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EdAction
Maple River Education Coalition PAC
105 Peavey Rd, St 116
Chaska, MN
55318
952-361-4931
http://www.EdAction.org
E-mail
February 8, 2002
Print Version
Baby Ed Government Curriculum
-- Child Care Credentialing and NAEYC's Anti-Bias
Curriculum
By Karen R. Effrem, M.D.
The government takeover of parenting takes many forms and is
implemented in many pieces. Regardless of the form and the funding
stream, it must be stopped! Stay alert for how you can help.
"Most citizens would recognize the anti-bias curriculum as a
highly politicized curriculum which seeks to impose a particular
ideological world-view upon children. Most taxpayers would simply
be astounded that tax dollars are routinely being spent toward the
state-by-state implementation of these apparently politicized
standards." (Mark Kindt (D), former Assistant Attorney General of
Ohio and West Virginia)
For example, standards for children from birth to kindergarten include
defining homophobia and discussing homosexuality, engendering a healthy
sexual identity and having preschoolers do anatomically correct drawings.
They teach religious diversity by discussing witchcraft, and they discuss
history from a diverse perspective by describing the first Thanksgiving as
"hypothetical" and racist against Native Americans. An
entire chapter is devoted to social activism projects with young children.
(See below.)
Following are some of the pieces and a few excerpts from the curriculum
that is being foisted onto all early childhood service providers for
children from birth to kindergarten:
- CDA (Childhood Development Associate) CDA is an early childhood
"credential" for childcare workers. The CDA training
teaches a very radical and dangerous curriculum to teachers and
childcare workers, who, in turn, use it on our very youngest and most
vulnerable children.
- TEACH (Teacher Education and Compensation Helps) TEACH
is a program that originated in North Carolina and uses taxpayer
dollars to provide:
a.- wage supports for childcare workers, and
b.- scholarships for gaining childcare credentials.
CDA is the credential for which TEACH makes scholarships available.
"The TEACH Early Childhood Project gives scholarships to
childcare workers to complete course work in early childhood education
and to increase their compensation." Child Development Associate (CDA)
Credential Assessment Scholarship Program."
The Minnesota legislature refused to grant money in 2001 for the TEACH
program. However, the Minnesota Department of Children, Families and
Learning (CFL) is implementing TEACH in Minnesota anyway, by using federal
grant money.
Minnesota's CFL proposes to offer TEACH beginning in fiscal year
2002-2003, according to "Child Care and Development Fund Plan for
Minnesota, FY 2002-2003," p. 28): "CDA scholarships will be
available through Bemidji State University."
A bill before the Minnesota legislature this year would implement TEACH
in Minnesota with state tax money. No bill number has been assigned to the
bill yet, but DFL gubernatorial candidate Senator Becky Lourey held a
press conference this week to announce how important she considers this
TEACH initiative to be. Lourey is from Kerrick, MN, Senate District
8. She chairs the Senate Early Childhood subcommittee and is Vice-Chair of
the Education Committee. The bill is sponsored in the House by
Representative Betty Folliard, DFL, HD 44A, Hopkins.
The Lourey/Folliard bill that would implement TEACH in Minnesota is
part of a national campaign (are we surprised?) called "Leave No
Child Behind." The campaign is spearheaded by the Children's
Defense Fund and "a broad array of charitable and public advocacy
groups." (See the press
release from that press conference)
The Children's Defense Fund represents one of the most well-funded and
aggressive promoters of universal government control of pre-school
education, including a government-sanctioned curriculum for kids. This is
no small campaign.
Who's in charge of early childhood credentialing and curriculum?
There are two organizations primarily involved in the CDA credential.
- The Council for Professional Recognition gives the CDA credential.
They were created by...
- NAEYC (National Association for the Education of Young Children.
These two organizations are very important, particularly NAEYC, because
NAEYC is setting the standard nationally for what all
preschool children must eventually know and be able to demonstrate.
William T. Gormley, in Everybody's Children, states:
"Another strategy related to training is
accreditation. The leading child care accreditation program is run
by the Council of Early Childhood Professional Recognition, which was
created by the National Association for the Education of Young Children
(NAEYC).
"Based in Washington, D.C., the Council awards a
Child Development Associate (CDA) certificate to providers who complete
120 clock hours of approved coursework and who successfully pass an exam
or 'assessment.'"
NAEYC's "Anti-bias Curriculum"
The principles of NAEYC's Anti-Bias Curriculum are in the professional
guidelines and standards for the CDA credential. This was confirmed by
telephone by the curriculum adviser for the Council on Professional
Recognition.
(<http://www.naeyc.org/profdev/prep.review/associate_baccalaureate.pdf>
and <http://www.naeyc.org/profdev/prep.review/2001.pdf>)
1994 - "1.4 Apply knowledge of cultural and linguistic diversity
to create environments and experiences that affirm and respect
culturally and linguistically diverse children, support home- language
preservation, and promote anti-bias approaches and the valuing of
diversity."
2001 - "In addition, in order to make curriculum powerful and
accessible to all, well-prepared candidates develop curriculum that is
free of biases related to ethnicity, religion, gender, or ability status
- and in fact the curriculum actively counters such biases."
None of this would raise eyebrows except that "bias," and
"cultural and linguistic diversity" is already being used
aggressively in schools and workplaces to force acceptance of attitudes
and beliefs that violate individual conscience and personal values and
beliefs.
