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School Liberator, 12-6-01--Ed Standards Spell
Trouble
Sender: owner-schoolliberator-list@free-market.net
Vol. 1, No. 41
===============================================
T H E S C H O O L L I B E
R A T O R
===============================================
* Columbine Case Dismissed * Edison's Woes
*
* Do You Smell a Boondoggle? *
* The Education Standards Movement Spells Trouble
for Private and Home Schools *
--> "[A] federal district court dismissed
lawsuits filed by 15 of 16 families, alleging that the local sheriff's department
and school district failed to catch the warning signs from the Columbine killers
and responded too slowly once the shooting started."
"Columbine seeks closure--out of court: Victims'
parents must look elsewhere for solace as federal judge dismisses legal case."
http://www.csmonitor.com/2001/1129/p2s1-usju.html
--> As we have commented in these pages
previously, government schools are not responsible for the safety (or the education)
of their students--that means YOUR children--so say the federal courts.
--> Cracks in the Edifice. Dark school forces
continue their battle--this time, the entrenched interests v. the "privatization"
(read false reform) proponents--while an opportunistic congressman tries to
grab air time. In other words, the more the government school scene changes,
the more it stays the same. What will happen to Philly and Edison?
Does it really matter? We school libbers can
sit back and watch the cracks widen.
Press Release: "Fattah Calls for Congressional
Hearings on Edison's Record"
http://www.educationnews.org/prnewswire_fattah_calls_for_cong.htm
--> If this astounding article can be believed,
the residents of Akron, Ohio have been unexpectedly hit withthe news that 42
of their 58 schools need to be replaced. Yes, you read that right, 42 out of
58 schools.
"Most Akron schools need to be replaced, study finds"
http://www.ohio.com/bj/local/docs/020094.htm
--> Akron school officials expect fewer
schools after the proposed $620 million (and rising) building project to replace
the old school buildings is completed. From the article:
"Elementary schools are likely to be big enough
for 350 to 400 students and have average class sizes between 15 and 19 students.
Middle schools will hold 400 to 800 students, with class sizes between 20 and
22 students. And high schools will be large enough for 900 to 1,200 students,
with the same class size as the middle schools."
--> Whose idea was it to have such large
schools, anyway? (And yes, I know there are some much larger. El Cajon comes
to mind...) How was this decided? The K-12 school I attended had around 300
students, as I recall. Everyone knew everyone else's name. I would love to see
a research project that explores the possibility of a correlation between school
size and student drug use and suicide rate. If you know of one, please email
the info to mailto:deschoolcuthbert@aol.com
--> The Akron situation brings to mind John
Taylor Gatto's eye opening speech, "The Logical Tragedy of Benson, Vermont."
See more below...
================= ANNOUNCEMENTS
=================
--> SepCon2002--Politics and Education Don't
Mix! Gatto, Sproul, Sobran, Coulson, Taylor. And of course, the big guy, Fritz.
June 30 through July 2 at the Doubletree Hotel in Arlington, Virginia. Too good
to miss. Be there.
Visit the following url for the SepCon2002
registration form:
http://www.sepschool.org/SepCon/02/reg.html
--> Please remember The Alliance in your
end of year tax planning. We are a 501(c)(3) educational organization so that
your generous donation is tax deductible. Thank you for your investment in the
future of educational freedom.
============= REQUEST FOR VOLUNTEERS
============
--> The Alliance has dozens of taped presentations
from past SepCons and from Marshall's peregrinations. We are looking for volunteers
to help us with transcription. Figure that each hour presentation requires approximately
three hours to transcribe. If you could devote just three hours of your time
to help us in this very necessary but long overdue venture please email us at
mailto:deschoolcuthbert@aol.com
================= SPECIAL OFFERS
=================
After we've whetted your appetite with this
week's article, read more insights by Cathy Duffy in her book Government
Nannies. Cathy blows the whistle on Goals 2000 and many other government
schemes to invade the family and interfere with your educational freedom. Get
this paperback from The Alliance as a School Liberator special--just $10 plus
$3.50 shipping-- a full $5 discount. And...
In "The Logical Tragedy of Benson, Vermont,"
Gatto tells of a town bullied by state school officials into abandoning it's
perfectly serviceable school house for the sake of bureaucracy. Get this 60
minute audiotape for just $1--plus $3.50 shipping-- a full $7 discount.
Call Morgen at 559/292-1776 to order.
