Posts Tagged ‘SOL’

Two Takes on National Education Standards

June 3rd, 2009

By Norman Leahy

Responding to word that, at least in principle, 45 states and DC have agreed to the creation of a new set of national education standards, the Richmond Times-Dispatch coos:

The common-standards endeavor might complicate the effort of charter-school advocates who have been encouraged by President Obama’s openness to their cause. But it need not be a stumbling block. For one thing, wide disagreement about what kids should learn and when means any nationwide standards the states agree upon likely will set bare minimums. More to the point, the common standards will define a common finish line for each grade level. How schools get the students to cross it can still be up to them.


So all you school choicers — don’t worry your pretty little heads over this. Yes, it might make things tougher for you, but then again, maybe it won’t.

And, naturally, Virginia will benefit because the SOLs are already so rigorous that these new standards just might force those slackers elsewhere to catch-up.

Ah, the SOLs. The faith placed in bubble tests by the local gentry would be charming, or even mildly amusing…except for the manipulation of SOL data and the rather unimpressive showing of Virginia students on that already in-place national standard, the SAT.

“Bare minimums” indeed.

But another, and far less blinkered, view of national standards comes from Cato’s Neal McCluskey, who writes:

…when establishing national standards was attempted in the 1990s the real fireworks didn’t begin until proposed standards were published. Then, it seemed that everyone had a different reason they were outraged – outraged! – by the standards. At best, there was only one point of broad consensus: that the wannabe national standards simply had to go.

So are national standards a serious threat? They sure are: Were they to be enacted, the educationally deadly government-schooling monopoly would be complete, with even the ability to escape to better districts or states cut off.

But, he’s not overly concerned these standards will ever see the light of day, given the fractiousness of the parties involved.

We shall see.

(cross-posted at Tertium Quids)

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