Common Core Lessons Are Bringing
Politics Into the Classroom
There’s been no end to the criticism Common Core has
received—and this lesson for an English class is a good example why:
It's exactly what critics of the Common Core school curriculum warned
about: Partisan political statements masquerading as English lessons finding
their way into elementary school classrooms.
Teaching materials aligned with the controversial national
educational standards ask fifth-graders to edit such sentences as
1. “(The
president) makes sure the laws of the country are fair,”
2. “The
wants of an individual are less important than the well-being of the nation”
3. “The
commands of government officials must be obeyed by all.”
The job of making sure laws are fair is not the president's, but
the judicial branch. The executive branch's duty is to administer laws.
And the example that places the well-being of the nation above the "wants
of an individual" appears to run counter to the basic principles of the
Bill of Rights.
Not only is the lesson in which students were taught about
Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War politically charged, critics say it was also
not accurate. But if the lessons are
meant as a primer on the Constitution, there's another problem, note critics. This
particular lesson will be edited, a Pearson spokesperson—but just how many
other lessons pushing political ideologies are out there?
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