==================================================
The Education Standards Movement Spells Trouble
for Private and Home Schools
http://www.home-school.com/exclusive/standards.html
By Cathy Duffy
The Standards/Testing Movement
States have been forced by federal legislation
to participate in the standards movement--developing lists of skills and content
required at each grade level. The weapon of enforcement is testing. New tests
are being developed that reflect the content of the standards. These tests are
supposed to judge student mastery of what is actually being taught rather than
the general competence measured by standardized tests of the past. If students
are or are not learning (as shown by test scores), schools and teachers are
rewarded or penalized. There are two underlying assumptions: that every child
is capable of learning the identical information at the same time as every other
child, and that all the standards selected by each state are academically sound
and worthwhile. If children were programmable robots, the first might be possible.
If politics and public pressure played no role in the standards, the second
might be possible. The experiences of the left-leaning Coalition for Educational
Justice and the right-leaning Kansas State School Board demonstrate the fallout
from these two false assumptions.
Leftist Group Decries Standards
On May 8, 2001, the left-leaning Coalition
for Educational Justice (CEJ) orchestrated a demonstration against the Los Angeles
School Board's use of the Stanford 9 test, labeling it a racist test. They also
protested the use of high-stakes testing to dole out monetary rewards and punishments.
The basis of CEJ's arguments is that biased tests and unequal school funding
are the cause of low test scores among schools serving low-income students of
color. Thus, they stand strongly opposed to the increasing use of test scores
for determining what schools and teachers get extra money and which lose funding
or get taken over by the state. [Coalition for Educational Justice (May 8, 2001).
[press release] "At the Height of Stanford 9 Testing, CEJ Demands 'End the
Racist Tests! City Schools Deserve the Best!'" May 31, 2001--http://www.fairtest.org/arn/Calif-pr.html
]
"Right Wing" School Board
Members Cause Brouhaha by Change in Standards
In Kansas, school board members were labeled
right-wing radicals in 1999 when they voted to NOT include questions on macro-evolution
in state tests. [note: Macro-evolution means one species changing into another
species; micro-evolution means adaptations or changes within species.] Teachers
were not forbidden to teach macro-evolution, but it wouldn't be included in
a standards-based test.
Evolutionists viewed the decision as a challenge
to the very fundamentals of science education. Adrian Melott, a University of
Kansas physics professor told the board, "I see this as an attack on science
in general, not just biology." [Beem, K. (1999, April 11). Evolution vs. Biblical
creation: The conflict continues. Kansas City Star. http://www.kcstar.com/item/pages/home.pat,local/30dae5e2.411,.html
]
CEJ and the Kansas School Board members appear
to have little in common on the surface. But their respective battles over testing
and standards are merely the tip of the iceberg, illustrating just a few of
the problems stemming from school reform efforts centered around development
of national standards and high-stakes testing. Problems for private and homeschools
promise to be even worse.
Control of Private School
Curricula
While the standards and testing movement is
certain to create enemies from across the political spectrum from far left to
far right, it poses the most serious threat to private schools who wish to pursue
their own "standards" based on philosophical outlooks and values that differ
from that which buttress the standards/testing movement. For example, classical
education is the latest movement in private schooling. Many new classical schools
have opened in recent years. Their courses of study usually differ dramatically
from those of government schools. High school students study works of
Aristotle, Plato, Cicero, Keynes, Marx, and other influential thinkers rather
than reading through typical textbooks. They study Latin, logic, and debate.
They don't take classes in Conflict Resolution, Sex Education, or Cultural Awareness.
They are not well prepared to pass tests that assume all students are being
taught the same things, but they seem to be better educated than the average
government school graduate.
The danger of undermining such private schools
with government testing and standards mandates has gone largely unremarked because
most families enroll their children in government schools and have little or
no interaction with any private schools. However, private schools--a category
which includes homeschools and religiously-affiliated schools up through very
prestigious prep schools--are valuable not only to those whose children attend
such schools, but to the public at large, even though they are largely unaware
of this. Why? For one thing, because private schools pose a continual challenge
to government-financed schooling. They offer a "product" that is perceived to
be significantly different enough from the "free" public schools that many parents
make the necessary sacrifices so that their children might attend. Whether those
differences are academic, social, religious, ethical, emotion, or physical,
many parents pay twice through taxes and tuition for their children to get "a
better education."
