I recently read PA State Representative Stephen Bloom’s book They’ve Crossed the Line A Patriot’s Guide to Religious Freedom. What a great book! The forward is written by Senator Rick Santorum. It is a quick read and I encourage you do take the time and read it. So often we as Americans are told we do not have our freedoms and so many people throw their hands up and walk away. We do have religious freedoms, no matter if we are at school, work, or in a public place. It’s time more Christians stood up and fought.
Category: Coalitions – Education
Rotten to the Core: The Feds’ Invasive Student Tracking Database
Rotten to the Core: The Feds’ Invasive Student Tracking Database
Rotten to the Core: The Feds’ Invasive Student Tracking Database
by Michelle Malkin
Creators Syndicate
Copyright 2012
(This is the fourth installment of a continuing series on nationalized academic standards known as the “Common Core.”)
While many Americans worry about government drones in the sky spying on our private lives, Washington meddlers are already on the ground and in our schools gathering intimate data on children and families.
Say goodbye to your children’s privacy. Say hello to an unprecedented nationwide student tracking system, whose data will apparently be sold by government officials to the highest bidders. It’s yet another encroachment of centralized education bureaucrats on local control and parental rights under the banner of “Common Core.”
As the American Principles Project, a conservative education think tank, reported last year, Common Core’s technological project is “merely one part of a much broader plan by the federal government to track individuals from birth through their participation in the workforce.” The 2009 porkulus package included a “State Fiscal Stabilization Fund” to bribe states into constructing “longitudinal data systems (LDS) to collect data on public-school students.”
These systems will aggregate massive amounts of personal data — health-care histories, income information, religious affiliations, voting status and even blood types and homework completion. The data will be available to a wide variety of public agencies. And despite federal student-privacy protections guaranteed by the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, the Obama administration is paving the way for private entities to buy their way into the data boondoggle. Even more alarming, the U.S. Department of Education is encouraging a radical push from aggregate-level data-gathering to invasive individual student-level data collection.
At the South by Southwest education conference in Austin, Texas, this week, education technology gurus were salivating at the prospects of information plunder. “This is going to be a huge win for us,” Jeffrey Olen, a product manager at education software company CompassLearning, told Reuters. Cha-ching-ching-ching.
The company is already aggressively marketing curricular material “aligned” to fuzzy, dumbed-down Common Core math and reading guidelines (which more than a dozen states are now revolting against). Along with two dozen other tech firms, CompassLearning sees even greater financial opportunities to mine Common Core student tracking systems. The centralized database is a strange-bedfellows alliance between the liberal Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (which largely underwrote and promoted the Common Core curricular scheme) and a division of conservative Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. (which built the database infrastructure).
Another nonprofit startup, “inBloom, Inc.,” has evolved out of that partnership to operate the database. The Gates Foundation and other partners provided $100 million in seed money. Reuters reports that inBloom, Inc. will “likely start to charge fees in 2015″ to states and school districts participating in the system. “So far, seven states — Colorado, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, North Carolina and Massachusetts — have committed to enter data from select school districts. Louisiana and New York will be entering nearly all student records statewide.”
The National Education Data Model, available online at http://nces.sifinfo.org/datamodel/eiebrowser/techview.aspx?instance=studentElementarySecondary, lists hundreds of data points considered indispensable to the nationalized student tracking racket. These include:
–”Bus Stop Arrival Time” and “Bus Stop Description.”
–”Dwelling arrangement.”
–”Diseases, Illnesses and Other Health Conditions.”
–”Religious Affiliation.”
–”Telephone Number Type” and “Telephone Status.”
Home-schoolers and religious families that reject traditional government education would be tracked. Original NEDM data points included hair color, eye color, weight, blood types and even dental status.
How exactly does amassing and selling such personal data improve educational outcomes? It doesn’t. This, at its core, is the central fraud of Washington’s top-down nationalized curricular scheme. The Bill Gates-endorsed Common Core “standards” are a phony pretext for big-government expansion. The dazzling allure of “21st-century technology” masks the privacy-undermining agenda of nosy bureaucratic drones allergic to transparency, accountability and parental autonomy. Individual student privacy is sacrificed at the collective “For the Children” altar.
Fed Ed is not about excellence or academic achievement. It’s about control, control and more control.
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Related:
My child’s Common Core-aligned Algebra book is crap
Opposition to the Common Core Proliferating
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Previous:
Rotten to the Core, Part 3: Lessons from Texas and the Growing Grassroots Revolt
Rotten to the Core, Part 2: Readin’, writin’ and deconstructionism
Rotten to the Core, Part 1: Obama’s War on Academic Standards
Rotten to the Core: Reader feedback from the frontlines
Fuzzy math: A nationwide epidemic
Obama’s Sputter-nik moment: Cash for Education Clunkers
January 2005: NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND, ACT II
February 2005: THE REVOLT AGAINST NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND
Stupid education fad of the day: “Mayan Math”
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More resources/background/links:
Barry Garelick: A New Kind of Problem: The Common Core Math Standards
EmpoweredGA.org – Georgia activists: Here, here, here and here.
