Mike H wrote:
>”We do need to test students on US government, especially what is meant by the 9th & 10th amendments. . . .”<
It would be hard to disagree that students -- and perhaps citizens in general -- should seriously study the US Constitution. If we’re going to single out important articles and passages, though, some particular attention also should be given to Article V, which provides for amending the Constitution. I would say that several amendments -- most notably the 14th and including the 15th, 19th, 24th and 26th -- speak to issues raised in the 9th and 10th amendments (articles 9 and 10 in the Bill of Rights).
The real point is that the Constitution ought to be studied in its entirety and not just cherry-picked to find provisions that suit our particular views of things.
Then . . .
>”In fact, the idea of federally or even state controlled education would blow the founding fathers minds. Education was for parents, or maybe the town to take care of.”<
I probably agree with this. Given the chance to vote on the concept of local education a decade or so ago, though, Michigan residents overwhelmingly elected to shift control over education out of their local communities and move it to the state level. How? By approving Proposal A.
Of course, dumping the MEAPs in favor of a “nationally recognized test” (which SB 1153 proposes) is not exactly the same thing as extending federal control over education. The MEAPs are “nationally recognized” tests, designed to gauge and challenge all students. This legislation only opens the door to bringing in the nationally *used* ACT and adding a social studies component to it (which the MEAP system already has). The primary effect most likely would be added frustration for public school educators by once again changing the yardstick against which their schools’ performance is to be measured.