still do my job – which is teach and NOT interfere with my instructional day.”

Omar Currie knows what is best for your child, so don’t you dare “interfere”.

 

UPDATE: Omar Currie will be teaching in Alexandria, VA this Fall according to WRAL.

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), EDUCATION, Social Justice, Video | Tagged , | 2 Comments

On Common Core, I had Sen. Ted Cruz “at Hello”

I’m in the midst of covering the NC Republican Convention this weekend and just raced home between sessions, so this is going to be a quick entry.

This morning I was honored to be in on a grassroots panel with 2016 Presidential hopeful Senator Ted Cruz. Multiple topics were discussed and time was running short, but I managed to get the last question of the session.

Markeece Young (@YoungBLKRepub) on Twitter was also there and managed to capture Senator Cruz responding to a question. Yours truly is 2nd on the right from Senator Cruz.

When I got to ask my question, I started off on a bit of diatribe on Common Core, the invasive data collection on our students and the increasing overreach by the Department of Education.

To be honest, I had a mini-rant moment there. I will try to transcribe the rough audio I have

I drew parallels on the data collection by the Dept. of Ed (which is inherent with Common Core and its tests) with the recent break of over 4 million government workers.

I admit I got a bit worked up on what a train wreck the fundamentally flawed experiment Common Core is and how all the tests are aligned, which pigeon-holes our kids into forced usage of the standards.

I told him school choice was a big deal. The Moms are paying attention to what candidates are saying about education. We can swing a lot of votes. Our kids are watching us fight. I know first-hand, I am one of the fighters.  I rambled on quite a bit, but I had a point and a question.

That question was how do we rein in the increasing overreach of the Department of Education, the data collection in particular, and dislodge Arne Duncan from his fiefdom?

Senator Cruz grinned at me and said, “So let me quote the movie Jerry McGuire…You had me at Hello…”.  Boom!  The room erupted into applause and laughter.

I kidded back that he was better looking than Jerry McGuire. More laughter and applause.

Once the laughter died down, Senator Cruz called Common Core an “abomination” and would like to see states repeal every word. Applause filled the room again.

Senator Cruz continued and said we should abolish the department of education.

Cruz elaborated on his abolishing the Dept. of Education remark and said that “a lot of Republicans get this wrong”.  Abolishing the Dept. of Education doesn’t mean ‘abolishing education’, but instead returning control of education to the states.

“Education is too important for it to be governed by unelected bureaucrats in Washington.”, said Cruz.

“We have direct accountability at the local level,” said Cruz. The Senator stressed the importance of accountability at the state and local level with regards to education. Senator Cruz also noted that being able to work with and speak out at the local level to change issues in education is crucial.

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Common Core, EDUCATION, ELECTIONS, EXCLUSIVE, POLITICS NC | Tagged | 10 Comments

Some Friday #HEH and the 8th Congressional District GOP

I hope folks have read the article at the Daily Haymaker titled, #ncgop: It’s your party, neuter it if you want to.

In the article, Haymaker rips one John M. Lewis, Chairman of the 8th District GOP, a well-deserved new one.  The Haymaker article ends with this summary:

Okay, so he likes Common Core.  Let’s stop and tally up here.  On Facebook, he’s called for STANDING FOR nothing.  On Twitter, he’s slammed the core interests of the family values crowd, the homeschoolers, AND Ted Cruz fans.  Boy, this is gonna be awkward when vice chairman Lewis called upon to campaign for GOP presidential nominee Ted Cruz.

Oh my.  Seeing as how Cruz is a major draw at the GOP convention this weekend, Lewis better hope most people have missed his spectacularly stupid commentary.

Speaking of spectacularly stupid,  The guy clearly needs schooling on the topic of Common Core.  I hope I see Mr. Lewis this weekend at the GOP convention, because on the topic of Common Core I’m your huckleberry So, bring it, Johnny.

Lewis has since locked down his Facebook page. I have two words for him: Too Late.

Now, on to the Friday #Heh. Mr. Lewis has new fans on Facebook. They’ve created a page all about him, in his own words.  HEH.

My favorite post on the new ‘fanpage’, so far, is this one.  Mr. Lewis, bless your heart… but you don’t know your arse from a hole in the ground about Common Core.