Pennsylvania revolt against TERC Investigations math.
http://truthinamericaneducation.com/
http://www.utahnsagainstcommoncore.com/
Indiana: hoosiersagainstcommoncore.com
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And more:
“Related Websites” from Truth in American Education has links to all of the following:
Alabamians United for Excellence in Education
Arizonans Against Common Core
Californians United Against Common Core
Closing the Door on Innovation Why One National Curriculum Is Bad for America
Common Core: Education Without Representation
Common Core Facts
Hoosiers Against Common Core
Keep Education Local
Missouri Coalition Against Common Core
Pioneer Institute Public Policy Research: Academic Standards
Stop Common Core: Reclaiming Local Control in Education
Tennessee Against Common Core
United States Coalition for World Class Math: Common Core Standards
Utahns Against Common Core
Utah’s Republic: Common Core Standards
Where’s the Math? Common Core State Standards
Where’s the Math? Standard Algorithms in the Common Core State Standards
Quote of the day . . . regarding common core
Students Asked to ‘Argue That Jews Are Evil’ and Prove Nazi Loyalty in Assignment Linked to Common Core
I attended the webinar that American for Prosperity hosted on Wednesday evening. Texas stopped common core in there state. We in Pennsylvania can do the same if we stick together and fight!
Lawmakers Request Specifics on Common Core Standards
HARRISBURG –Last week, three state representatives issued a letter to Pennsylvania Department of Education (PDE) Secretary Ron Tomalis requesting more information about the impact that the pending imposition of national Common Core Standards may have on Pennsylvania school districts.
Reps. Stephen Bloom (R-Cumberland), Rob Kauffman (R-Cumberland/Franklin), and John Lawrence (R-Chester) asked Tomalis to clarify aspects of the Common Core Standards, including how the standards would apply to private schools and those who are homeschooled, estimated costs of implementation and ramifications for curriculum.
Specifically, the lawmakers expressed concern that by seeking to qualify for federal education grants, PDE may be exposing school districts and students to mandated federal education requirements and textbooks, removing the local control Pennsylvanians demand from the schools funded by their tax dollars.
“I have constituents who are very worried that attempting to adhere to Common Core Standards will end up distracting and detracting from the efforts of our school leaders and teachers,” Bloom said. “Our schools need to be flexible to focus on the education of our community’s children, not satisfying the whims of Washington bureaucrats.”
“There are rising concerns that the Common Core could mean taking away control from our locally elected school boards,” said Bloom. “Federal mandates or coerced obligations to federal authorities risk dumbing down our educational outcomes and leaving our kids behind in the global economy.”
The Common Core State Standards Initiative is a set of academic standards, developed as a result of a nationwide initiative to adopt a consistent set of educational standards among the states. Presently, 45 states and the District of Columbia, as well as three U.S. territories, have adopted these “voluntary” standards. The Pennsylvania State Board of Education adopted the standards in July 2010 for English language arts and mathematics through regulatory process, without legislative approval. The transition to Common Core began during the 2010-11 school year. According to PDE, full implementation is expected by July 1, 2013.
A copy of the lawmakers’ letter sent to Tomalis is available here. The letter is also available for download at www.RepBloom.com.
Representative Stephen Bloom
199th District
Pennsylvania House of Representatives
Media Contact: Abbey Fosnot
717.260.6222
afosnot@pahousegop.com
RepBloom.com / Facebook.com/RepBloom/Twitter.com/RepBloom
Join Republican Women as we fight against Common Core
45 States, including Pennsylvania, have adopted Common Core Standards that require students be proficient in keyboarding, but not in cursive writing.
Pennsylvanians against Common Core
Understanding Senate Bill 1: The Opportunity Scholarship Act
| Understanding Senate Bill 1:
The Opportunity Scholarship Act Speakers Include: Matthew Brouillette, President & CEO, Commonwealth Foundation State Senator Mike Folmer, Pennsylvania’s 48th District Charles R. Gerow, CEO, Quantum Communications Ana Puig and Anastasia Przybylski, Kitchen Table Patriots Who Should Attend? Interested parents, teachers and students who would like to learn more about how SB1 may affect them. Monday, April 25 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. 102 Thomas Building – University Park (Corner of Pollock and Shortlidge. Parking available in the HUB Parking Garage.) Sponsored by FreedomWorks, Kitchen Table Patriots and the Commonwealth Foundation |
Vote Alert – School Choice – Calls Needed
The Union County Republican Committee urges you to take action!
As you know the Union County Republican Committee unanimously passed a resolution supporting SB1: The Opportunity Scholarship and Educational Improvement Tax Credit Act and calling upon our elected officials to support this bill.
Unfortunately some senators have not yet decided to support school choice. They are undecided as to who is is more important – students or the education establishment. They need to hear from you. Please call today to make your voice know. SB1 is expected to come out of the Appropriations Committee this afternoon and go the full Senate.
GOP Senators
Gene Yaw 717-787-3280 (eastern Union, part of Susquehanna; all of Lycoming, Sullivan, Bradford)
John Gordner 717-787-8928 (all of Snyder, Northumberland, Columbia, Montour; part of Dauphin and Luzerne)
Robert Tomlinson 717-787-5072
Patricia Vance 717-787-8524
Charles Mcllhinney Jr. 717-787-7305
Jane Earll 717-787-8927
Elder Vogel 717-787-3076
Democratic Senators
Lisa Boscola 717-787-4236
Andy Dinniman 717-787-5709
Larry Farnese 717-787-5662
Shirley Kitchen 717-787-6735
John Yudichak 717-787-7105

