Last week, BESE made another
apparent concession, after having said
previously it would use state-derived questions for testing purposes, to
Jindal in that it would restart the test procurement process. Jindal has
ordered heightened scrutiny over that process, almost the only conceivable way
in which a governor can influence even the implementation of education policy
in the state as that policy-making is vested in the hands of BESE, because he
claims using a national test by definition imposes national content on the
state, even if it is not content but common standards being adopted by
Louisiana and most states that the test would evaluate the degree of their achievement.
But just as the previous request
really meant nothing granted, in that only the subject areas not covered by
national testing would use Louisiana questions and BESE indicated national
tests still would be used in English and mathematics, so also did this latest
offer also give nothing up to Jindal’s insistence that the national exam
developed by the Partnership for
Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers not be used for
this purpose. BESE officers and White proclaimed that they voluntarily
would start over, if allowed to immediately and wrap it up in three months,
the procurement process again – knowing that because PARCC had discussed giving
the exam to the state for its first year for free that it could come in with a
bid of zero and automatically win. Even if that didn’t happen, the officers –
whose offer antagonized the only three apparent (of 11 total members) BESE opponents
of the Common Core State Standards to which PARCC
is tied – said the winning bid had to be for a test allowing for comparisons
across states.
Just so, as legally the state is
required to use such a test beginning this academic year under a law
signed by Jindal himself. This represents an unimpeachable advantage that
BESE has over Jindal in this showdown. Add to that the free offer from PARCC
itself, and Jindal has almost no cards to play to stop BESE from imposing its
will here.
And he has even fewer in that
also last week BESE got a favorable
ruling from Atty. Gen. Buddy
Caldwell that it could hire outside counsel to defend any court actions
that could come over the dispute – and for free. Former gubernatorial candidate
Phil Preis volunteered at least for this month to act on behalf of BESE, not
only countering a Jindal strategy of potentially using the legal process to
stop BESE from moving on this, but also a Jindal tactic that tried to put
limits on the ability of BESE to hire attorneys by trying to cap the amount
paid in contracts to do that. The only leverage Jindal has left here is that
technically the governor must sign off on contracts for legal defense, even if
free.
Jindal’s position continues to
deteriorate in a standoff. State law compels BESE to use a test that it is
extremely unlikely that Jindal would not find falls under his conceptualization
that national standards equal national content, and even if it tried to do
otherwise, any state legislator, for example, could sue it to make it comply. A
free PARCC instrument cuts Jindal out completely from any ability to stop its
administration, even if only given away this upcoming year (because before the
next round of testing Jindal will be term limited out of office). It’s apparent
that substantively Jindal is highly unlikely to win, so the only motivation he
would have to is to aim for a symbolic victory, by presenting himself as a
go-down-blazing opponent of PARCC, thus by extension CCSS, who did everything
he could, even if he failed, to stop its implementation in the state.
But if his ambitions for a future
political career drive him to continue to hold out, the question becomes
whether that does him any good if not whether he has passed the point of no
return already. For every person who thrills to his never-say-die defense,
there could be more who see that as a cheap political ploy where a vainglorious
pursuit puts the state’s interests subordinate to his own, as is implied
already by some
leading interest
groups. His stance supports interests often opposed to him that will not
convert them to become political boosters of him, while it sours erstwhile
supporters of him on many issues – especially those on this particular issue
where he
used to support them on it – and makes them much less likely to go to the
ramparts to help his agenda in the future. Again, it’s worth pondering whether by
his continuance he has not made the issue his white whale that will lead his
political career into an Ahab-like end.
1 comment:
Excellent post, but I would like to clarify one thing: PARCC is not a vendor and thus they would not be bidding on the testing contract. They will give away their intellectual property for free (the standards) but the state still needs to hire a vendor to implement (write questions, help administer, score, etc) the test.
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