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Saturday, August 3, 2024

The Death of Curiosity and Alacrity:

Title: "The Death of Curiosity and Alacrity: How Common Core Murdered American Education"

If educational acronyms told the truth:

1. Uncommon Bore State Stagnation
2. The Conformity Core
3. Mediocrity Mainstreaming Initiative
4. Creativity Culling Curriculum
5. Standardized Stupefaction System
6. Lowest Common Denominator Learning
7. The Great American Dumbing Down
8. No Child Left Unshackled
9. Operation Educational Ennui
10. The Procrustean Bed of Learning
11. Bureaucrats Know Best Directive
12. Curiosity Killing Consortium
13. Imagination Inhibition Initiative
14. Race to the Middle
15. Uniform Underachievement Guidelines
16. Cookie-Cutter Cognition Scheme
17. Bland National Curriculum
18. One-Size-Fits-None Education
19. Assembly Line Learning Protocol
20. The McDonaldization of Knowledge

These names satirically highlight various criticisms of the Common Core, such as its alleged stifling of creativity, overemphasis on standardization, and potential for reducing education to a one-size-fits-all approach. They play on the idea that in attempting to create common standards, the initiative may have inadvertently promoted mediocrity or conformity at the expense of individualized, creative learning.


In the grand tradition of bureaucratic blunders, few rival the spectacular own-goal that is the Common Core State Standards Initiative. This insidious experiment, foisted upon America's youth with all the subtlety of a sledgehammer to the cranium, has managed to accomplish what generations of incompetent pedagogues could only dream of: the wholesale eradication of intellectual curiosity, creativity, and critical thinking in our nation's classrooms.

Let us be clear: the architects of Common Core, in their infinite wisdom, have succeeded where countless despots and dimwits have failed. They have transmuted the vibrant, messy, exhilarating process of learning into a soulless conveyor belt of "skills acquisition," as if children were mere widgets to be programmed rather than minds to be cultivated.

Gone are the days when a child might stumble upon the intoxicating realm of narrative, where morality, empathy, and the humn condition are explored through the timeless art of storytelling. No, such frivolities have no place in our brave new world of "education." Instead, we subject our youth to an endless barrage of decontextualized "skills," taught at ages determined by bureaucrats who wouldn't know a developmental milestone if it bit them on their clipboards.

And let us not forget the Orwellian sanitization of history that Common Core has wrought. Slavery, that great American shame, has been rebranded as "work programs" or the "colonial workforce." One can almost hear the ghostly laughter of Jefferson Davis echoing through the halls of our sanitized schools. Perhaps next we'll rebrand the Holocaust as an "involuntary population …" or the Trail of Tears as a "sponsored nature walk."

Ah, how delightfully on-brand for the American education system. As if our curricular butchery weren't thorough enough, we now have the spectacle of Southlake's finest attempting to "balance" accounts of the Holocaust with "opposing views." One can only imagine the riveting classroom debates: "Hitler: Misunderstood Vegetarian or History's Greatest Monster?" Perhaps we should also seek "balance" in our coverage of chattel slavery or the Trail of Tears. After all, who are we to impose our modern, snowflake sensibilities on the complex moral quandaries of the past?

This farcical episode in Southlake is merely the logical conclusion of our educational system's race to the intellectual bottom. Having abandoned any pretense of fostering critical thinking or moral reasoning, we now find ourselves in the absurd position of treating genocide as just another topic for a high school debate club. It's as if we've taken Voltaire's famous dictum - "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it" - and twisted it into "I disapprove of your systematic extermination of millions, but I will defend to the death your right to have it taught as a valid historical perspective."

One can almost admire the perverse consistency of it all. If we're going to sanitize slavery into "work programs," why not give equal time to Holocaust deniers? After all, in the glorious world of Common Core and "balanced" education, all viewpoints are equally valid, and critical thinking is just another skill to be bubbled in on a standardized test.

The true tragedy, of course, is not just the mind-numbing stupidity of such a proposal, but the chilling effect it has on teachers. Imagine being an educator in Southlake, caught between the Scylla of historical truth and the Charybdis of administrative reprisal. Do you dare to teach the unvarnished facts of history, or do you kowtow to the demands for "balance" and risk turning your classroom into a forum for historical revisionism?

In the end, this is where our educational race to mediocrity has led us: to a place where teaching basic historical facts is seen as a potentially fireable offense. Bravo, America. You've outdone yourself this time. Perhaps next we can "balance" our physics curriculum with the flat Earth theory, or our biology classes with a unit on spontaneous generation. After all, we wouldn't want to be accused of bias towards reality, would we?

The irony, of course, is that while we claim to value critical thinking and Socratic questioning, we have systematically dismantled every educational approach that might foster such abilities. We have replaced the messy, vital process of intellectual discovery with a paint-by-numbers approach to learning that would make even the most ardent Stalinist blush with envy.

The coup de grâce, naturally, was the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent shift to remote learning. If Common Core was the bullet to the heart of American education, remote learning was the shovel that buried it six feet under. Teachers, once trusted professionals, have been reduced to glorified Zoom operators, their every move scrutinized and micromanaged by administrators who wouldn't know pedagogy if it slapped them across the face with a textbook.

In our quest for standardization, we have standardized mediocrity. In our pursuit of measurable outcomes, we have measured the life out of learning. And in our desperate attempt to win the mythical "global competition" in education, we have forfeit the very qualities that once made American ingenuity the envy of the world.

The result? A generation of students who can recite facts but cannot reason, who can pass tests but cannot think, who can follow instructions but cannot innovate. We have created, in short, the perfect workforce for a dystopian future: compliant, unquestioning, and utterly devoid of the spark that drives human progress.

But perhaps this is the point. Perhaps the true aim of Common Core and its ilk is not to educate, but to indoctrinate. Not to inspire, but to control. Not to foster creativity, but to crush it beneath the weight of standardized mediocrity.

If so, then we must concede: mission accomplished. The bureaucrats and bean-counters have won, and our children have lost. The great experiment in dumbing down America is complete, and we are all the poorer for it.

One can only hope that somewhere, in some forgotten corner of a classroom, a child still dares to dream, to question, to imagine. For in that fragile flame of curiosity lies our only hope of salvaging the wreckage of American education from the twin catastrophes of Common Core and COVID.

But I wouldn't bet on it. After all, such frivolous pursuits are not on the test.

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