I have thought long and hard about the Common Core standards.
I have decided that I cannot support them.
In this post, I will explain why.
I have long advocated for voluntary national standards, believing that it would be helpful to states and districts to have general guidelines about what students should know and be able to do as they progress through school.
Such standards, I believe, should be voluntary, not imposed by the federal government; before implemented widely, they should be thoroughly tested to see how they work in real classrooms; and they should be free of any mandates that tell teachers how to teach because there are many ways to be a good teacher, not just one. I envision standards not as a demand for compliance by teachers, but as an aspiration defining what states and districts are expected to do. They should serve as a promise that schools will provide all students the opportunity and resources to learn reading and mathematics, the sciences, the arts, history, literature, civics, geography, and physical education, taught by well-qualified teachers, in schools led by experienced and competent educators.
For the past two years, I have steadfastly insisted that I was neither for nor against the Common Core standards. I was agnostic. I wanted to see how they worked in practice. I wanted to know, based on evidence, whether or not they improve education and whether they reduce or increase the achievement gaps among different racial and ethnic groups.
After much deliberation, I have come to the conclusion that I can’t wait five or ten years to find out whether test scores go up or down, whether or not schools improve, and whether the kids now far behind are worse off than they are today.
I have come to the conclusion that the Common Core standards effort is fundamentally flawed by the process with which they have been foisted upon the nation.
The Common Core standards have been adopted in 46 states and the District of Columbia without any field test. They are being imposed on the children of this nation despite the fact that no one has any idea how they will affect students, teachers, or schools. We are a nation of guinea pigs, almost all trying an unknown new program at the same time.
Maybe the standards will be great. Maybe they will be a disaster. Maybe they will improve achievement. Maybe they will widen the achievement gaps between haves and have-nots. Maybe they will cause the children who now struggle to give up altogether. Would the Federal Drug Administration approve the use of a drug with no trials, no concern for possible harm or unintended consequences?
President Obama and Secretary Duncan often say that the Common Core standards were developed by the states and voluntarily adopted by them. This is not true.
They were developed by an organization called Achieve and the National Governors Association, both of which were generously funded by the Gates Foundation. There was minimal public engagement in the development of the Common Core. Their creation was neither grassroots nor did it emanate from the states.
In fact, it was well understood by states that they would not be eligible for Race to the Top funding ($4.35 billion) unless they adopted the Common Core standards. Federal law prohibits the U.S. Department of Education from prescribing any curriculum, but in this case the Department figured out a clever way to evade the letter of the law. Forty-six states and the District of Columbia signed on, not because the Common Core standards were better than their own, but because they wanted a share of the federal cash. In some cases, the Common Core standards really were better than the state standards, but in Massachusetts, for example, the state standards were superior and well tested but were ditched anyway and replaced with the Common Core. The former Texas State Commissioner of Education, Robert Scott, has stated for the record that he was urged to adopt the Common Core standards before they were written.
The flap over fiction vs. informational text further undermined my confidence in the standards. There is no reason for national standards to tell teachers what percentage of their time should be devoted to literature or information. Both can develop the ability to think critically. The claim that the writers of the standards picked their arbitrary ratios because NAEP has similar ratios makes no sense. NAEP gives specifications to test-developers, not to classroom teachers.
I must say too that it was offensive when Joel Klein and Condoleeza Rice issued a report declaring that our nation’s public schools were so terrible that they were a “very grave threat to our national security.” Their antidote to this allegedly desperate situation: the untried Common Core standards plus charters and vouchers.
Another reason I cannot support the Common Core standards is that I am worried that they will cause a precipitous decline in test scores, based on arbitrary cut scores, and this will have a disparate impact on students who are English language learners, students with disabilities, and students who are poor and low-performing. A principal in the Mid-West told me that his school piloted the Common Core assessments and the failure rate rocketed upwards, especially among the students with the highest needs. He said the exams looked like AP exams and were beyond the reach of many students.
When Kentucky piloted the Common Core, proficiency rates dropped by 30 percent. The Chancellor of the New York Board of Regents has already warned that the state should expect a sharp drop in test scores.
What is the purpose of raising the bar so high that many more students fail?
Rick Hess opined that reformers were confident that the Common Core would cause so much dissatisfaction among suburban parents that they would flee their public schools and embrace the reformers’ ideas (charters and vouchers). Rick was appropriately doubtful that suburban parents could be frightened so easily.
Jeb Bush, at a conference of business leaders, confidently predicted that the high failure rates sure to be caused by Common Core would bring about “a rude awakening.” Why so much glee at the prospect of higher failure rates?.
I recently asked a friend who is a strong supporter of the standards why he was so confident that the standards would succeed, absent any real-world validation. His answer: “People I trust say so.” That’s not good enough for me.
Now that David Coleman, the architect of the Common Core standards, has become president of the College Board, we can expect that the SAT will be aligned to the standards. No one will escape their reach, whether they attend public or private school.
Is there not something unseemly about placing the fate and the future of American education in the hands of one man?
I hope for the sake of the nation that the Common Core standards are great and wonderful. I wish they were voluntary, not mandatory. I wish we knew more about how they will affect our most vulnerable students.
But since I do not know the answer to any of the questions that trouble me, I cannot support the Common Core standards.
I will continue to watch and listen. While I cannot support the Common Core standards, I will remain open to new evidence. If the standards help kids, I will say so. If they hurt them, I will say so. I will listen to their advocates and to their critics.
I will encourage my allies to think critically about the standards, to pay attention to how they affect students, and to insist, at least, that they do no harm.

If there is to be a national school accountability system then there must be national standards and a national assessment to measure those standards. It is absurd that each state is allowed to write its own standards, develop its own tests to measure students’ progress in meeting those standards, and then decide what constitutes proficiency. Does anyone really believe that in 2009-2010 eighty-five percent of the schools in Nevada were failing and ninety percent of the schools in Mississippi were succeeding? Either scrap national accountability or implement national standards and assessments.
Gee whiz, how did we get to be the most powerful nation in the world without the Common Core and national tests?
We won’t be the most powerful nation in the world for long without a better educational system. At least the Common Core and national tests will ensure that we are comparing apples to apples.
Gosh, do you think Finland and Korea will take charge of the world without the Common Core standards? How do you know? Did you know that on the first international test in 1964, we came in last in one test, and next to last in the other? How did we manage to rise to world dominance without the CC all these years?
German scientists?
. . . Either scrap national accountability or implement national standards and assessments and live with the consequences.
I’m not advocating for national standards or assessments, just making the point that if we are to continue using an accountability system that is fundamentally punitive, we should at least apply the same measure to all.
Yup, good call Diane. U.S. was world leader for past 60 years without Common Core. All is well now. Keep calm and carry on.
Please bear in mind that when first international tests were given in 1964, 12 nations competed in two grades. We came in last in one grade and next to last in the other. In the past half-century, we have been more successful by every measure than the 11 nations with higher test scores.
The world is changing faster than we can document and education has always lagged behind. We are no longer the “most powerful nation”, at least as far as our education system goes. Will a Common Core fix all the issues, absolutely not. It will, however, provide a common way to assess how we are doing. Do we need to address standardized testing to make sure the tests are equitable and accurate, absolutely! I just see a Common Core as one way to provide direction and focus for districts/states and teachers and at least some measure of continuity for a highly mobile population.
The reason we the most powerful nation in the world is because we embraced all of education…I do mean all…
The emphasis was not on testing but on learning ….every aspect of learning….
