Saturday, March 9, 2013

CSCOPE: EXPOSING THE NATION’S MOST CONTROVERSIAL PUBLIC SCHOOL CURRICULUM SYSTEM

Via Cousin Bill

Naivete to call it only controversial. 

In February, Texas announced that the state, along with the Texas Education Service Center Curriculum (TESCCC,) would enact major changes to the controversial curriculum management system dubbed CSCOPE. The system received a litany of complaints from faculty members and parents alike concerning its lack of transparency (parents were allegedly not permitted to review lesson-plans), lack of oversight from the State Board of Education, and for allegedly imposing oppressive working conditions for faculty members.
CSCOPE was created so that teachers could frame their year around teaching points required by the state. Lessons, which are written by CSCOPE staff and current and former teachers, can be updated and delivered online, making it more cost-effective than standard textbooks.
To note just how off-color some of the CSCOPE curriculum is, consider that the Texas CSCOPE Review, an independent watchdog group, uncovered an out-of-date, optional CSCOPE lesson-plan on terrorism — “World History Unit 12 Lesson 07″ — which allegedly likens the Boston Tea Party to “an act of terrorism.”
The system also recently asked students to design a flag for a new socialist nation.
To glean greater insight, Glenn Beck invited special guests David Barton and Pat Gray, along with teachers Mary Bowen, Stan Hartzler and Texas State Sen. Dan Patrick to discuss what is truly going on within their state’s education system.
Barton explained that CSCOPE is referred to as “instructional material” and not “curriculum,” therefore is not subject to regulation by the State Board of Education. The historian also brought in artifacts of Texas public school curriculum to showcase just how different it is today and to mark, year-by-year, the increasing application of political correctness in lesson plans.
More @ The Blaze

5 comments:

  1. are they using that Core Curriculum nonsense in NC? Something I heard on the Blaze TV makes me think so. It needs to come to an end!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Absolutely. I'll run a search and thanks.

      Delete
    2. I didn't find much of anything, fortunately. I hope I'm correct.

      Delete
  2. I have a child in elementary and a child in high school. Once I find evidence that CSCOPE is here in NC, I will work harder to put both in private schools.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Homeschool. Your high schooler can do it with just your guidance and he/she can help the younger one. http://www.robinsoncurriculum.com/

      Delete