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Alan Keyes: Teaching the essentials
WND ^ | Saturday, December 22, 2001 | Alan Keyes

Posted on 12/22/2001 9:25:26 AM PST by Gelato

Saturday, December 22, 2001


Alan Keyes Alan Keyes
Teaching the essentials


By Alan Keyes


© 2000 WorldNetDaily.com--> © 2001 WorldNetDaily.com

According to the Washington Post, "The start of the war on terrorism proved an unexpected tonic for education reform." The Post cites a White House aide who said, "I think [congressional education negotiators] saw it as a way they could demonstrate to the country that Congress had not been immobilized." Apparently, the nation lives in fear that terrorists will intimidate the people's representatives away from the now rapidly resuming task of federal over-reaching executed in the name of reform. Take heart, oh people! Our politicians will not be dissuaded from expanding state power at the expense of liberty.

There are those, of course, who would rank a "mobilized Congress" high on the list of terrorizing sights. Heaven help us when Ted Kennedy partners with "compassionate conservatives" in issuing marching orders for the education bureaucracy to "leave no child behind." War tends to increase national governmental power – not only in matters directly related to the conflict, but also in vastly broader realms of our common life. In a season of national pride and solidarity, advocates of expanded government power tend to find rich fields offering "targets of opportunity." Education is such a field, and in the legislation passed last week, it has received a direct hit.

That's the bad news, as I discussed last week. The good news is that federal pressure and control will be applied slowly, and curricular pressure will be applied only indirectly through a new testing regime that will serve as a benchmark for the states' own measures, not as the basis for direct federal control. Accordingly, much state autonomy will actually remain – if the states and their citizenry vigorously claim and exercise it.

Better still, rising up from below to meet the new federal activism is a range of state and local initiatives that will have significant effect in preserving local autonomy in education. This is particularly true in the realm of civic education which, as Jefferson pointed out, is – after elementary literacy and arithmetic – the chief purpose of education.

And here, the news from the states is very positive. Ebbing, flowing, but generally advancing around the country is a movement to restore to the education of our children an effective and formative exposure to their true civic heritage as Americans. This is a project that can mitigate much of the servile effect of high-dollar federal educational meddling. And it is a reform that genuinely and fruitfully draws on the spirit of national resolve prompted by the current international conflict.

The reforms we should pursue can be divided into three steps. First, Declaration recitation bills should be encouraged, such as those recently passed in Texas and defeated in New Jersey. The daily recitation of the Declaration in our country's schools would be a simple and effective beachhead for the restoration of real civics education. Our children would experience concretely the fact that the Declaration is considered vital to their daily lives, and this experience would point naturally and effectively toward a more substantial curricular treatment of the principles and history of American liberty.

Second, commitment to civics education must be embodied in principled state standards and in corresponding materials for substantive instruction in Declaration principles. This is appropriately included, when possible, in the same legislation that establishes the recitation of the Declaration. The "Founding of America" bill in Ohio, to be voted on next year, does just that.

Finally, standards and officially approved materials must be effectively used in the classroom. This is the particular challenge, and opportunity, for local educational authorities – beginning with parents. Wherever progress is made in including real American civics in the law and standards of public education, citizens and local educational authorities must make the most of their opportunity to educate not "labor force participants" or mindless "tolerators" of "diversity," but citizens.

We would do well to imitate the zeal of the liberal ideologues whose influence we are seeking to replace. They understand that the standards and materials used in teaching young Americans about America are not trophies to be collected, but tools to be used in the formation of young souls, and they set about their task with energy and determination whenever they see the chance. We should be no less energetic and determined in the task of reclaiming and reshaping the souls of our young people for the cause of true national virtue.

The new consensus in Washington for federal educational activism is indeed bad news. But as with all bad news, what finally matters is our response. A world made safe from organized terror will more than redeem the pain of Sept. 11. And a renewed and increased citizen devotion to real civic education in response to last week's deformation of national education policy will do much to overcome the damage even of so ill-conceived a law.


Be sure to visit Alan Keyes' communications center for founding principles, The Declaration Foundation.


Former Reagan administration official Alan Keyes, was U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Social and Economic Council and 2000 Republican presidential candidate.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: keyes
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To: Keyes For President
..."That's the bad news, as I discussed last week. The good news is that federal pressure and control will be applied slowly, and curricular pressure will be applied only indirectly through a new testing regime that will serve as a benchmark for the states' own measures, not as the basis for direct federal control. Accordingly, much state autonomy will actually remain – if the states and their citizenry vigorously claim and exercise it"....

Oh sheeet, Dr. Keyes......how can it be good news to be sticking the damn frog in the cold pot of water? The sheeple will never know what hit 'em!!!!!

41 posted on 12/23/2001 5:50:29 PM PST by Rowdee
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To: Rowdee
I agree with you, Rowdee. If I had my way, there wouldn't even be a public school system!

Merry Christmas to you, my friend! May the Lord's peace be on you and your family.

Warmest regards,

42 posted on 12/24/2001 8:17:33 AM PST by Keyes For President
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To: Keyes For President
And a Merry Christmas back at you, KFP.
43 posted on 12/24/2001 9:27:10 AM PST by Rowdee
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Comment #44 Removed by Moderator

To: malador
It seems that every time we engage in a "war" (forgetting the fact that the Congress has not declared war on anyone or anything since 1941 (WWII), "to defend freedom" we always have a little less of it when the "war" is over.

It's interesting that the only wars for which this isn't true, where liberty was expanded and not diminished as a result, were the Revolutionary and Civil wars. The reason for this, as we all know, is that the philosophical objectives behind those wars were more clear, and the commitment to liberty was stronger, at the beginning of our nation than now. By the 20th Century, American principles were pretty much forgotten. The common man lost his liberty-loving perspective, as well as his diligence in keeping his government in check. He had too much faith in his leaders, in the “experts,” and not enough feelings of personal initiative. What other result could there be when this happens, but a lessening of his freedoms?

That’s why it’s so important for each one of us to take self-government seriously. When we feel we can rest easy with our government officials, or we are content to just let things be, our complacency is taken advantage of. No minuteman was ever born with that attitude of laziness.

Our difficulty is that we must be not just modern minutemen, but watchmen also. This is impossible if we are not firmly devoted to our founding principles.

45 posted on 12/29/2001 12:08:09 AM PST by Gelato
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