Socrates….
“I cannot teach people anything, I can only make them think”
You have me thinking Socrates…thinking about tests..day after day after day after day after day
Test after test after test after test…
That is all that we think abut..that is all the students think about..That is all the new TESTERS (used to be teachers) think about..
That is all the Political Testing Hierarchy thinks about..
Sing along with me..
“Our score is better than youuuuuuuuuuuuur score”
I agree with Nancy. If we don’t get our act together, it’s only a matter of time before we’re dependent on other countries for their developments in science and technology. It doesn’t mean we have to try to become carbon copies of other countries, but we should take a look at what’s working and figure out how it could work for us. We aren’t breeding innovators, which we might have gotten by with in the 60s but it’s now 2013. We can compare ourselves to ourselves all we want, but worldwide we’re falling behind.
The common core isn’t the only part of the equation. There has to be some type of accountability. That doesn’t mean we need to be threatened by the government and it doesn’t mean that we have to over-test our children. It means that teachers need to be transparent and willing to share their expertise with one another as well as lean on one another when they need help. I’ve seen so many horribly lazy and indifferent teachers in my career who need to be replace with qualified teachers who want ALL students to succeed, no matter what it takes.
Again, begging the question. WHO SAID we needed a national school accountability system? Your examples are correct – some states show crazy rates of “proficiency” while others don’t. But that has more to do with who is in charge of the cut scores and who is running for office. When someone is running on an Ed Reform platform, voila! The scores plummet. And after a few years, the scores magically rise. Now translate this to a NATIONAL phenomenon. Because that’s what will happen.
It may be a good idea to have a daily national stock market type ticker on the nightly news. We can see the test scores rise and fall every day. By state, city, school, etc. Could be done. Means nothing, but Gates/Rhee/Pearson/Walton would squeeze out meaningful data for them, translate it into >+$$$$. Legislators will review it daily to evaluate their legislative actions, minute by minute.
More ideas can be generated as we think this plan through.
How about it?
Let’s do it! I think we are finally ready for this.
Now I have a stomach ache.
Speaking of running the office; here in Senator Bennett’s initial destruction playground, a head administrator for “purchasing” has been accused of BRIBES and KICK BACKS, and here’s the real clincher…he’s being “investigated” by DPS! What rot! NOT the ciy’s attorney or other outside legal means, but by DPS! No wonder his smiling face on the CBS website looked so uncaring! One lady who overheard me talking to someone about this, cut in and said, “SO, what’s the problem???? If the kids got their computers, WHO CARES?” But I’d bet that same idiot would be more than happy to join in slamming teachers! Have we sunk this low???
Your comment dovetails with THE MANUFACTURED CRISIS by Berliner and Biddle
Mr. Carlton,
With all due respect, what makes you think that the high-stakes tests (produced and sold by the testing “nonprofit” moguls at a high price tag), twin siblings of the common core standards are the only or the best accountability measure of learning?
Cordially,
Lourdes Pérez Ramírez
President
HispanEduca
So sorry about the failing rate in Nevada but no need to doubt the progress of Mississippi students.
Diane,
I appreciate your post. I especially appreciate the clarity and candidness of your writing. However, I disagree with your choice to take this position.
Your title and your blog suggest that you cannot support the Common Core State Standards. I hope I can fairly summarize the very good reasons you cite as the basis of your claim.
• No trials.
• A lack of transparency and authenticity in the adoption process.
• The possibility of large scale failure, affecting some groups, perhaps, more than others.
• A centralized ideology, reflecting values that may have largely been defined by one man.
While the evidence you cite to support each reason is perfectly acceptable to me and while I have developed a great deal of respect for you and your work, I still cannot hold with you on the operational reality of the basic premise of this post.
Here is why:
The alternatives are status quos or gradualism. Neither is acceptable given drop out rates in cities like Chicago and Detroit. Furthermore, in systems where the schools aren’t so challenged, you’ll have to admit that change is needed just to take the antiquated systems we’ve had in place for far too long and bring them up to speed a little.
The operational reality of not supporting the standards is waiting for something else to bring about the needed, sweeping change. In my view, the stage has finally been set for something real to happen. We need to do it.
I say, we need to think entrepreneurially, like all great teachers do. We try it; if it doesn’t work, we reflect, learn and try something else that is better the next time, hopefully without losing what was great about that magical first draft.
The reality is that we need technology and we need better standards. The CCSS are better than most state standards, simply because there are fewer of them and they focus on good things. For example, mathematical practices standard three: “Create a viable argument and critique the reasoning of others.” If that is what will be measured, that will get done, poorly or not so poorly, but isn’t that exactly what we should be teaching kids to do? So why not give it a try? With nearly a whole nation focused on a few good things that aren’t as restrictive as the ridiculously discrete things we had in our state standards, we can reflect and revise together.
The new standards also allow for another important change to occur. Without the fragmentation that the 50 state standards caused in the educational resources market, there might actually be hope for transparency, competition, teacher entrepreneurship, and ultimately better products.
We have to try something, and even though these standards have flaws like any other set whether they were made by one, a few, or many people, the consensus or compromise that is the CCSS gives us an opportunity (just now at a time when technology is exploding) to take a shot at real, equitable access to high quality education for all.
“The alternatives are status quos or gradualism. Neither is acceptable given drop out rates in cities like Chicago and Detroit. Furthermore, in systems where the schools aren’t so challenged, you’ll have to admit that change is needed just to take the antiquated systems we’ve had in place for far too long and bring them up to speed a little.”
Please explain how Common Core tackles the problem of drop out rates.
How can you condemn systems that “aren’t so challenged” as being “antiquated?” Have you looked at them? Who is best to judge – those in said system or . . . you?
I agree with you, Eileen; and I remain optimistic.
Diane, you have my highest respect, but I disagree.
Some of my own thoughts/questions:
I don’t know what the assessments look like, but why should we be worried about the possibility that test scores will decline? Maybe we will learn more about our students and our own instructional strategies, so we can help them learn more about themselves, the content, skills, and dispositions they need.
Why is there so much emphasis on the test scores as opposed to other indicators of school success including the character of the students, their creativity, critical thinking, ability to collaborate with others, and entrepreneurship and innovation? Are these important characteristics measured by the tests, CCSS or other state tests? Unfortunately, I don’t think so.
Is a decline in test scores due to the more rigorous demands of the new CCSS as reflected in the assessment? If so, good! It tells us that we need to do a better job preparing teachers to teach children in better ways (which are not prescribed by the CCSS). We need higher expectations of our teachers and of our students. Striving toward “Average” or “Passing,” for all students, is not good enough.
What is the consequential validity of the decline in scores for ELLs and low SES students? Could it be that they’d get better instruction after they’re identified? Could we put more effort into helping them exceed their potential? After what we went through with the punitive measures embedded in NCLB, I hope lessons have been learned!
I am confident that higher expectations reflected in the CCSS assessment will result in higher expectations and more effective and efficient instruction to improve student learning.
It’s good to be critical, but please keep an open mind. Optimists are problem-solvers who will focus on continuous improvement; being too critical causes unsightly scowl marks.
I could not have said it better myself. Thank you for your insight. Something has got to change. I also agree with the above statement that teachers have become testers and the reason we were doing better 30+ years ago, was because teachers were allowed to teach. Teachers were supported and respected by the government, their communities and parents. Not a day goes by that teachers are demoralized and criticized by those who know nothing of what it is like to be in a classroom. Common Core is not the silver bullet to fix education in America, but it is a step in a much needed different direction.