Such parents seem to believe they are getting
value for their money or they wouldn't continue to pay, but the rest of the
country also benefits from the competition posed by this alternative "system"
of private schools. Yes, it reflects poorly upon a government school when a
private school in the same geographic area, serving a similar socio-economic
group, produces better-educated graduates, a safer environment, or other temptations
for parents to defect to the private school. And this might force some government
schools to do a better job than they might without any competition. But the
real value of private schools lies in their ability to teach what they believe
to be right or best without dictates from the government. They are free to develop
a more-challenging or alternative curriculum, then let the marketplace decide
whether or not they are successful. If they do a good job, they will have students.
It should surprise no one that innovation and
creativity is much more common in private schools than government schools. In
fact, the most-private schools--homeschools--are the most innovative of all.
Why else would so many online education providers first target homeschool students?
They understand the openness and flexibility of parents who constantly look
for the best methods ofproviding education for their own children. Homeschoolers
can pick and choose from among the wide world of options: traditional texts,
programmed learning, student-initiated projects, video courses, computer programs,
tutors, group classes, and online learning.
Because of this, homeschools operate as a laboratory
for the development of new and unusual content and delivery methods in ways
that traditional private schools cannot. And the evidence is clear that homeschooling
is producing both academic and personal excellence. As more and more homeschoolers
have gone on to college, they have done so well that college recruiters across
the country actively court homeschoolers to attend their institutions.
Redefining Education as Vocational
Training
The standards/testing movement has the potential
to cripple private schooling by constraining it within its own narrow boundaries.
Those boundaries are the result of Goals 2000 and School-to-Work (STW) legislation
passed in 1994, coupled with other, older efforts from the Departments of Labor
and Education to redefine education as "training for the workforce." Documents
such as Learning a Living, published by the Department of Labor in 1992, have
explained the economic necessity of preparing students to compete in the global
economy of the 21st century as the justification for educational restructuring.
Goals 2000 and STW allowed the federal government to dictate restructuring requirements
to the states.
Floretta Dukes McKenzie helps us understand
the thinking behind the "school as training" agenda. McKenzie voices support
for this view of education in a book published by the NEA spinoff organization,
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development. Notice McKenzie's emphasis
on economic competition, "marketable skills," and workers as the primary focus
of education "equity." She tells us, "Educators and policymakers must join forces
with other government agencies to bridge the gap between the haves and have-nots.
This gap threatens the safety of our cities today, as well as the economic
survival of our society into the next century.... From a purely economic point
of view, failure to pursue educational equity for minority youth is a form of
slow suicide. The internationalization of the economy will require an increasing
economic competitiveness. ...We must transcend the common practices of focusing
on basic skills and marketable skills for minority students without providing
the thinking and learning skillsthat will help them adapt to the 21st-century
career environment. The continued development and use of leading-edge technology
will require a high-quality work force. On a more selfish note, the next generation
of workers will require three workers to support each person on Social security....
today's older workers must maximize the learning skills and, therefore, the
earning skills of tomorrow's minority workers, on whom they will rely for their
retirement incomes. [McKenzie, F.D. (1993.). Equity: A Call to action. In Challenges
and Achievements of American Education, Cawelti, G. (Ed.). Alexandria, VA: Association
for Supervision and Curriculum Development, pp. 9, 12-13.]
While McKenzie is on the right track with her
recognition of the need for improved "thinking and learning skills," she and
others seem to view the purpose only as success in the workforce. Postman labels
this educational outlook as "Economic Utility" in his book The End of Education:
"If you pay attention in school, and do your homework, and score well on tests,
and behave yourself, you will be rewarded with a well-paying job when you are
done. Its driving idea is that the purpose of schooling is to prepare children
for competent entry into the economic life of a community." [Postman, N. (1996).
The End of Education. New York: Vintage Books, p. 27.]
Contrast this view of "education solely as
job preparation" with the idea of "liberal" (in the classical sense) education
as described by Great Books Academy--a new online classical school: "Liberal
education is ordered toward making the student a free and happy individual.
This freedom and happiness arises within the student as he is freed from ignorance
and becomes better equipped to recognize the truth and beauty of the world around
him. And it is truth which in turn leads him to freedom and happiness" ["Liberal
Arts and Liberal Education versus Liberalism." (2000, Summer). Classical Homeschooling.
Morton, WA. p. 31.]
