Yesterday, Jindal announced
several actions through executive orders BJ 2014-6 and BJ 2014-7 designed to
interfere with the Louisiana’s ability to administer exams designed through the
Partnership for Assessment of Readiness
for College and Careers, based upon the Common Core State Standards
initiative. Despite having once been a supporter and with the state’s own
testing used as a model for constructing the PARCC exam, he has become a critic
of the effort, arguing that, even if CCSS does not impose any content standards
in curriculum, PARCC somehow could be used as a tool to impose a nationalized
curriculum, which he opposes. Thus, in stopping PARCC, CCSS falls on its own
accord, the thinking goes.
These are interesting as much for
what they include as what they leave out. First, they order the Department of
Education – directed by the separate Board of Elementary and Secondary
Education and its hired superintendent that runs DOE – essentially to rebid the
contract for testing. The argument used is that DOE allegedly failed to follow
state law in allowing a group procurement for the PARCC organization, because it
could skirt competitive bidding laws -- despite the fact that the contract started with the same firm for using previous tests in 2003 and was renewed regularly since.