While I plead to being agnostic when it comes to opinion of the Common Core just yet, I can speak to my own experience thus far as a classroom teacher. My district in rural western Wisconsin jumped on the band wagon for common core in the area of mathematics 2 years ago. Some of our staff have unergone significant training, workshops, and education regarding the Common Core in the area of mathematics. I can say, while somewhat painful, I feel very optimistic about the growth I see in my students and look forward to the future.
I am concerned however, in the assessment process using the Smarter Balanced Assessment as this will be a computer based assessment. My district runs about 50% free and reduced lunch, which means that we are a high poverty school district. We have typically boasted extraordinary scores on our WKCE testing, which is Wisconsin’s currtent state testing system. We have always been very proud of out-scoring our neighboring communities as well as the state scores. While I am not worried about the scoring system or competition amongst school districts, I am simpy worried about having 3rd, 4th, and 5th graders complete computer-based tests that will then hold districts and teachers accountable. We don’t even have enough computers for 3 classrooms in our school of 17 classrooms. We share those PCs.
Our district is declining in enrollment and our governor is pouring more money toward voucher systems and freezing money put toward our public schools. We have over the past 3 years looked at significant budget deficits. Much of our community is more worried about their taxes rather than the education of the students in our community. Therefore, the hope of improving our technology in any way to give our students more access is dimming. We only have PCs at this point – there are no IPads or laptops or anything else for that matter. Our teachers do each have a PC at their desk.
I wonder how we are going to be able to effectively teach our students to use a computer in order to even take a test that will assess their knowledge. It won’t necessarily be their knowledge that we are testing, but their ability to use the technology for the assessment. I wish I had a solution to my concerns, but for now, I simply have to wonder…….
Chrome books?
Common Core should mean common sense; we shouldn’t celebrate the likely lower results but lower standards are not the answer either. Of course there is an educational conspiracy but we are falling behind and must giddy-up.
Thank you Diane for your reflection. Many of the commenters here that are against your position simply state that we should go along with these changes, because the change has to be better than what we have currently. They fail to consider the consequences of standards that are not developmentally appropriate to young students and that were not developed based on developmental levels for anyone, except what the business world expects students to be able to do when entering the job force or college and backwards mapping from there. It’s a wonder how we survived having Kindergarten students doing trigonometry. I, for one, have the biggest trouble buying into these standards due to the lack of educators being involved in their development. Real teachers were in the classroom and educational publishers seeking to gain profits were designing our standards. Now, unknowingly, teachers are being misled into believing that increasing the failure rate of public school students at the delight of private and charter school voucher supporters is a good thing. Free and appropriate public education will be a thing of the past if we are not careful.
I have lived, had children in schools, volunteered, and taught in several states. I was appalled at the the wide variance in many aspects of the schools. They are truly different worlds. I was aghast at the differing standards, practices both within classrooms and for employees. On commonality was that the educators running the systems have years of experience and do the best job they know how.
Therein the problem – they only know their own system and what they have experienced for years. They are unable to “see” to improv because they haven’t been involved with a variety of different educational systems. They are working under state standards that other limited minded people wrote – often teachers with seniority but also limited exposure to differing educational systems. These educators have the best of intentions and do their best – BUT – we are a nation and function internationally, we have to educate as a nation.
Now, let me state that I firmly believe that most educational decisions need to be based locally – not evn at the state level. Frankly, the USDOE needs to be a abolished and state DOEs should be minimal, delegated to coordinating functions only. Decisions on how to manage the schools/employees and educate th students should be made locally.
Mary,
I Don’t understand your position. You seem to have totally contradicted yourself. You want commonality, but feel the “USDOE needs to be abolished and even the state DOEs need to be minimal”? So how do you suggest we achieve commonality if these departments are abolished and minimized?
I am a public school teacher in Philadelphia where the city has adopted the CC on top of the current curriculum; in many schools that curriculum is a scripted daily ritual. Meanwhile, the CC is being implemented in addition to the state standardized test eligible content. No new resources are given, no new funding is given, and no accommodations are given to students with exceptional needs. The CCSS requires that students not learn how to read, but read to learn (goodbye to all phonics and phonemic awareness). As you correctly stated, critical thinking skills can be attained through the use of both literature and NF. Expectations have been raised to the point of allowing only the top end of the bell curve to achieve. How is it that the politicians and powers that be can not understand that the world, including children, includes the basic bell curve for achievement. And when those same powers that be attach all teacher salaries to student achievement, who will then teach low achieving children, children with special needs, or English language learners? I like the concept of the CC. I like the ideas behind the CC [much of our required reading as adults IS NF], but why is it every time some new idea in education, oftentimes a recycled one, they throw out the baby with the bathwater?
@Jennifer ( “I like the concept of the CC. I like the ideas behind the CC [much of our required reading as adults IS NF]“):
That much our required reading is NF doesn’t mean we need to impose it on our kids. I, and probably you, like most highly educated adults, learned to read by reading a lot of fiction for pleasure. What matters for reading is reading, and kids should be able to read whatever they are interested in. For most kids, that’s fiction. My daughter is this very second engrossed in a long book about talking dolls. 98% of her reading these days is fiction, and that’s fine. She will ace whatever tests come her way!
At first, I thought that the Common Core would mean a common curriculum for all states, agreed upon subject matter that was important to teach. When I found out that civics was not to be in the “common core” and that teachers had little to nothing to do with developing them, I knew we were in for yet another way for privateers to profit by parents throwing up their hands in despair over the insanity.
Well said!
I echo your statement!
As an author of nonfiction books for children, I am welcoming the CCS because it will expose students and teachers to some of the best writing and thinking about the real world that has been absent from most classrooms. Did you know that there is a body of work out there that presents the thinking of scientists and historians and their questions about content that can inform and inspire learning? Did you know that excerpts from these books are what comprise the material to be read and interpreted on assessment tests? (I have a stack of permissions that I have sold to Pearson et al in my drawer.) I think the CCS will open up possibilities to use nonfiction literature to engage children and teachers in non cookie-cutter creative strategies that will free them from teaching to the test and substitute real engagement in learning.
The CCS have inspired me to become an entrepreneur and start an organization that brings these skills into the classroom by interacting with top children’s nonfiction authors. We read to learn, curate the information, and synthesize it into new writings with the added value that we hook our readers into learning. The CCS skills are what we use to earn our livelihoods. I think that people are scared that the CCS will force them into using nonfiction reading material typical of textbooks and wikipedia. Where is it written that you have to learn to read boring and difficult to understand material in school? Nonfiction authors have all survived our individual educational histories to achieve and ongoing passion for learning and we’re discovering how to ignite it others.
If you’re interested in learning more, check out http://www.inkthinktank.com
Ignite it in others, by all means, but please don’t impose it on my children. My own kids are great readers, and they mostly read fiction. Some of my students love high quality NF. Both are okay. The CC’s fiction/nonfiction percentages are ridiculous and counterproductive.
Let’s please view the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) as separate from our current system of external oversight and accountability of teachers, which does not allow teaching to flourish and keeps teaching from become a vibrant profession. Our current teaching system is practically designed not to work — it runs entirely counter to what we know about human motivation and the development of expertise. It’s the system that needs to change, and I think we can use the CCSS as a lever to help us make that change.