A liberal education, as traditionally understood,
was designed to produce a wise young adult with a wide breadth of tools for
learning and evaluating any new situation or task--the very result politicians
and educators have been clamoring for. These "tools of learning" are accompanied
in a liberal education by a solid grounding in the great thinkers and events
of the past. A student so educated is capable of holding a wide variety of jobs--whatever
his innate talents and desires draw him to--not just one that is chosen for
him by state planners. However, the most important part of such an education,
once the basic tools of learning are mastered, is the student's growth in understanding--a
quality that can only be measured through ongoing interaction with wise teachers
and mentors.
The effect of the theory of economic utility
in education is to transform it into a commodity that can be easily measured,
tracked, and quantified and that requires no special wisdom or insight to administer.
That transformation happens as reformers come up with specific, measurable educational
objectives relating to their goals; write curricula that teaches each one of
those objectives; then create tests that measure student mastery of each objective--the
economic utility style reform we have come to label as the "standards movement."
Broad Support for Standards
Across the political spectrum, almost everyone
from President George W. Bush to Senator Edward Kennedy supports the push for
national standards and the testing necessary to support the standards. [Kennedy,
E.M. (1997, September 4). Statement of Senator Edward M. Kennedy for the Senate
Appropriations Subcommittee hearing on voluntary national tests in education.
http://www.senate.gov/~kennedy/statements/970904edtesting.html ]
Governor Paul Cellucci of Massachusetts echoes
the widespread support President Bush has garnered by making this a top priority
in the early days of his administration: "President Bush's decision to tackle
the difficult problems of education as the first initiative of his new Administration
is good news for America's families. The President has made it clear that comprehensive
education reform must start by insisting upon high standards and strengthening
accountability for student performance." [Republican Governors Back Bush Education
Plan. (2001, January 23). Press release issued by the Republican National Committee.
See http://www.rnc.org/newsroom1/0124_104.htm ]
Educational historian and former Department
of Education official Diane Ravitch joins the chorus of approval: "...standards
are essential both for excellence and equal opportunity." Ravitch, President
Bush, and many others recognize that national education standards are pointless
without testing as an enforcement mechanism. If it isn't tested, it won't be
taught. Consequently, Ravitch and other standards advocates call for either
the expanded use of the federally-funded National Assessment of Educational
Progress (NAEP) test or state tests aligned with and calibrated to the NAEP
standards. [Ravitch, D. (1996, Summer). 50 states, 50 standards. The Brookings
Review, 14 (3).
http://www.brook.edu/press/review/ravsu96.htm
on April 9, 2001; Ravitch, D. (1999, winter). Retrieved from Student performance:
The national agenda in education. The Brookings Review. See http://www.brook.edu/es/research/areas/edu/standards.htm
]
The new tests must be what are called "high-stakes
tests" (you lose a lot if you fail to pass), otherwise the national standards
won't have any influence. At present, states use a variety of tests. Some use
the familiar standardized tests such as the Iowa Test of Basic Skills (ITBS)
and the SAT 9. Many states have developed or are in the process of developing
their own exams such as the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills and California's
Golden State Exams. While the older standardized tests measure general academic
knowledge and skills, the new tests are aligned directly with each state's standards
or framework that measure whether or not students at each grade level have mastered
very prescriptive lists of content and skills.
Problems arise because, thus far, the standards
and tests created by various states are not identical. States differ in what
they believe is important for students to learn, although not by much. The National
Education Goals Panel, which was created by Goals 2000, set up Technical Planning
Groups to work out the details of Goals 2000. One of these groups concluded,
"there can logically be only one set of national education standards per subject
area." [Goals 3 and 4 Technical Planning Group on the Review of Education Standards.
(1993, November 15). Promises to Keep: Creating High Standards for American
Students, pp. 11, 15-16.]
Standards Conflicts
Groups of subject matter experts have formed
around the country to try to come up with a single set of national standards
for each subject that will be accepted nationwide. However, many people began
to realize how challenging, and perhaps impossible, this might be with the presentation
of national history standards in 1994. The seemingly simple choice of what historical
information to include or not to include was recognized to be a powerful determiner
of attitudes and values for children. Fans of western civilization felt betrayed
when European history and classic American heroes such as George Washington
and Patrick Henry, whose lives clearly shaped American history, were demoted
in favor of a more multicultural approach that allotted space to less influential
heroes representative of minorities and other cultures. [Morris, J. (1998, March-April).
