And You Thought You’d Heard It All?

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Charlotte Thomson Iserbyt#NO WAY ESEA  #NO WAY ESEA  #NO WAY ESEA
KEEP CALLING (202–224-3121) AND EMAILING YOUR SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES!!!

S1177 (the Reau­tho­riza­tion of ESEA…the old No Child Left Behind Act) is a com­bi­na­tion of Repub­li­can Con­gress­man John Kline’s HR5 Stu­dent Suc­cess Act and Repub­li­can Sen­a­tor Lamar Alexan­der’s Every Child Achieves Act 2015 (S1177)

You, mem­bers of Grass­roots Amer­i­ca, killed HR5 last Feb­ru­ary. You can kill its com­pan­ion bill S1177, which is com­ing up for a full vote in the Sen­ate any day now.

READING NOW CONSIDERED CLASS WARFARE!

IS READING GOING THE WAY OF MATHEMATICS (delib­er­ate dumb­ing down): 2+2=13?

The Read­ing Wars have suc­ceed­ed in bring­ing our nation to a lev­el where, for the moment, it is not fair for more priv­i­leged par­ents to read to their chil­dren at night. What’s next? All chil­dren? Com­put­ers should take care of that. The fol­low­ing is proof “they” could­n’t care less about the less privileged/minority chil­dren being able to read. Are the “priv­i­leged” ones next on their delib­er­ate dumb­ing down list?

In a Wash­ing­ton Post arti­cle dat­ed August 1, 1977, enti­tled “Com­pe­ten­cy Tests Set in 26 Schools,” Thomas Sticht—who was lat­er named to U.S. Sec­re­tary of Labor Eliz­a­beth Dole’s Secretary’s Com­mis­sion on Achiev­ing Nec­es­sary Skills (SCANS)—was also men­tioned as an asso­ciate direc­tor at the Nation­al Insti­tute of Edu­ca­tion (NIE) at the time mas­tery learn­ing was imple­ment­ed in the D.C. schools. The Post arti­cle quot­ed Sticht exten­sive­ly, ver­i­fy­ing that he and Spady were both deeply involved in the imple­men­ta­tion of the new mas­tery learn­ing cur­ricu­lum. Lat­er, in 1987, The Wash­ing­ton Post again para­phrased Sticht as follows:

Many com­pa­nies have moved oper­a­tions to places with cheap, rel­a­tive­ly poor­ly edu­cat­ed labor. What may be cru­cial, they say, is the depend­abil­i­ty of a labor force and how well it can be man­aged and trained, not its gen­er­al edu­ca­tion­al lev­el, although a small cadre of high­ly edu­cat­ed cre­ative peo­ple is essen­tial to inno­va­tion and growth. End­ing dis­crim­i­na­tion and chang­ing val­ues are prob­a­bly more impor­tant than read­ing in mov­ing low income fam­i­lies into the mid­dle class.

The crazy Whole Lan­guage agen­da, fol­lowed by the Skin­ner­ian Direct Instruc­tion dog train­ing read­ing instruc­tion meth­ods, have brought the USA to a lev­el where demo­graph­ic groups of Amer­i­cans will be labelled as elit­ist or deprived depend­ing on whether they read to their chil­dren at night. What an insult to the mil­lions of low income Amer­i­cans who read to their chil­dren every night! It’s not just in the wealthy white sub­urbs that par­ents read to their children.

Why was Samuel Blu­men­feld’s Alpha Phon­ics howtotutor.com, the tra­di­tion­al phon­ics way to teach read­ing, NOT ever accept­ed, or even con­sid­ered by the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment for fund­ing? Shame, shame!

Is “read­ing to your young chil­dren at bed­time” becom­ing part of a class war­fare dis­cus­sion? The bold­ed words below sound like THOUGHT POLICE!

http://dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/reading-to-children-at-bedtime-abc-questions-value-of-time-honoured-practice/story-fni0cx12-1227335151442reading 3

Swift said par­ents should be mind­ful of the advan­tage pro­vid­ed by bed­time read­ing. “I don’t think par­ents read­ing their chil­dren bed­time sto­ries should con­stant­ly have in their minds the way that they are unfair­ly dis­ad­van­tag­ing oth­er people’s chil­dren, but I think they should have that thought occa­sion­al­ly,” he said.

THE ABC HAS QUESTIONED WHETHER PARENTS SHOULD READ TO THEIR CHILDREN BEFORE BEDTIME, CLAIMING IT COULD GIVE YOUR KIDS ANUNFAIR ADVANTAGEOVER LESS FORTUNATE CHILDREN.

Read­ing to chil­dren at bed­time: ABC ques­tions val­ue of time-hon­oured practicereading 1

Read­ing at bed­time an unfair advantage?

humptydumpykids.com

ABC presenter Joe Gelonesi.

ABC pre­sen­ter Joe Gelonesi.

THE ABC has ques­tioned whether par­ents should read to their chil­dren before bed­time, claim­ing it could give your kids an “unfair advan­tage” over less for­tu­nate children.

Is hav­ing a lov­ing fam­i­ly an unfair advan­tage?” asks a sto­ry on the ABC’s web­site.

Should par­ents snug­gling up for one last sto­ry before lights out be even a lit­tle con­cerned about the advan­tage they might be con­fer­ring?” The sto­ry was fol­lowed by a broad­cast on the ABC’s Radio Nation­al that also tack­led the appar­ent­ly divi­sive issue of bed­time read­ing. “Evi­dence shows that the dif­fer­ence between those who get bed­time sto­ries and those who don’t — the dif­fer­ence in their life chances — is big­ger than the dif­fer­ence between those who get elite pri­vate school­ing and those that don’t,” British aca­d­e­m­ic Adam Swift told ABC pre­sen­ter Joe Gelonesi.

Gelone­si respond­ed online: “This dev­il­ish twist of evi­dence sure­ly leads to a fur­ther con­clu­sion that per­haps — in the inter­ests of lev­el­ling the play­ing field — bed­time sto­ries should also be restricted.”

Con­tact­ed by The Dai­ly Tele­graph, Gelone­si said the bed­time sto­ries angle was high­light­ed by the ABC “as a way of get­ting atten­tion”. Asked if it might be just as easy to lev­el the play­ing field by encour­ag­ing oth­er par­ents to read bed­time sto­ries, Gelone­si said: “We didn’t dis­cuss that.”

Swift said par­ents should be mind­ful of the advan­tage pro­vid­ed by bed­time read­ing. “I don’t think par­ents read­ing their chil­dren bed­time sto­ries should con­stant­ly have in their minds the way that they are unfair­ly dis­ad­van­tag­ing oth­er people’s chil­dren, but I think they should have that thought occa­sion­al­ly,” he said.