The CCSS for Mathematics (my field) describe the most important and central ideas in K-12 mathematics and provide a pathway to the STEM knowledge, reasoning, and skills needed for college and a range of careers. Would we really not want this strong vision of K-12 mathematics for the whole country? Wouldn’t that be like saying that doctors in Georgia and California should develop their own standards for medical care instead of using standards developed by experts in the discipline?
When it comes to teaching, I think we need to take a disciplinary perspective. We need to connect across all levels in a discipline — from Kindergarten through college — because what happens at one level enables and constrains what can happen at another. In mathematics, we need to improve teaching at all levels, from Kindergarten through college, and all of us have much we can learn from each other. What we really need is a mathematics teaching system that has two key components:
1) A high bar to entry, so that even novices are held in respect because they have achieved a level of competence.
2) A community norm of discussion, collaboration, and exchange of ideas and data that fosters a healthy and supportive competition for the admiration of our peers and that allows us to demonstrate excellence in our own ways.
What we need in mathematics teaching is to be ruled not by external measures of control but rather by the messy, inexact judgments about each other’s work that we develop by discussing our ideas, building on each other’s ideas, and examining and critiquing each other’s work. This — not the tyranny of test scores and evaluations — will motivate us to work towards excellence and to develop mathematics teaching as a vigorous profession. What we need most of all and most urgently is to decide collectively that we want such a community and that we will work together to develop it.
Is this too radical? Too idealistic? Can it be done? I don’t know. But shouldn’t we try?
For those who teach (or taught) math at any level and are interested in discussing issues of math teaching, please check out the Mathematics Teaching Community
https://mathematicsteachingcommunity.math.uga.edu
” Wouldn’t that be like saying that doctors in Georgia and California should develop their own standards for medical care instead of using standards developed by experts in the discipline?”
Are you implying that the great states of Georgia and California don’t have any experts in these disciplines?! Or that David Coleman is the country’s leading expert in his discipline?! Both ideas are pretty silly.
I sure am reading a lot about what the TEACHERS like about Common Core and what THEY think the students should be learning. What happened to the PARENT’S VOICE? It used to be PARENTS who were in charge of their child’s education. Shouldn’t the teachers be having these curriculum conversations with the parents and the tax paying community rather than the state and federal GOVERNMENT? It USED TO BE that the teachers were the EMPLOYEES of the PARENTS and the tax paying community. It certainly seems as if this isn’t the case any longer. One such parent of elementary age children in Kennesaw, GA tried to express her concerns over the CC curriculum with her child’s teacher. The teacher told her there was nothing she could do about the curriculum…. she has to teach what she is told to teach. So, the parent went to the school principal. The principal told her to “get over it.” She said “The government has set the curriculum and the teachers and school administrators work for the government. So, Common Core curriculum is what her child is going to learn!”
Bye bye parental control over your child’s education. Parents in Georgia are now just starting to see what is in Common Core and they aren’t liking it!
Angela– you need to contact your state legislature and DOE.
I’m still trying to see how standardization makes sense in a global economy that depends on innovation and out-of-the-box thinking. This scares the hell out of me.
Well stated, Jane!
Some subscribers to Diane Ravitch’s blog might be interested in a recent post “The Contentious Common Core Controversy” [Hake (2013)]. The abstract reads:
ABSTRACT: The Common Core State Standards (CCSS) http://www.corestandards.org/ have engendered considerable controversy – see e.g., “Resistance to Common Core standards growing” [Strauss (2013)] at http://wapo.st/Y7kwdK. Stimulated by Diane Ravitch’s (2013) admonition at http://bit.ly/XGpEpK “to think critically about the standards,” I searched Google for “Common Core State Standards” to obtain 3,010,000 hits at http://bit.ly/15QLBZR on 03 March 2013 10:15-0800. Careful consideration of all those leads me to suggest the following sixteen as especially valuable:
ANTI- CCSS
1. “Eight problems with Common Core Standards” [Brady (2012)] at http://wapo.st/15Z4kTg.
2. “Engineering Good Math Tests” [Burkhardt (2012)] at http://bit.ly/VaJgpp;
3. “How Common Core will change testing in schools” [Krashen (2012)] at http://wapo.st/12bt9w5;
4. “Debunking the Case for National Standards: One-Size-Fits-All Mandates and Their Dangers” [Kohn (2010)] at http://bit.ly/Z0xoUV;
5. “Do young kids need to learn a lot of facts? ” [Miller & Carlsson-Paige (2013)] at http://wapo.st/13oJVqW.
6. “Whoo-Hoo! Occupy the Schools” [Ohanian (2013)] at http://bit.ly/XGs4oq;
7. “Why I Cannot Support the Common Core Standards” [Ravitch (2013)] at
http://bit.ly/XGpEpK;
8. “Do We Need a Common Core? ” [Tampio (2012)] at http://huff.to/ZBaDb6.
PRO-CCSS
9. “Creating a Comprehensive System for Evaluating and Supporting Effective Teaching” [Darling-Hammond et al. (2012)] at http://stanford.io/Wj1w1E;
10. “Standards Worth Attaining” Finn (2012) at http://bit.ly/XHtS0k;
11. “A Common Core Standards defense” [Hirsch (2013)] at http://wapo.st/Y1gwvk;
12. “What English classes should look like in Common Core era” [Jago (2013)] at
http://wapo.st/XdE2cM;
13. “International Lessons About National Standards” [Schmidt, Houang, & Shakrani (2009)] at http://bit.ly/xPjmJ4.
14. “Seizing the Moment for Mathematics” [Schmidt (2012)] at http://bit.ly/Z0BbS2;
15. “On Naked Standards – And Free Curriculum” Tucker (2012) at http://bit.ly/Y531xl;
16. “The Case for National Standards” [Weingarten (2009)] at http://wapo.st/XbIJ6K.
For an earlier review of the pros and cons of the Common Core Standards see “National Education Standards for the United States? ” [Hake (2009)] at http://bit.ly/Z0DMLK. In a subsequent post I shall discuss the “Next Generation Science Standards” (NGSS) http://bit.ly/y1gJPx and their relationship to the “Common Core State Standards. ”
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Richard Hake, Emeritus Professor of Physics, Indiana University
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“I have come to the conclusion that the Common Core standards effort is fundamentally flawed by the process with which they have been foisted upon the nation. . . . . They were developed by an organization called Achieve and the National Governors Association both of which were generously funded by the Gates Foundation. . . . . Their creation was neither grassroots nor did it emanate from the states. . . . . . it was well understood by states that they would not be eligible for Race to the Top funding unless they adopted the Common Core standards. . . . . ”
- Diane Ravitch (2013) at http://bit.ly/XGpEpK
“The countries that consistently outperform the United States on international assessments all have national standards, with core curriculum, assessments and time for professional development for teachers based on those standards. . . . . Should fate, as determined by a student’s Zip code, dictate how much algebra he or she is taught? . . . . Education is a local issue, but there is a body of knowledge about what children should know and be able to do that should guide decisions about curriculum and testing.”
- Randi Weingarten (2009), president of the American Federation of Teachers at http://wapo.st/XbIJ6K.
“So much orchestrated attention is being showered on the Common Core Standards, the main reason for poor student performance is being ignored – a level of childhood poverty the consequences of which no amount of schooling can effectively counter.”
- Marion Brady (2012) at http://wapo.st/15Z4kTg.
REFERENCES [URL shortened by http://bit.ly/ and accessed on 03 March 2013.]