North Carolina adopted Common Core in June 2010, but didn’t implement it until the 2012-2013 school year. We’re in our third year of implementation right now, in the 2014-15 school year. Related:

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Common Core, GOP | Comments Off on Some Friday #HEH and the 8th Congressional District GOP

Common Core Aligned: “Teaching Tolerance” – PT 2

CommonCoreAligned“…to create just these kinds of tests—next-generation assessments aligned to the common core. When the tests are aligned to the common standards, the curriculum will line up as well—and that will unleash powerful market forces in the service of better teaching.”
Bill Gates, 2009 Speech To Natl. Conf. of State Legislatures

The goal is to align everything so that students and the money have nowhere to go but Common Core.

A few days ago, I wrote the first article in a multi-part series, Common Core Aligned: Southern Poverty Law Ctr’s ‘Teaching Tolerance’.

The article covered Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) and their education arm, ‘Teaching Tolerance’. The overall aim is to provide free materials to teachers in order to push a particular set of social issues in K-12 classrooms; effectively turning little kids into activists. This is part two.


‘Teaching Tolerance’ – What Parents Should Know

This ‘teaching’ arm concentrates on using Common Core aligned readings with correlating activities with the intent of turning school aged children into activists for social issues and causes.  

This includes the use of Social media, which parents may or may not be comfortable with their child using.  The goal is clearly to spur social activism, as narrated by Teaching Tolerance’s materials, by children.

These materials could be in your child’s classroom right now. How would you know?

Example: http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/news/teaching-tolerance-magazine-examines-classroom-use-of-social-media

Excerpt:

Teaching Tolerance is being distributed free of charge by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) to more than 400,000 educators nationwide. It can be read at http://www.teachingtolerance.org.

“As educators, we strive to help our students recognize the humanity in everyone, but language, technology and our culture often reduce people to convenient stereotypes,” said Teaching Tolerance Director Maureen Costello. “Social media and immigration are two opportunities for educators to bring lessons into the classroom that help students look beyond the labels.”

Who Are These People?

‘Teaching Tolerance’ has announced its new ‘Advisory Board‘.

Parents at Frank Porter Graham Elementary in Chapel Hill, North Carolina might be in for a surprise. Meet Barbie Garayua Tudryn. She’s on the new board. According to Facebook, she previously worked at the “Racial Equality Institute“.

‘Teaching Tolerance’ — Common Core Aligned Indoctrination

In the next installment, I’ll be taking a look at ‘Teaching Tolerance’s “Perspectives for A Diverse America”, which is described on their site as:

“Teaching Tolerance’s Perspectives for a Diverse America is a literacy-based curriculum that marries anti-bias social justice content with the rigor of the Common Core State Standards.”


More Information on ‘Teaching Tolerance’

Site: http://www.tolerance.org
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/TeachingTolerance.org/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Tolerance_org
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/ToleranceOrg/

 

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Common Core, EDUCATION, Poltical Correctness, Racial Justice, Social Justice | Tagged , , , | 5 Comments

Free Speech Wins Out In New Hanover

Over the last week or so, LGBT activists took aim at New Hanover County School Board member, Tammy Covil.  She dared to express an opinion in a closed Facebook group and comments on a related topic, which were on her own Facebook page.

I know, the horror…right?

The initial reaction was about what you would expect.

These tolerant LGBT activists claimed she was being ‘intolerant’, while at the same time Covil received death threats, hate mail — most of which were anonymous. Some of these folks even suggested she should have a ‘date with wire hanger‘ for her views.

Then the tide turned, as it tends to do when the facts come out about what the ginned up outrage is truly about. The unspoken core of this fight is about parental rights and the increased amount of social issue agenda items taking precedence over actual academics.

At any rate, Covil, who was given no chance to respond to her chickenshit ‘anonymous’ critics, had an op-ed letter published by WECT.

I have included the full text of this statement at the bottom of this article.

The result of said op-ed letter was an outpouring of support for Covil and, frankly, a beat down of the thug-like, shutuppery tactics employed by the named LGBT activists who threatened Covil’s job and ‘anonymous’ ones who threatened her person.

Apparently, free speech and the employment of actual facts is valued. Go figure!


Full Statement from Tammy Covil:

Now that the dust has settled somewhat and the visceral reaction over comments I made about same-sex marriage and homosexuality have subsided, I would like to take a moment to clarify some misconceptions, particularly since I was not allowed an opportunity to put my comments into context.

