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Educational Standards

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State standards writers are reluctant to take sides in the "culture wars" or to participate in the selection of a "canon." By spelling out which books children should read in English class, which individuals and events to study in history, and which discoveries and inventions to discuss or replicate in science lab (and, of course, which to omit), standards authors are making decisions about what is important for American children to know and be able to do. They are setting priorities. That, in our view, is exactly what the writers of standards are supposed to do. But, of course, such matters are contentious, the stuff of great debate, the underpinnings of disparate worldviews. Perhaps from exhaustion, perhaps from timidity, many states opted to sidestep such choices. The results, not surprisingly, are vague and (to us) unhelpful standards. A second explanation is the "committee process" that many jurisdictions used to develop their standards. It's possible that there were just too many cooks adding to the broth (often including politicians, educators, citizens, experts, "resource persons," business leaders, textbooks publishers, parents, etc.), and therefore the final result was less than tasty. Either too much was included in order to placate various factions and satisfy individual enthusiasms - and the product was


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Educational Standards by Jeff Palmer - Issuu