Hake, R.R. 2013. “The Contentious Common Core Controversy,” online on the OPEN! AERA-H archives at http://bit.ly/Y7ocMv. Post of 3 Mar 2013 11:01:22 to AERA-H and Net-Gold. The abstract and link to the complete post are being transmitted to several discussion lists.
One problem I have is the assumption that raising standards will raise results. Perhaps it is time to consider education more scientifically. We know that poorer (lower socioeconomic) students tend to do poorer in school. How about looking at the true root cause. I do not think it is because teachers do not want poorer students to succeed, but rather that poorer students do not come to school the same as richer students. We know that external problems, health, family issues and support, and summer activities all affect student performance. These are more concrete issues than teachers don’t expect enough. However, providing these items costs money, and that is the real problem. We want things to be better, but we don’t want to pay for it.
“Penny” commented: ”We know that poorer (lower socioeconomic) students tend to do poorer in school. How about looking at the true root cause.”
For the “true root cause” see the REFERENCE list below containing poverty-related references from my *complete* post “The Contentious Common Core Controversy” at http://bit.ly/Y7ocMv
Richard Hake, Emeritus Professor of Physics, Indiana University
REFERENCES
Berliner, D.C. 2009. “Poverty and Potential: Out-of-School Factors and School Success.” Education and Public Interest Center (Univ. of Colorado) and Education Policy Research Unit, (Arizona State University); online as a 729 kB pdf at http://bit.ly/fqiCUA. In his abstract Berliner states: “This brief details six Out of School Factors (OSFs) common among the poor that significantly affect the health and learning opportunities of children, and accordingly limit what schools can accomplish *on their own*: (1) low birth-weight and non-genetic prenatal influences on children; (2) inadequate medical, dental, and vision care, often a result of inadequate or no medical insurance; (3) food insecurity; (4) environmental pollutants; (5) family relations and family stress; and (6) neighborhood characteristics. These OSFs are related to a host of poverty-induced physical, sociological, and psychological problems that children often bring to school, ranging from neurological damage and attention disorders to excessive absenteeism, linguistic underdevelopment, and oppositional behavior.”
Brady, M. 2012. “Eight problems with Common Core Standards,” in Valerie Strauss’ “Answer Sheet,” Washington Post, 21 August; online at http://wapo.st/15Z4kTg. Note especially Brady’s crucial problem #4: “So much orchestrated attention is being showered on the Common Core Standards, the main reason for poor student performance is being ignored-a level of childhood poverty the consequences of which no amount of schooling can effectively counter” – see e.g., Berliner (2009), Duncan & Murnane (2011), Kristof (2013), Marder (2012), Neuman & Celano (2012), and my 14 blog entries on the overriding influence of poverty on children’s educational achievement at .
Duncan, G.J. & R. Murnane, eds. 2011. “Whither Opportunity? Rising Inequality, Schools, and Children’s Life Chances.” Russell Sage Foundation, publisher’s information at http://bit.ly/nCkmKv. Amazon.com information at http://amzn.to/r3MrCh.
Kristof, N.D. 2013. “For Obama’s New Term, Start Here.” New York Times OP-ED, 23 Jan, online at http://nyti.ms/WnEhU2. Kristof wrote: “Something is profoundly wrong when we can point to 2-year-olds in this country and make a plausible bet about their long-term outcomes – not based on their brains and capabilities, but on their ZIP codes. President Obama spoke movingly in his second Inaugural Address of making equality a practice as well as a principle. So, Mr. President, how about using your second term to tackle this most fundamental inequality?”
Marder, M. 2012. “Failure of U.S. Public Secondary Schools in Mathematics,” Journal of Scholarship and Practice 9(1): 8-25; the entire issue is online as a 2.7 MB pdf at http://bit.ly/KPitWM, scroll down to page 8. Marder wrote: “The collection of nationwide data do point to a primary cause of school failure, but it is poverty, not teacher quality. As the concentration of low-income children increases in a school, the challenges to teachers and administrators increase so that ultimately the educational quality of the school suffers. Challenges include students moving from one school to another within the school year, frequency of illness, lack of stable supportive homes with quiet places to study, concentration of students who are angry or disobedient, probability of students disappearing from school altogether, and difficulty of attracting and retaining strong teachers. Most people who see the connection between poverty and educational outcomes are confident that low-income students in a sufficiently supportive environment will learn as much in a school year as students in well-off communities.”
Neuman, S.B. & D.C. Celano. 2012. “Giving Our Children a Fighting ChancePoverty, Literacy, and the Development of Information Capital,” Teachers College Press, publishers information at http://bit.ly/ZVCsil. Amazon.com information at http://amzn.to/VVml0G, note the searchable “Look Inside” feature. The publisher states: “This is a compelling, eye-opening portrait of two communities in Philadelphia with drastically different economic resources. Over the course of their 10-year investigation, the authors of this important new work came to understand that this disparity between affluence and poverty has created a *knowledge gap* – far more important than mere achievement scores – with serious implications for students’ economic prosperity and social mobility. At the heart of this knowledge gap is the limited ability of students from poor communities to develop *information capital.* This moving book takes you into the communities in question to meet the students and their families, and by doing so provides powerful insights into the role that literacy can play in giving low-income students a fighting chance.”
I teach in a Title 1 school and I am shocked by the lack of skills the students have when they come to school. Parents need to send their children to school with basic skills: counting, number sense, alphabet knowledge, fine and gross motor skills, listening skills, social skills and language skills. I am shocked be the limited vocabulary of the students in my school. Kids come to school tired, and hungry. Parents need to do their job, too.
Bingo.
I’m late to the game… but wanted to leave this thought:
The biggest problem I have with the Common Core is that it reinforces the factory school model by using “grade levels” to define the learning sequences in each subject. The grade-level construct was introduced in the 1920s to help schools run more efficiently by grouping students into cohorts based on their age. This construct is based on the assumption that all students of a similar age are at a similar level of intellectual maturity. Anyone who has raised two children or been in a family with siblings knows this is not the case. Today’s technology makes it possible to move away from this administratively convenient construct to a truly individualized curriculum that would match each student’s ability and interest. This isn’t a “romantic notion”, it is a real possibility that will be lost if we continue with the standardized testing regimen of the past two decades. The common core and the testing that accompanies its implementation is precluding the evolution of education by reinforcing the factory paradigm. Worse, it assumes that teaching is not an art based on developing a nurturing relationship and deep understanding of each individual student but rather a science that can be engineered and measured with precision.
FYI, you’re listed here as a trustee at CommonCore.org:
http://www.commoncore.org/wwa-trust-dr.php
Scott, the Common Core State Standards are entirely separate from a small nonprofit called Common Core. The latter was created to advocate for the liberal arts, and I was co-chair along with Toni Cortese, vice-president of the AFT. I resigned from the board about two years ago. Currently I serve on only one board (unless I have forgotten some): Class Size Matters in New York City.
Thanks for the clarification. That’s a bit confusing. Thought you had been co-opted again (like with StudentsFirst)!
Wow, that’s confusing. Diane, they still have your trustee page linked, and your introduction to the CCSS group as co-founder. Much of the content is from 2009, but if you click through the blog, recent posts reference the current Common Core debate and include positive comments about Mark Tucker’s position on issues: http://blog.commoncore.org/2013/01/23/growing-creativity/
Maybe you could get them to remove references to your support, or to clarify how they are officially connected (or not) to the Common Core standards now under discussion.
Two completely different organizations.
