Slate brings
news of another survey of high school students, with depressingly predictable results. In a multiple choice test,"only half knew why the Federalist papers were written . . . Fewer than half knew when the Civil War was fought." The questions that attracted the best results were civil-rights related ones: who said"I Have a Dream" in the history section, the plotline of
To Kill A Mockingbird in the literature section.
The--ideologically diverse--group that conducted the survey, Common Core, blamed curricular changes associated with No Child Left Behind for the result. Perhaps. But based on what I've seen of the Education bureaucracy in New York, I doubt that even a repeal of NCLB would lead to an increased curricular emphasis on the purpose of the Federalist Papers.