How not to set national history standards. Civreviews, 2, (2). See http://www.civnet.org/journal/issue6/revjmorr.htm
]
The Kansas State School Board conflict was
actually more important than most people realize because it demonstrated the
hollowness of claims that the educational standards were merely voluntary guidelines
that would not control the curriculum. Teachers were not forbidden to teach
macro-evolution, but that topic wouldn't be included in a standards-based test.
Yet, many understood that what was on the tests is what would get taught in
the classroom and vice versa. Pro-evolution forces marshaled their armies and
waged a successful campaign to unseat conservative board members in February,
2001. New, pro-macro-evolution board members promptly voted to revise the standards
so they are now in alignment with the national standards from the National Academy
of Sciences. The NAS standards are based upon five "unifying concepts" or "cornerstones
of science"--one of which is "evolution and equilibrium." [Beem, K. (1999, April
11). Evolution vs. Biblical creation: The conflict continues. Kansas City Star.
Retrieved from http://www.kcstar.com/item/pages/home.pat,local/30dae5e2.411,.html
]
The end result for Kansas is the same as the
more-peacefully achieved results in most other states. National standards for
each subject are being used as the basis for state standards, resulting in a
high degree of similarity in the curriculum from state to state. This is a highly
desirable goal for backers of national standards and testing since one of their
objectives is easy comparability from state to state.
High-Stakes Testing
Rewards and punishments play a crucial role
in the push for national standards. To make sure school personnel understand
the importance of teaching the new standards, many states have instituted "high-stakes
tests" with rewards and punishments meted out to school personnel in relation
to student scores. At present, 41 states already have high-stakes testing. Increasingly,
states are tying improved test scores to cash bonuses (up to $25,000 per teacher
in California) and positive job evaluations for both teachers and principals.
As an important side note, cheating incidents among educators have risen dramatically
with implementation of high-stakes testing. [Harrington-Lueker, D. (2000, December).
When Educators Cheat. AASA School Administrator. http://www.aasa.org/publications/sa/2000_12/harrington-lueker.htm
]
Implementing high-stakes tests creates pressure
for state standards, since these tests do not currently line up with the existing
curriculum and standards.
Earl H. Wiman, principal of Alexander Elementary
School in Jackson, Tennessee, echoes a typical complaint that "the test does
not reflect the state's academic standards closely enough to help focus instruction.
If we're going to hold schools accountable, we need to very clearly identify
for teachers and schools what needs to be taught, and we need to very clearly
identify for teachers how that's going to be tested." [Olson, L, (2001, February
21). Usefulness of annual testing varies by state. Education Week, XX (23),
1, 22-23.]
Jeanne Allen, president of the Washington-based
Center for Education Reform, has heard such complaints. In an interview, she
comments, "The issue before was, how the heck do you make sure that state standards
and state tests are good enough in order to make these rewards and impose these
consequences?" She believes that President Bush's education proposal has the
answer. "Mr. Bush has proposed verifying state test-score gains by comparing
them with NAEP results." If state exams results are substantiated by similar
results on the NAEP, this would be a good indicator. However, the comparison
cannot even be made in many states because they either do not participate in
NAEP testing or too few schools participate to give representative scores for
comparison. Thus, for Bush's plan to work, more states would have to participate
in the NAEP. [Olson, L. (2001, January 31). "Few states are now in line with
Bush testing plan. Education Week, XX (20), pp. 1, 25.]
Whether the Bush administration will choose
to expand the NAEP or, instead, opt for NAEP-equivalent questions imbedded in
states exams remains to be seen. If the "standards" trend continues, the result
will be the same either way. Testing programs will expand, and the federal role
will become much more significant. States that are not yet closely aligned with
national standards and tests will be brought into alignment one way or another.
Clashing Worldviews
As the standards and tests are being implemented,
it becomes increasingly clear that the standards will not easily accommodate
those who would have their children learn a Christian worldview or any other
worldview that does not align with the dominant secular materialist worldview
reflected in the standards. Neutrality isn't an option. Education has an undeniable
cultural/philosophic/religious aspect that is transmitted whether purposely
or not. Historians Eby and Arrowood tell us, "Education is more than the acquisition
of a certain body of knowledge; it comprehends the transmission to the younger
generation of the entire culture of a people. Now the culture of a people involves
an ideal of character and of religious faith, a system of behavior, together
with some theory of the universe, however simple it may be." [Eby, F. &
Arrowwood, C. F. (1940). The History and Philosophy of Education Ancient and
Modern. New York: Prentice-Hall, Inc., p. 589.]
