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The BLOB Usurps Parent Responsibilities
Aug 23rd, 2011 by Tunya Audain

 

Parent’s Role And Responsibilities Usurped By The BLOB
 
(BLOB – Bloated Learning Organized Bureaucracies)
 
Instead of “Families First” I say it is “Families Last”.  Even while our BC government says its policies must prioritize what’s best for families, the reality sadly leaves parents left-out in critical matters in child-raising and education.
 
In an essay I claim that while the welfare state continues to grow with more services and more public servants it is the families that suffer.  They are seduced to relinquish their children to early child programs as early as babies.  And, while the children are enrolled in public schools, there is a general “Hands-Off” attitude by the system which discourages meaningful parent involvement. This leaves them “flabby”. 
 
Parents should not be blamed when young people riot as they did recently in Vancouver, BC, and in Britain. Erosion of family strengths by the state has serious consequences on civil society.
 
Families Last  –  The BLOB Is Trump Again In BC Education 
 
(by Tunya Audain 20110815, comment to Report Card blog by Janet Steffenhagen, Vancouver 
Sun Education Reporter on “Conflict 101: Fall studies in B.C. public schools 20110812) 
 
Oh, the cruelty of the welfare state!  The more it says it helps families the more it disempowers 
and disables.  As some of us parents in the 70s used to say  –  “The helping hand has struck 
again!”.  I’m now a grandparent and I’ve seen 40 years of steady erosion of parent effectiveness 
in education to the point that we, consumers, have been rendered practically “brain dead” and 
unresponsive when yet another attack is mounted against the integrity and sovereignty of the 
family by the system  –  the BLOB (Bloated Learning Organized Bureaucracy). 
 
The granting, by the Labour Relations Board, of permission for public school teachers to 
withdraw 30 services deemed to be administrative come this fall during the BCTF “strike” is 
questionable.  One of the articles deals with preparing and distributing report cards to parents and guardians.  In the world of union shakedowns, 30 demands is not unheard of, but I think the 
essential teacher function was deliberately slipped in.  Report cards are an essential teacher 
function, not administrative! 
 
In Canada it is, ultimately, the parents who are responsible for their children’s education. For 
those parents who are unable or unwilling to educate or buy education services  –  and since 
education is compulsory  –  there is the government back-up, social safety-net service of public 
schools. To underscore the importance of an educated citizenry government schools have been 
deemed an “essential service”  –  not to be terminated by employee work stoppages.   
 
Why am I such a voice in the wilderness on this?  Why is no one else protesting, calling “Foul”, 
or asserting that it is totally ILLEGAL to withhold educational achievement report cards from 
parents and guardians? How can a parent monitor progress or advocate for better services or 
withdraw to another school without this information? 
 
I don’t see anyone from the stakeholder groups  –  those who gain their income from this vast, 
bloated system  –  speaking out against this travesty. Even the government subsidized parents’ 
group, BCCPAC, isn’t shaking up the sandbox where all these alphabet soups play in  –  
BCSTA, BCPVP, BCSSA, BCPSEA, etc.  Neither will the teacher training universities speak out 
against the deprivation of this essential parent tool.  How can parents be instrumental in their 
children’s educational progress without this measure? 
 
The “Victory!” of excluding parents from a meaningful role in public schools damages civil 
society.  Thus it becomes easy for even some members of the press to have a lop-sided view of 
how children are raised in our communities.  Today’s opinion piece by Shelly Fralic in the Sun 
amply exhibits this myopic view when she totally blames parents for the riots in Vancouver and 
England.  See today’s Sun “Parents bear responsibility for the recreational rioter” 
 
Fralic flagellates herself and other parents for “bad parenting”.  She quotes the British Prime 
Minister, David Cameron, who sums up the problem  in one word  –  “irresponsibility  . . .  it’s a 
lack of proper parenting, a lack of proper upbringing, a lack of proper ethics, a lack of proper 
morals, that is what we need to change.” 
 
Ms. Fralic  –   please look up classical conditioning.  Two generations of parents have basically 
had their natural instincts disrupted and in many cases extinguished by the “hands off” policies 
and behaviors of the public schools.  Listen when parents talk about “symbolic” use of parents, 
that is, parent advisory councils that are kept busy fund-raising, bullying policies which are 
superficial and unresponsive to parent concerns, incompetent teachers still in the classrooms, etc.
 
Ms. Fralic  –  upbringing is not only what parents do, it also happens in the schools and 
community. Parents have been rendered useless and inept in the public schools. Parents have 
been habituated to being deferential and obsequious to school people.  How would you feel if 
you were treated as a nuisance in your child’s school? 
 
I hate to see parents beaten down and defeated. I deplore seeing the building block of society, the 
family, diminished and crushed. Why is our welfare state so perverted that it serves the interests 
of the bloated producers not the consumers in the monopoly school system?  Parents without 
choice and without a handle on performance are indeed reduced to “absent” or AWOL status. 
 
Professor John E Coons in support of school choice has this to say:  “It's a shame that there are 
no social science studies on the effect of choicelessness on the family. If you are stripped of 
power—kept out of the decision-making loop—you are likely to experience degeneration of your own capacity to be effective, because you have nothing to do. If you don't have any responsibilities, you get flabby. And what we have are flabby families …” 
 
Will anyone please mount a defense for the maligned and excluded parents in light of Fralic’s blind-eye? 
 
Will anyone else share my outrage about the illegal withholding of report cards to parents come the new school year”? 
 
