By Susan Ohanian
September 26, 2013 - 12:52 pm CDT
He's back!
Who knew that Jonah Edelman is alive and well--and pumping the Common Core! I stumbled on this information by way of a Tweet by Vicki Phillips, Director of Education - College Ready at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, who issued two shout outs in praise of Edelman's work--a Huffington Post piece One Thing All Parents Should Know about the CommonCore, in which Edelman is humping a new film made by Stand for Children. She'd already declared her love of the film: #CommonCore 'Building Dreams' - great video explaining #CCSS from @Stand4Children | http://bit.ly/18cUaji
We'll get back to this film.
I find it interesting that putting his foot in his mouth at Aspen in 2011 , and bragging what a great political maneuverer he was, doesn't seem to have dimmed Jonah Edelman and Stand for Children's bulb much at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. They continue to shovel buckets of money his way. Since 2009, the Foundation has awarded $9,267,796 to Stand for Children--for general operating expenses, to support expansion, to enable their national office to "deliver state of the art organizing programs to other states, to establish "educator panels," to organize parents and teachers in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana. And to make films.
Gates gives the money and Jonah Edelman, co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of Stand for Children, rightly billing itself as a neo-liberal organization, delivers. Here's the Common Core work Stand for Children is doing for Gates this week. When he's not making a pitch for Stand for Children films, Edelman finds other ways to promote the Common Core, Tweeting, "Great piece on Kentucky's quietly successful implementation of the new #CommonCore standards: http://ti.me/16bl90O --this sent to the article's author, Amanda Ripley. Of course this article in the Sept. 20, 2013 issue of Time starts out by claiming that teachers and researchers wrote the Common Core.
- Easy, interactive tool to learn more about how #CommonCore will affect you:
- One Thing All Parents Should Know [About the Common Core]
He’s really pushing this film—sent call-out to Co-CEO of Teach for America, to @dropoutnation, to Lauren Bowles, a TV actress, and to the world in general.
- @dropoutnation I'd love your help getting eyes on our new #CommonCore video. 13K views and counting! http://youtu.be/6M9208ZrlMU
- Have you spent two minutes learning about the #CommonCore yet? http://youtu.be/6M9208ZrlMU
Edelman seems really proud of this film. It opens with a girl carrying her Pearson Common Core textbooks. Apparently at Stand for Children there’s no sense of shame. Not even any sense of irony. None. Wouldn't you think they'd have been smart enough to find a library book for the kid to hold? Of course the strong possibility is they shot the film in a Common Core school stocked only by Pearson textbooks.
One of the other 38 short videos features John Legend trying to sound wise. They have disabled the comments but indicate that one person like this film.
One more ugly thing about this whole Stand for Children operation. On one of their sites, they feature a map, so the viewer can click on her state and see how kids are doing. I clicked on Vermont and was told Common Core in Vermont: 42% of Vermont's college freshmen aren't ready for college-level work and spend their tuition gaining remedial skills they should've received for free in high school.
They reallly throw in the fear:
- Arkansas: 72% of Arkansas' college freshmen aren't ready for college-level work and spend their tuition gaining remedial skills they should've received for free in high school.
But then it gets interesting:
- Mississippi: 39% of Mississippi's college freshmen aren't ready for college-level work and spend their tuition gaining remedial skills they should've received for free in high school.
- Connecticut: 81% of Connecticut's college freshmen aren't ready for college-level work and spend their tuition gaining remedial skills they should've received for free in high school.
- New Mexico: 47% of New Mexico's college freshmen aren't ready for college-level work and spend their tuition gaining remedial skills they should've received for free in high school.
Where are they getting these numbers?
Bill and Melinda Gates money at work.