Common Core State Standards is one.
Common Core is a small independent group that advocates for the liberal arts.
They are separate. I am no longer a trustee.
As an educator I would like to think if I were allowed to spend more time on teaching than on testing, that my students would in fact, do better. The baby is never going to gain weight by weighing it, it will only gain weight by feeding it. Teachers need more input at all levels of reform and politicians need to stay out of it for the most part because they are not educational experts. Most teachers in our district will readily admit that even to the detriment of their students, all they do these days is prepare their students for the tests. Schools score higher based on student test scores which helps to fuel the madness. I do believe that Standards-Based education is the way to go, the Common Core Standards fall very short of the mark. It forces teachers to move through material far too quickly and settle for “covering” instead of mastery. I absolutely agree with wgersen that we are creating a society of automatons who lack the creativity that is what truly makes our country great. As mentioned above, the reality is that the only thing that will truly fix education is to fix poverty.
As a classroom teacher of 38 years, a teacher involved in the CCSS Mathematical Pathways, reader of the standards for AFT working with the writers, an NBCT, national trainer for teacher professional development, I too have grave concerns with the reasons cited to not support CCSS.
Anyone who has taken a deep dive into these standards would feel relieved at any level by the new standards. The enormous responsibility of teaching from a textbook that contains 835 pages (for me) to be taught in 180 days (90 days on my even odd schedule) is a daunting task few would want to face. These standards allow me to focus on what is truly important, knowing that what was taught prior, was taught in depth. The standards will also allow students to be exposed to material of the grade instead spending 30% or more of the year reviewing material from the previous years.
In order for the standards to do what they are intended to do, it will take a group of “educated people” who understand the problems in front of us, and are willing to be a part of the solution, which the writers have demonstrated they are. Quite often we hear complaints as teachers, and more importantly, we repeatedly have things surreptitiously done “to us,” and “for us,” by those who know very little about the art of teaching. Implementation of the standards will require quality professional development of teachers, district and administrative staff versed in the standards, as well as parents and a community (university educator preparation especially) who understand the timetable needed to accomplish this critical goal of national standards.
As a mathematics teacher, if the standards’ only accomplishment was teachers making sure students were proficient in the eight Mathematical Practices, that alone would be worthy of implementing the standards. Combine the Mathematical Practices with the ability to teach the standards in depth to prepare students for the next level, and you have a formula for success. I have not seen a better idea to date. If you have deemed these standards a failure, what is your solution?
I would love to see a detailed description of what we should be doing if not these standards, how we should do it, how long it should take, and who is responsible to” guarantee” the standards work. Many state lawmakers are using the results of student testing to evaluate teachers without knowing what the standards are, let alone how to implement them with fidelity.
I cannot imagine parents reading the standards and saying I, “don’t want my child to be able to accomplish this level of proficiency, nor do I want them to be challenged.” If we understand as a nation what is necessary and what is possible, we can all work on this together.
As an educator of 20 years having taught k-2, I find time and time again that standards being imposed on our children are consistently developmentally inappropriate. The CC is no different. On top of this, there have been too many standards to teach all at once to get kids ready for a test which has caused teachers to not teach indepth. Will the CC change this? As I continue to education myself on the CC I fail to see it remedy any of the above. We will see what the next few years have in store for our children. But like Mrs.Ravitch, we must not wait a few more years to see the result. I recommend that teachers and parents are vigilant and come together at the first sign of trouble. Another thing is that we must be aware of where all of this is comming from which is big money ie. Gates Foundation which is just one of the proponents for privatized education.
The CCSS development was funded by the Gates Foundation, which is strongly interested in privatizing public education. What better way to accomplish this than by setting an unattainable set of national goals, then showing how the public schools are making it?
Please read this letter from a Georgia mom with CONCERNS ABOUT COMMON CORE NATIONAL STANDARDS CURRICULUM
I am a mother of two amazing little girls ages 8 and 10 and I am extremely concerned about the use of Common Core in our schools. Like many other busy parents, my first introduction to the dramatic changes Common Core Standards would actually impose was at the open house at our children’s school. As the new methods were described, my husband and I quickly became “uncomfortable” and soon noticed that we were not alone. In fact, the majority of parents appeared to be caught off -guard and very surprised as well. Needless to say, we all had a number of questions and concerns particularly about the way our children would now be learning math. At the time I don’t think many of us (teachers included) truly knew what we were getting into – all were assured “this will be a good thing”. However, many were disturbed not only by the format itself, but by the fact that we were just being presented with this information now. No such details had ever been discussed before nor were we ever given the opportunity to openly debate anything regarding this curriculum prior to its implementation. Under the circumstances and left with no other available options, we did our best to approach it with an open mind and tested the waters together. Now, the school year is almost over and our experience with Common Core has been anything BUT good – We are angry and we are worried; and, once again, it would appear that we are not alone.
I believe that parents should have the strongest voice in their child’s education – not bureaucrats. I believe our educational system should be accountable to Georgia tax-payers and Georgia parents – not Washington. And I strongly believe it is wrong and extremely disturbing for the Executive branch to embrace a federal grant that fundamentally changes classroom goals and teaching strategies for our children without fully vetting everything with our local communities and duly elected representatives in the legislature. Whether this decision came from the Governor’s Office or The Department of Education, whoever made it had no constitutional right to dictate this horrible top-down approach to the education of our children and it must not be allowed to continue.
As more information became available about Common Core, I found the volume of contention surrounding it to be even more alarming. As a parent, I have a responsibility to be my children’s advocate and put their best interests first. Therefore, I decided to connect with other parents within our schools community in hopes of opening up a dialogue and sharing information. What happened next was almost as shocking as the Common Core controversy itself – I was called to the Principle’s office. To my amazement, the Principal of my children’s school expressed more of an interest in her disapproval of my contacting other parents and sharing information than in the now exposed flaws of the curriculum. In her words, she stated that she “wanted to make sure I wasn’t starting some kind of grassroots movement” and informed me that I was not to utilize any of the parents email address from our school or question any of the teachers regarding their professional opinions as educators about anything regarding Common Core. She then supported this by explaining that she and the staff were employees of the state and therefore their loyalties, efforts, support and unwavering commitment would be to implementing this curriculum regardless of how good or bad it may be. I don’t think there is even a word to describe how mortified I was to know that the top priorities of my children’s head educator were not dedicated to the quality of their education nor to the concerns of their parents but rather to satisfying the desires of bureaucrats in Washington – I found this to be extremely chilling.
In short, Common Core is flawed on too many levels to describe here. Not only is it destroying the achievement standards of our students and dumbing down our entire educational system but in its wake it is also leaving our budgets destroyed, our schools non-transparent, our privacy violated, and our children frustrated and confused. According to many experts, our children will now be 2 years behind in math. Algebra is pushed to 9th grade, division postponed to 6th grade and multiplication delayed until 5th grade! In the past, my second grader would have moved on to multiplication this year. However she spent the entire year going backwards and “re-learning” how to add and subtract via Common Core. Instead of adding the ones first, carrying the tens and so on, she now had to learn how to add and subtract by grouping the highest denomination of ten first and working backwards. For example the sum of 17 + 14 is now determined by grouping all of the 10’s first and then adding the 1’s.
The work they need to show looks something like this:
17 + 14 = ?