Please see my website for the legal references  :  http://genuine-education-reform-
Please see today’s three letters to the editor, Sun,” BCTF job action rankles readers” 
Withholding Student Reports Is Illegal
Aug 8th, 2011 by Tunya Audain

 

Collective bargaining between teacher unions and the government is an experience which effectively excludes most people who are intimately concerned with the outcomes  –  parents, students, taxpayers  –  the public generally. There are two parties who meet in secret to arrange a peace pact.

Invariably, the teacher union  –  reading from some international union playbook  –  produces some “noise” to boost their demands.

This year in British Columbia Canada  –  following earlier established procedures (so, so civilized, you know)  –  the teacher union has received a legal judgment from the Labor Relations Board as to what they can and can’t do in Phase 1.  There are 30 actions which they need NOT perform  –  see http://www.bcpsea.bc.ca/documents/teacher%20bargaining/00-WP-Essential%20Services%20Update%20No.%202011-02.pdf

One duty public school teachers can be relieved from doing are preparing and distributing report cards.  I maintain this is illegal.  I wrote a comment

Parents Undermined By Strike

It is the parents who are ultimately responsible for the education of their children.

Compulsory education acts were enacted as back-up, the safety net, for those parents unable to educate or afford tutors or private schools.

Unfortunately, this provision has become perverted so that the prime beneficiaries now are those in the education industry, not students. This benefit for needy parents has now been universalized. This system has become hostage to the civil servants (public school teachers) now threatening to strike.

Withholding reports to parents under the School Act is illegal. Parents depend on regular reports so that they can fulfill their duty. When a student is not meeting expectations the parent needs to know this so as to move the child or press for better services.

The government should stand by with a contingency plan — to provide the sum of $8357 for each child whose parents will seek an education in a non-striking school.

Student-Progress-Report-Order-re-BC-School-Act

In a blog comment one teacher agreed with me  –  “…withholding reports from parents is illegal and parents need to know how their child is doing.”  But, then the teacher goes on, and on, about how workload has increased, and reporting is time-consuming and they deserve raises, etc., etc.

Below is the letter to the Editor of the Vancouver Sun I just sent in (not yet published)

Dear Sir:

Re:  Job action means no report cards this fall, Sun, August 05, 2011

BC  public school teachers have a list of 30 job actions they intend to follow come “strike” time in September.

BCTF vice-president Glen Hansman assures parents they won’t see “…any negatives. In fact, things actually may be better for their children this fall.”

I strongly disagree with Hansman and the rest of those who believe this is acceptable.  In particular I am horrified that the permission has been given to NOT produce or distribute report cards.

This grossly undermines parental duty for it is the parents who ultimately are responsible for the education of their children.  Without feedback from the school they are unable to judge if learning is going on or just babysitting.

If the parent finds that the child is not meeting expectations they indeed have the duty to pursue remedies or to withdraw to another school.

The fact that parents are to sign-off on receipt of report cards testifies to the legal recognition of parental primacy. Canada is not a totalitarian country like Germany and Sweden where parental sovereignty or home education, for example, are forbidden.

I assert that not fulfilling the report card function as prescribed in the School Act is illegal.  The government should be prepared with vouchers for those parents not receiving their obligatory report cards and who wish to seek alternatives to public schools.

 

MY CONCLUSION

Allowing public school teachers to remove themselves from preparing and distributing report cards is an affront to civil society, contributes to the erosion of the family, and is an utter failure on the part of government and its agencies that are supposed to serve the public interest.

Failure #1 Government Failure in allowing the teacher union to call the shots in bargaining, therefore a failure in governance.

Failure #2 Education in BC is an essential service, and no report cards to parents from a compulsory public school system fails the public interest in neutering parents’ ultimate and primary responsibility in education. A government service in education is the “safety-net” for those parents otherwise unable to provide private or home education or other provision for their children.

Failure #3 The School Act mandates that parents are to receive periodic report cards (failure in statutory duty).

Failure #4 The School Act mandates that parents are to sign-off on receipt of report card (failure in statutory duty).

_______________________

Additional Information 3 days later …

Only the Province newspaper picked up on my fear about the demise of the family via public education.  The Labour Relations Board granted BCTF teachers the dispensation from producing and sending report cards to parents in the latest round of teacher bargaining.

A mild editorial called for the BCTF to get their hands slapped. [Shouldn’t they get their hands pulled out of the cookie jar altogether?]

See: http://www.theprovince.com/opinion/editorials/Time+teachers+union+hand+slapped/5232318/story.html

Time teachers’ union got its hand slapped (Aug 10, 2011)

My comment to the editorial

The State Is Stomping On Parents

I wrote to newspapers about my fears that parents would be totally excluded from their education duty to their children if the teacher strike prevented reporting to parents.

My concern about attendance has now been settled (as of yesterday) and parents will be able to find out from the office if their child is in school. At least we’ll know that babysitting is happening!

However, instruction is unknowable unless reporting happens. In Phase 1 of the protest teachers will not prepare or distribute report cards according to union orders.

This is in defiance of legislation and I assert that the withholding of student reports about learning achievement is illegal.

 

 

Furthermore, by denying tools to parents to enforce their duty actually damages civil society. Is there an international court of law, maybe the ILO, to take this to?

I expect to present this issue to advocates of the family and champions of the individual. The modern “nanny” welfare state does not serve the family well as it is permeated with self interest groups who would expand the state, make work for themselves at the expense of the family and diminish the sovereignty of the family and the individual.

Remember,  teacher unions are ideologically on the left of the political spectrum and are committed to inform and “transform” society.  Parents simply run interference with teachers molding the “wax”.  As Horace Mann perceived it public schools would focus on the young  –  “men are cast-iron but children are wax”. Dedicated progressive schooling throughout the last century and a half has brought us to the state of affairs we have now. Reap what you sow.


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