"The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the primary backer for the inBloom educational grading and service (which also acts as a platform for third-party applications), is catching flak for its role in encouraging the outsourcing of US Education. The article (cited by RMS today) argues that though the Common Core is a scary new concept that takes power away from state and local school governance, the real danger is allowing corporate enterprises to have so much control over our classrooms. The Washington Post also reports a case where Pearson included corporate logos and promotional materials inside its test booklets."
(Score: 2, Informative) by Open4D on Wednesday February 19 2014, @11:25AM
Interesting. Corporate influence worries me, but not nearly as much as religious influence.
Here's a blog post about "33 jaw-droppingly bad multiple-choice questions from Accelerated Christian Education [wordpress.com]" (Don't forget to read the "Think this doesn't affect you?" section.)
In the UK, the two biggest parties both seem intent on massively increasing the number of state-funded religious schools and giving them a great deal of independence. My education was in officially Christian schools but it was survivable. (I'm 33 years old.) The new places springing up are more like Islamic madrassas [blogspot.com], and the Christian equivalent, plus Sikh, Jewish, etc..
For more on the UK situation, further reading is here: 1 [educationengland.org.uk], 2 [humanism.org.uk], 3 [secularism.org.uk]
(Score: 1) by slartibartfastatp on Wednesday February 19 2014, @05:31PM
THIS is the kind of comment I liked about slashdot, and that's why I came to soylentnews!
Thank you, sir!