10 +10 = 20 ( group the 10’s and add them first)
7 + 4 = 11 (next, add the 1’s – but 11 can be divided into another grouping of ten so…)
10 + 1 (revise the grouping made my adding 7 + 4 to reflect the additional grouping of 10)
20 +10 + 1 ( the equation now becomes this: all of the 10’s + all of the 1’s)
or
10 + 10 + 10 + 1
30 + 1 = 31
It is cumbersome, it is confusing and it is absurd! They have spent the entire year going backwards and grouping every which way to Sunday without ever moving on. Each time a new strategy is introduced, it is so complicated and confusing it not only brings many of the children to tears, but the school needs to send home a detailed instruction sheet so the parents of second graders can help their children learn to add and subtract. It’s insane!
In closing, please understand me when I say, it is imperative that we do everything in our power to remove Common Core from our schools immediately.
I teach in Virginia where we do not use Common core. Our standards are actually harder than common core. Here is the problem with both: these standards are not developmentally appropriate for children. I am teaching my LD (special ed.) students things like: order of operations (PEMDAS) and prime and composite numbers. I have found very few adults who know what composite numbers are, including West Point and Harvard grads. Do you know what a stem and leaf plot is? Do you know what a compression wave is? Do you know the difference between an expression and an equation? Do you know what an open sentence is (in math)? Can you name different rhyme schemes in poetry? Can you do MLA citations and computer powerpoints? These are 5th grade skills. I am teaching middle and high school skills to 10 year olds. Then when they have difficulties, it is my fault. Really?
Speaking of “rhyme schemes in poetry”: they are patterns of sounds and very much within a 10-11 year old’s ability to learn, especially if the lesson uses fun and interesting verse that connects to other parts of the day’s content. For example, limericks are fun ways to play with social studies content.
“Diane says she cannot abide
new standards that seem to deride
the teacher’s own voice
for more classroom choice.
Hold on! We’re in for a ride.”
Seeing lots of varied opinions for the common core standard.
One of our Twitter follower mentioned:
-The #CCSS provides the opportunity for teachers to express creativity in the profession.
-The #CCSS is an opportunity to control how the curriculum is designed and delivered.
-The #CommonCore makes room for what should have already been happening: critical thinking.
-The #CommonCore provides the opportunity to integrate the disciplines..allows for disciplinary literacy.
You might want to look at how useful this site (opened.io) would be for those who need to learn using the common core standards using videos.
It’s free and in private beta for now. Let me know if you need an invite.
I’m late on replying here, but as a teacher myself, CCSS won’t fix anything. I am in full agreement with Kris F above (I also teach 5th grade), at almost all levels in elementary, the curriculum is simply developmentally over their heads. I’d say roughly 10% of our entire 5th grade is proficient in simple math facts. I have students who subtract upside down, still. In 5th grade. (meaning they don’t borrow/regroup, they just subtract the smaller # on top, from the larger on the bottom). There are still simply too many standards as well. Kids will never, ever, become the thinkers they need to be if we continue to skim across the top of every single subject, instead of taking the needed time to truly explore, practice, and understand the ideas.
Then “explore, practice, and understand.” If you’re creative, intentional in your teaching practice, and establish a rapport of learning with your students, depth can happen. Then have numerous, pointed conversations with your colleagues across the nation about how it happened so they can make it happen as well. Maybe you just need to hit the “refresh” button on your pedagogy by trying something outside your comfort zone? Try “flipping your class” with videos from the internet or “interest centers” based on a “staircase of knowledge”. Write a small grant for four iPads so your students can make video diaries of their learning process. Google it, buy the book, and get started.
Teachers are what make our schools great. Live in to the opportunities.
My pedagogy isn’t the issue. I have a great rapport with my students. We have a lot of fun. I don’t have a “comfort zone” I need to worry about. I don’t have TIME to teach deeply. So many standards. So few hours. So many interruptions. So many students constantly out of the classroom. We have Activboards in the room – I’m probably one of the most digital teachers in the building.
And if there’s one thing I hate more than the state of the education system, it’s buzzwords.
Many admire the Finnish schools and the ultimate out ome, educated children. Mr. Phelps, you pointed out the skimming od skills across the curriculum. Many European countries do just the opposite: narrower curriculum but with depth and mastery. As an educator of many years, I strongly believe that children are not able to retain tons of skimmed facts, disconnected and hardly ever mastered. Hate to tell you this, but many 5th graders who have not mastered the basic math skills will continue to exhibit an even wider gap by high school. The non-educators and publishers determine our curriculum, the pace and the testing items. Dr. Phil would say, how’s working for us? Answer, it is a disaster for kids, teachers and our society. You make very good points.
“TIME to teach deeply”
Sounds like the source of your next professional development plan, and many of us will be addressing this aspect of instruction as well.
Buzzword? or Tier 3, domain-specific vocabulary?
ToCC Teaching~
Teaching deeply, or just appropriate and good teaching. In order to teach a skill well and for students to learn and master the skills we are looking toward Tier 3? RTI for insufficient teaching and time spent? When most kids don’t master skills taught, then there was not adequate teaching. Given today’s insanity, we cannot introduce a concept one day, review the next day, test the third day, and move on to another concept by day 4. Makes no sense. Why are we surprised that kids are still working on elem. level skills in middle and high
schools. The EdReformers push us to teach and kids to ‘learn’ in lock-step. How often do we have to say it? They don’t want to hear it, and do not care. How sad.
Another issue with the Common Core is that school districts are cutting other curriculum to focus just on math and English/language arts. I found out at a staff meeting that my year long geography course would now be cut to one trimester to make room for more math and English time. A course that crammed two years of curriculum into one year will now be shortened to one trimester and be a combined 7th and 8th grade class… Additionally, the District has not set aside any time to draft a new curriculum or choose the standards to teach in this shortened class. We will, however, have three days this summer to draft units for our class that are correlated to the Common Core…
OK, I’m really late to the party, but am well educated now (thanks everyone) about the pros and cons of Common Core. In England we have a trial new curriculum for the 4-14 age range that is not dissimilar to CC in its political intent. We have increasing variety in schooling, including free schools and academies, partly modelled on charter schools, that won’t have to teach the core curriculum – or in fact ANY of the curriculum. Public schooling does not get bashed as hard by the political elite as in the US, but it is still hard and uncomfortable. It is really a time for courageous leadership above all, for us to say that international comparisons do not matter very much to 11 year olds, and not very much to teachers, and therefore should not matter very much to school leaders. I agree with those who have pointed out that CC leads to an industrial model of education and with Diane when she says that CC should be voluntary. There is not really a need, except in Washington/London, to say which system is better or produces better numbers in TIMSS and PISA. These are children we are educating in love and honour and our public service is to them and their families, to give them a WHOLE education, not just the bits you can measure and not just the bits that will be useful in the workplace.
I have enjoyed the level of educational debate on this site, though and will start following the blog.
Welcome, Huw! It’s great to have people from across the pond here! I love learning about education in the UK. Thanks for sharing the info that students in charters/academies and private schools are exempt from CC over there, as they are here.
Americans have been led to believe by corporate “reformers,” politicians and the media that the achievement gap between lower and higher income students is just an American problem and the fault of teachers, when international studies indicate that this issue exists in all countries. I fell for the propaganda myself for years, until I discovered UK research, not that long ago, and then data from other nations. So, we really need regular injections of world-views over here! (I read UK news reports just as often as those from the US now.)