The late R. J. Rushdoony wrote even more explicitly:
"Not only does education find its foundation in religion, but the educational
curriculum expresses the religious standards and expectations of a culture."
[Rushdoony, R. J. (1981). The Philosophy of the Christian Curriculum. Vallecito,
CA: Ross House Books, p.4.] This holds true even if the religious foundations
are non-theistic. For example, "statism" was the religion of the Soviet Union,
so its educational system clearly reflected the state's beliefs, philosophy,
historical interpretations, and goals. Under that system, professing Christians
were typically shut out from college admissions, and hence from all but menial
jobs, since they did not adhere to the state's philosophy and goals--its "standards."
Can We Work Around the Standards?
Some people suggest that private and home schools
can work around the standards by first teaching the required content, then adding
worldview-focused curricula to the mix. Others suggest ignoring the standards
but providing students with a solid liberal arts education with the expectation
that they will then be intelligent enough to "outsmart" the tests.
Unfortunately, neither solution is realistic.
Teachers increasingly complain that school days are consumed with teaching to
the standards and preparing for tests. The standards have become so extensive
and detailed that teachers have no extra time to teach beyond them. [Stoskopf,
A. (2000, February 2). Clio's Lament. Education Week, XIX, (21), 38-41.] Homeschoolers
might be able to manage the time to do both, but I suspect that most parents
would see the hypocrisy and waste in teaching material that supports conflicting
worldviews.
Testing is likely to become more and more problematical.
If private schools and homeschools try to ignore the standards and implement
a classical liberal education (or any other alternative curricular agenda),
their students might test poorly as tests become more and more narrowly focused
on details dictated by the standards that would be unlikely parts of their educational
program.
As the standards movement gathers steam, pressure
will be exerted upon private schools and home schools to adhere to the same
standards and tests as government schools.
Exit exams (tests students must pass before
graduating from high school) might well have the strongest impact. Twenty-four
states have exit exams in place or in the planning process thus far. Students
in government schools must pass these tests to earn a high school diploma. [Olson,
L. (2001, January 24). States adjust high-stakes testing plans. Education Week,
XX (19), pp. 1, 18-19.]
Could "Standards" Be Forced
on Homeschoolers?
Early in 2001, the Maine legislature introduced
legislation (LD 405) requiring homeschoolers to take the state's Maine Educational
Assessment exam. Although this legislative effort failed, it demonstrates that
it is not a farfetched concern for homeschoolers in general. [HSLDA News Release.
(2001, February 16). Home School Legal Defense Association, Purcellville, VA.
] Also, as colleges and universities explore linkage of college entry to student
scores on standards-based tests and exit exams, it is likely that they will
come to expect private and home school students to pass the same tests just
as they now take the same SAT I, SAT II, and ACT exams as public school students
for college entry exams.
Private and home schools that choose to teach
a significantly different curriculum will be faced with choices of sacrificing
their own agenda so their students can achieve high test scores, accepting the
risk of low student scores, or fighting for alternative evaluation.
What We Must Do
We might be able to avoid these dismal alternatives
if we can keep private and home education free from the standards movement.
That means:
* resisting or getting rid of state and/or
federal laws that require home educators to take standards-based tests;
* encouraging colleges and universities to rely on evaluation tools other than
standards-based test results;
* not enrolling our children in government-sponsored homeschool programs (which
will all use standards-based tests);
* educating others about the dangers of the standards movement;
* clearly identifying our own educational goals and diligently working to accomplish
them.
Only if we resist government-imposed standards
will we be free to develop our own standards of education that reflect God's
purposes for our own families.
---------------------
Cathy Duffy, a homeschool and school liberation
advocate, is a member of the Board of Director of The Alliance for the Separation
of School and State. She is the author of the Christian Home Educators' Curriculum
Manual and Government Nannies and a frequent convention speaker.
==================================================
FINAL THOUGHT
"You are not paying for education twice if
you send your child to a private school. You are paying once for the government
indoctrination of other people's children and once for the education of yours.
You are not paying for education when you pay taxes."
-- Marshall Fritz, President, The Alliance for the Separation of School and
State
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one word, "subscribe," in the BODY of the message
(not the subject.)
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