My remarks were in direct reference to an article I posted about a school board in Virginia which recently approved the addition of “gender identity” and “sexual fluidity” concepts into their family life education curriculum.

According to the article, the district’s recommendations state that, “Students will be provided definitions for the sexual orientation terms heterosexuality, homosexuality and bisexuality; and the gender identity term transgender. Emphasis will be placed on an understanding that there is a broader, boundless, and fluid spectrum of sexuality that is developed throughout a lifetime.”

The term “sexual fluidity” is the point at which I took issue and regarded as perverse. Despite strong opposition from parents, the Virginia school system will now teach children that not only are our physical attributes irrelevant, gender can also shift and change throughout our lifetime. Ostensibly, one could vacillate between male, female, and back to male, based solely on preference and as often as desired.

If homosexuality is purely biological – meaning that sexual orientation is hard-wired in our DNA – how can it also be fluid? There appears to be an agenda to not only redefine traditional marriage, but homosexuality as well. Doesn’t this latest characterization of sexuality as a “broader, boundless, and fluid spectrum that is developed throughout a lifetime” contradict and undermine the argument for same-sex marriage?

To be clear, it is not my intent to deny two consenting adults the freedom to enter into a relationship if they so desire. It is not my business, nor do I care about the activities of same-sex couples in the privacy of their own home, anymore than I care about heterosexual couples. That said, when these topics filter down into the public school system and are forced upon children who do not possess the experience or maturity level required to even begin to comprehend them, these topics have entered the public arena and are, therefore, open to debate.

As a representative who was elected to advocate on behalf of children and families in New Hanover County, I believe that most parents would be very uncomfortable with this type of curriculum and if it were to come before our board, I would staunchly oppose it.

The predominant question this poses is, to what degree and at what ages should human sexuality be taught in public schools to begin with? Given the controversial nature of the subject matter in question, I do not think the public school system is the appropriate venue for these discussions. There is simply no way to present them in a fashion that will be sensitive to all viewpoints.

For example, if a course being taught advances the case that homosexuality is an inherent part of human

sexuality, which some believe to be true, are we not then required to teach the opposing belief that there is no concrete scientific evidence to support this premise and that homosexuality is therefore a lifestyle choice?

If there are students who disagree with either hypothesis, do they not have a right to speak in opposition? Once we have chosen this path, where do we set parameters as to what is scientifically and educationally appropriate? Who should determine where those boundaries lie? Are we going to draw the line at homosexuality? Bisexuality? Gender identity? “Sexual fluidity”? How about “Pansexuality”? “Genderless”? “Third-Gender”?

Concepts like “sexual fluidity” have no scientific basis, which suggests that their roots are ideological in nature and are intended to indoctrinate young minds according to a specific agenda. If this is the baseline criterion for educational content, what then are the limits? What sort of resources are taxpayers willing to allocate to fund these programs and at what cost to the fundamental curriculum we are required by law to provide?

The point is, in bringing these topics into the classroom, we involve children in a very complex and provocative examination of human sexuality; of which even the most educated scholars among us cannot come to consensus or find much common ground. As an adult who has suffered vicious attacks for daring to even pose the subject – to the point of threats against my safety – I sincerely doubt that a child would possess the intellectual wherewithal or the courage necessary to offer an alternative perspective.

The more deeply we tread into the issue of sexuality, the more polarizing it becomes. Consequently, it is in a child’s best interest to leave the teaching of sexuality to the parent, as it is their responsibility to determine what is morally and ethically appropriate for their family. Far too many school systems today are usurping the rights of parents and it is not only a contributing factor to the decline of the family, it makes a teacher’s job much more difficult.

I recognize that some may agree with my stance, while others may not. America was founded on the principles outlined within and protected by our Constitution, most importantly our First Amendment right to free speech. We have the right to express our views, as well as the right to be offended by those with whom we disagree. We do not have the right, however, to bully, threaten, or condemn others for exercising that right.

From a political standpoint, elected officials are not only entitled to an opinion, it is required! Our representatives should possess a core set of beliefs from which to draw when they are presented with difficult decisions while in office. They must also have the ability to delve more deeply into the issues than the superficial, sound bite approach of the media, which is apparently what passes for acceptable journalism these days.

Tammy J. Covil

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), LGBTQ Issues, Parental Rights, Social Justice, THE LEFT | Tagged | 2 Comments