Activities and principles in the Anti-bias Curriculum - Tools for
Empowering Young Children (Derman-Sparkes, NAEYC, Washington, D.C.,
1989) include defining homophobia and discussing homosexuality,
engendering a healthy sexual identity, and having preschoolers do
anatomically correct drawings. They teach religious diversity by
discussing witchcraft, and they discuss history from a diverse perspective
by describing the first Thanksgiving as "hypothetical" and
racist against Native Americans. An entire chapter is devoted to
social activism projects with young children.
That chapter on activism inspired an entire book called That's not
Fair! - A Teacher's Guide to Activism with Young Children. (Pelo and
Davidson, Redleaf Press, St. Paul, MN, 2000)
The State of Virginia
The State of Virginia found that when the CDA requirement was combined
with the Virginia Child Care Resource and Referral Network, a child care
monopoly was created requiring the teaching and training of students,
teachers and parents with the radical Anti-Bias Curriculum.
("Improper Special Interest Influence in Key Contracts: An Analysis
With Preliminary Observations on the Politicized Agenda in Child Day
Care," Mark Kindt (D), former Assistant Attorney General of Ohio and
West Virginia):
- Issuance of complex regulations for day care licensure "under
the guise of protecting the health and safety of children, but which,
in reality, are calculated to restrict entry, limit competition,
reduce access, limit parental choice, and increase cost."
- "...Development of a college curriculum designed to turn out
'politically correct' day care 'professionals'"
- "Development of a politicized core curriculum for day care
providers (a so-called national standard) to be used to form the minds
of children with a radical ideology before they enter public
schools."
Other NAEYC professional development standards within the 2000 set are
anti-academic and politically correct:
Mathematics - "Mathematics instruction should be guided
by the ...standards developed by the NCTM [National Council of Teachers
of Mathematics, the group that drives integrated and fuzzy math as the
national standard]...According to NCTM, understanding [of math] develops
through interaction with...in settings where students have opportunities
to construct their own relationships when they first meet a new
topic."
Language and literacy - "They know the sociopolitical
contexts of major language groups and how this may affect a child's
motivation to learn English. They know the benefits of
bilingualism..."
The Anti-Bias Curriculum was used in writing and referenced in
Minnesota's Early Childhood Indicators of Progress, published and promoted
by Minnesota's Department of CFL. On page 46, for example, it states
that teachers should "involve children in service learning and social
action projects."
Excerpts from NAEYC'S "Anti-Bias and Child Activist
Curricula":
Anti-Bias Curriculum - Tools for Empowering Young Children
Multiculturalism:
Definition of "Whites: All
the different national ethnic groups of European origin who as a group
are disproportionately represented in the control of the economic,
political, and cultural institutions in the United States." (p.
3)
Witchcraft:
"Kay sets up...a 'witch-healer' table, where the children can make
their own potions." (p. 9)
Revisionist History:
"And if the hypothetical Indians who participated in that
hypothetical feast thought all was well and were thankful in the
expectation of a peaceful future, they were sadly mistaken." (pp.
87-88)
Homosexuality:
Definition of "Homophobia: A fear and hatred of gay men and
lesbians backed up by institutional policies and power that discriminate
against them." (p. 3)
Sexual Identity:
"...the purpose of these activities is to enable preschoolers to
develop a clear, healthy sex identity through understanding that their
being a girl or boy depends on their anatomy, not on what they like to
do." (p. 53)
"Make copies of an outline of a body as drawn by a preschooler,
and in small groups, ask children to fill in all the body parts, and to
show if the person is a girl or boy." (p. 53)
Activism with Young Children:
"Young children have an impressive capacity for learning how to be
activists if adults provide activities that are relevant and
developmentally appropriate. (;. 77)
"Instead of one superhuman figure (usually a white male)
righting wrongs all by himself, activism activities teach that real
people, adults and children, make life better by working together."
(p. 79)
That's Not Fair! - A Teacher's Guide to Activism with Young Children
Teachers do activism projects with young children based on: -
Environmentalism, acceptance of homosexuality, affirmative action,
feminism, homelessness, violence prevention, anti-military themes
- Page 8 - "Anti-Bias activism has other intrinsic benefits for
young children.
"Activism projects:
* nurture self-esteem and empowerment
* develop empathy and appreciation for differences
* facilitate critical and problem solving
* provide a mental model for children at risk from bias
* provide a model for equity and justice for privileged dominant culture
children
* contributes to community-building"
- One part of the curriculum describes a teacher reading books to the
children in order to "bring up big issues, issues that provoke
debate, discussion, and often, activism project."
The book goes on to describe the teacher's reading of a book called the
Trumpet of the Swan and how she uses it to deal with the issue of
homosexuality. (p. 50-51)
"The second part of the book focuses on the swan's courtship and
mating. When Ann reads the book, she changes the gender of the
main character from a male to a female swan. When the main
character is a female, her courtship of another female swan becomes the
story of two women falling in love. This invariably provokes
conversation among the children about women marrying women and men
marrying men. It's important to Ann that children feel comfortable
around people who are lesbian and gay. She wants children to
expect to meet people who are lesbian and gay and to feel relaxed and at
ease with them. When Ann reads this book, the kids already care
about Louise the swan by the time she begins to court Serina, her true
love. They can't easily dismiss her or ignore her, because they
are invested in her life and her happiness."
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