Women
in Combat
by
Deborah DeBacker
Women
in combat and Jessica Lynch have become quite controversial among
conservative circuits. Many are calling for President Bush to change
the Clinton policies that put women into combat areas. And well
he should. However, those who value the role of women as mothers
and nurturers, have already lost the next generation who are enrolled
in the indoctrination camps called public schools. Women in combat
and other politically correct thoughts must be taught in all schools
requiring students to take statewide or national assessments.
Education
officials like to call these authentic assessments. Beverly Eakman,
author of several books, including Cloning
of the American Mind, defines a "test" as an objective measure
of a child's ability to solve a problem; an "assessment" is a social
scientist's speculation about the environmental conditioning of
the child.1
As
Ms. Eakman says, today’s standardized tests are more concerned with
the child’s psyche, social values, and ability to conform, than
his ability to calculate, use correct punctuation, or read a periodic
table.
The
indoctrination by the collectivists who run our schools is not lurking
in some photocopied handout in 5th hour Social Studies
class. Here in Republican-run Michigan, part of that indoctrination
is a mandate resulting from questions in the Michigan Educational
Assessment Program test, known as the MEAP. Oh yes, the MEAP asks
plenty of politically correct multiple choice and essay questions,
including but not limited to evolution, how privatization drives
up costs, and what those chauvinist colonial men thought of women.
But my favorite is the question asking students their opinion of
women in combat.
MEAP
scoring is based on rubrics requiring that part of the score be
based on outside data to support the conclusion. The MEAP study
booklet for teachers and students includes charts and data purporting
to show that military officers and the public increasingly support
women in combat. What is a student to do? To get a top grade, he
must use the data provided and support women in combat.
Values
tested in Michigan are called Core Democratic Values, as determined
by a foundation called CIVITAS, not your local school board. This
group has a similar philosophy to the Center for Civic Education,
who determines the national standards for civics and government
for the NAEP, national testing, along with the new federal curriculum.
So pushing the idea of women in combat and other politically correct
thoughts are not unique to Michigan. (See www.edwatch.org for more
on CCE). Most parents are unaware of the content of these tests
since obtaining, reviewing, or releasing the questions is unlawful
in most states, and a possible federal felony.
What
right does the state or federal government have to ask our children
their opinions on political and possibly religious based beliefs?
Just what happens to those answers? They are turned into the state
for grading, and eventually make their way to the Center for Educational
Performance. CEPI administers a computer database capable of tracking
the attainment of every student in Michigan to determine what instructional
programs really work.
Based
on the answers, policies are initiated to improve the scoring on
assessments. What is necessary is continual remediation until the
student answers correctly. That is why many questions found on the
8th grade tests, are repeated in the 11th
grade tests.
Besides
worries about privacy, parents should realize that they have the
near impossible job of de-programming their children every night
if they attend test-administering schools. Most do not, and many
that try will be unsuccessful. Today’s generation raised by public
schools that teach what to think and not how to think will rule
this country.
Schools
must teach the acceptance of women in combat along with of other
socially leftwing ideas to ensure their students pass our state
and national assessments. The students must answer properly to pass
those tests. Unless there is an unlikely immediate change in those
who control our public schools, or an immediate mass exodus from
public schools, we can be assured that the values historically held
by Americans and Christians will not survive to the next generation.
Those who control the test, control the curriculum and the thoughts
and beliefs of our children.
- To learn more
see article by Bev Eakman, The
Darkside of Nationwide Tests.
May
14, 2003
Deborah
DeBacker [send her mail]
is the chair of the Oakland County Republican Assembly. She has
been a political activist in education issues for the last 10 years.
Most important, she and her husband are the parents of three teenage
boys.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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