The US and the UK seem to have more of an “achievement tail” than some other countries in Europe, and a much less egalitarian approach to education than, say, Scandinavian countries or Canada or NZ. We also have a much greater blame culture towards schools and school leaders than other western countries. The trouble is (as we see in France right now with their debate about school standards) is that everyone is paying way too much attention to international comparisons without taking any account of historic approaches that all countries have evolved by and for themselves. The US should be looking to their specific educational culture – John Dewey to begin with, and then listening carefully to voices like Neil Postman who try and root education in the culture that it flows from. I love reading Wendell Berry’s fairly simple view of education – that it flows from community for community, with localism at the centre. The US has a huge amount to teach us about education, but it won’t do it by expecting all states to have the same approach to education. We are not machines, but people, living in a set of different cultures. The way that Ontario approached the problem (read Ben Levin’s work) is interesting because they insisted on whole-system improvements by trusting schools, SO that schools can develop in different ways in confidence. High expectations of standards does not imply a uniform curriculum nor a flattening out of the teaching culture. We learn from one another and apply those lessons to the educational cultures we love for our children. Otherwise, as Berry says, it just becomes industrial. And industry has done enough damage to both our countries already. the comment by EC misses the point here. There ARE different medical approaches in different jurisdictions (witness the specialisation in heart treatment in India’s mobile clinics) but the analogy is poor – human bodies are much less culturally dependent than their brains!
Huw– these are all good points, but I would start by looking at Thomas Jefferson and some of the other founders on why we need an educated citizenry and how to develop an aristocracy of merit.This by no means provides the complete picture, but father an important piece of the puzzle.
That actually just shows my ignorance of American history – I think I give myself some credit for having waded through Democracy and Education – without which Postman famously said he would not let anyone near an American child, but have not read Jefferson since before I became a teacher! I appreciate the comment about an educated citizenry, but I don’t think Jefferson would have been thinking of an industrialised one!
I am also late to the parlor on this issue, but have enjoyed the discussion so far.
I began teaching in January of 2002, and feel like I am just emerging from the cave to realize that my whole teaching career has been defined by standardized tests and accountability and this is why so many are dissatisfied with the profession. Anyone in the classroom can tell you (before a big, expensive study is conducted) that we need to be able to meet the needs of our own particular students. That every child isn’t going to reach the same level of expertise in every subject and that some will be legendary contributors to society in areas outside of what is tested. We need clarity about what we are preparing students for and clear goals to reach. This is why the testing movement persists: the test gives us a goal to work for and feedback about how well we did. If we are preparing students for college-readiness, why can’t we have real articulation with local colleges and universities? FERPA disallows us from knowing how our students do once they graduate, so we never really know if we achieved did well in meeting that goal.
If we are doing our jobs well, we know without ANY of this national testing stuff, how are kids are turning out. Yes, college MAY bring with it challenges that may distort them somewhat, but generally my students did as well as or better than I thought they would. This maniacal testing regimen is such a waste of time and money. Granted the CCSS provide high goals, but we need to be able to adapt them to the students. I see the CCSS as education more for teachers in what the state of knowledge IS, and more as guides for teacher training institutions. Once a year for testing is enough.
This is a fight for our continued relevance as a nation. I believe the reason we have lasted this long was because EACH State was allowed to tinker as we saw fit. The idea that is most preposterous to me is the Federal government :
1.Takes money from states
2.Shuffle it around and
3.Are nice enough to give SOME of it back if we do as they wish
Please! Is it any wonder that certain agendas are playing out, or some crony corporate interests are being fed in DC?
Freedom- let our teachers at the local and State levels figure it out! Darn that 17th amendment!
You make some good points about linking money to state adoption of the CCSS, but I am excited and intrigued to see what might happen if our students learn to think deeply and critically over time and across disciplines. In this age of the “low-information voter”, isn’t it time to increase our expectations of what students can do and how they can think? I’ve been following the work of Lucy Calkins and the work of the Reading and Writing project. Take a look at the videos on their Vimeo site. The high level thinking in these students is amazing. Assessment is a DIFFICULT questions. Our traditional assessments are lacking and the old way of teaching a topic for mastery, testing it, and moving on no longer works. But that is the “productive struggle” and I am thankful to be a part of it for the sake of our students and for our nation.
How can students learn to think critically when their teachers were not invited to think critically–and anyone who dares to think critically about the Common Core is dismissed out of had as a grumbler?
Diane, that’s a strawman argument. Our students do not merely mimic teacher thinking, nor are the boundries for their learning defined by the political processes their teachers have, or haven’t, engaged.
ToCC Teaching: a student when fully trained will be like their teacher. That is, if teachers are to teach to the test, the curriculum becomes de facto and critical language awareness, in regards to writing, is not given that time is needs to be developed and the methodology a teacher has to teach CLA goes bye-bye. In the end, we have students learning not how to read and write, but how to produce only that which is standard, no specialty is learned and the standard becomes the norm. Now we have to ask, what is so wrong with the standard, could it not be as good as the specialty? Well, yes, it could be, but the cut off scores, it must be remembered, are arbitrary. Therefore, with our pilot programs, if you will, mandating that the Common Core be implemented nation wide is sort of like jumping off a brain cliff and taking a blind faith approach. There might not be anything too wrong with just trying something for a little while, but with children, well, we should just approach the issue carefully and considerably. Anyways, the issue is much too large to quickly discuss in a comment box on a blog post, about a comment. Diane, in the end, makes no strawman argument, then.
“…a student when fully trained will be like their teacher.”
Considering that students will have been “trained” by upwards of 40 teachers from K through 12, which singular teacher did you have in mind to make your statement true?
As a teacher who came to education from the software industry, there was one phrase that struck a nerve with me: “the Common Core standards effort is fundamentally flawed by the process with which they have been foisted upon the nation.” If there is one thing we can learn from business, it is that rolling out a new product in great numbers without field testing it thoroughly is a fool’s game at best and organizational suicide at worst. Companies who gamble this way often find themselves in bankruptsy.
Speaking as a Constitutionalist (translation, conservative), there is NO provision in the Constitution for education. It also makes it clear that those things not covered in the Document would be the province of the states (no pun intended). That’s why Conservative Presidential candidates constantly harp on the need to totally disband the Department of Education. It would be like having a Department of Street Sweeping. Education is NOT the business of the Federal Bureaucracy. This fiasco looks like the Obamacare of education. In the article I read that Condoleeza Rice and Jeb Bush support it. Condoleeza is a staunch conservative. That isn’t enough for me to say, “People I trust tell me so.” I saw this coming two decades ago with “standards” and all the emphasis being placed on testing. But I was assured “by people I trust” we’d never have to be on the “same page on the same day” as another teacher. Then came pacing guides, adopted by the Socialist Palmdale School District right in our area. I hear they’ve been discarded, but they exist in many districts. This takes away the last element of flexibility that a good teacher has. Pacing guides are GREAT for poor teachers (another 6 paragraph explanation could be inserted here). The problems in education for anyone who has spent four decades in it as I have are: absenteeism, discipline (lack thereof), motivated students and parental involvement. PERIOD. It’s not even MONEY! We spend more money per student than any other nation. Period. One thing that bothered me in the essay is the old mantra of “hurting the students who need help most–special ed, handicapped, etc.” As a conservative I am tiring of this and those reading this will mostly disagree. Assume a killer asteroid was approaching earth and the world were to end in one month. What would the headline be in an educational journal? “World to be destroyed by asteroid– women, minorities, handicapped, poor and special needs students to be most affected.” Creative teaching is dead. Education like health care is doomed to mediocrity and failure.