Joseph Ricciotti, a retired college professor, wrote the following statement to major newspapers in Connecticut:
He writes:
“A teacher involved in implementing Common Core in her classroom writes, “Common Core for the most part is teaching with a script, and scripts suck the oxygen out of a classroom.” We are hearing more and more from teachers involved in the teaching of Common Core State Standards (CCSS) that it is simply not working. In the State of Tennessee, which is one of the earliest states to hop on the Common Core bandwagon and one of Secretary of Education Arne Duncan’s favorite states because it quickly fell into line, a recent survey by Vanderbilt University conducted of teachers in Tennessee now show a majority of the teachers (56%) believe that the Common Core should be abandoned. Not fine-tune or refine it, mind you, but abandon it ! Another poll released by “Education Next”, a journal published by the conservative Hoover Institution, found that the term “Common Core” has become toxic.
“Common Core’s architect is David Coleman, a non-educator who wrote and developed the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) that are now being implemented in many states across the nation including Connecticut. And who is David Coleman? Dana Goldstein in “The Atlantic” describes him as the pompous architect of Common Core who “is an idealistic, poetry-loving, controversy-stoking and a former McKinsey consultant who has determined, more than anyone else, what kids learn in American schools.” Unfortunately, classroom teachers were deliberately excluded from the process
of choosing curricula and devising the standards. Can you imagine doctors being excluded from helping to determine standards for the practice of medicine?
“In the use of scripts in teaching the Common Core lessons, teachers are not allowed to use their own methods to introduce the material, manage the classroom, or share their own wisdom. Likewise, the students are not encouraged to connect the material to their own lives or things that may interest them. Hence, the script tells the teachers and students, at all times, what to say and do. In essence, Common Core does not treat teachers or students with dignity.
“Moreover, to make matters worse, with the increased amount of testing, referred to as SBAC, that will be ushered in and aligned with Common Core, teachers will be evaluated on how well students do on the SBAC tests. Is it any wonder why the teachers in Tennessee want to abandon Common Core? Needless to say, this also explains why parents across the country are revolting against Common Core as they learn what it does to the classroom and to their children’s learning.
“Another problem of Common Core is that it is not developmentally appropriate and how CCSS does harm to young children. A kindergarten teacher, Ms. Angie Sullivan, cites
“ I teach kindergarten. There is very little that is developmentally appropriate about the K-2 Common Core. Write a fact and opinion essay at age 5?……we have 2nd or 3rd grade curriculum “pushed” down to Kindergarten.” Christina Leventis in “Truth in American Education” writes, “Why is it that teachers involved in Common Core are afraid to speak out? Those who do speak will only do so anonymously and what they have to say about
CCSS is not positive, These are the award winning, quality, caring teachers we are losing to the bureaucratic take over of our classrooms”
“The tide is turning for many states concerning Common Core as parents learn more about its impact on learning as well as the negative impact on teaching as a profession. If the money that is being wasted on high-stakes standardized testing could only be invested in teaching and learning, it could spark a renewal of interest in the teaching profession. Tests should only be used for diagnostic purposes to enhance learning, not to rank students and schools or evaluate teachers. Good teachers know how to awaken the minds and spirits of their students and to instill a love of learning. We have had enough of the so-called accountability movement that has emanated from politicians as well as from the Bill Gates and Arne Duncans of the world. It is time to end the madness of Common Core and allow teachers the opportunity to teach without having to teach to the test.”
Joseph A. Ricciotti, Ed.D.
Fairfield, CT 06824

Edushyster had an interesting interview with Yong Zhao on this topic: http://edushyster.com/?p=5755
LikeLike
And as far as this, “Can you imagine doctors being excluded from helping to determine standards for the practice of medicine?”, yes, that’s exactly what’s happening there too. Insurance agents are now writing the standards for the practice of medicine. The parallels between medicine and teaching are striking.
LikeLike
Dienne… so hauntingly true. If you – god forbid – should contract a mysterious illness, doctors are held back in seeking out possible treatment by number’s crunchers who decide “what the treatment” should entail. This is true for Lyme disease sufferers who do not respond to typical protocols.Their doctors are held back. I am sure there are countless varied medical cases where doctors are hindered by insurers. If an insurer does not pay for a $500 per pill prescription… a working class patient goes without – for that matter middle class too!
LikeLike
And then we must ask… why is a pill $500 in the US and $1.00 in just about every other country!
LikeLike
Dienne: good catch.
And another striking example of how, when you substitute squishy numbers in support of ROI for sound judgment in support of quality sustainable results—
You get disaster after fiasco after calamity.
But the bean counters and those that profit from their numerical malpractice double and triple down on their mistakes because for them it makes lots and lots of ₵ent¢. Or as the self-styled leaders of the “new civil rights of our time” aka “education reform” like to say to each when there’s no one around to record the voicing of their innermost thoughts:
“$ucce$$ is its own reward.”
😎
LikeLike
Doctors are charged with doing what is in the best interest of the patient, yet many suspect they practice “defensive medicine” and order what they consider unnecessary and possibly dangerous tests because they are in the best interest of the physician, not the patient.
The principal agent problem exists in medicine, auto repair, teaching, legislating, running a company that you do not own, etc. It is a concern.
LikeLike
So you’re saying doctors want the insurance agencies to take over medical decision making? You’re unbelievable, TE.
LikeLike
Dienne,
Doctors don’t want to be constrained, but they should be. Do you think that physicians don’t practice defensive medicine?
LikeLike
Yes, TE, I think insurance agents definitely know more about medicine than doctors. Just like Gates knows more about education than teachers.
Seriously, do you hear yourself?
LikeLike
Dienne,
Who said anything about insurance agents?
You might be interested in the following paper I just ran across: http://www.nber.org/papers/w20534
LikeLike
Value added of physicians? Cripes, TE. I’m done for today at least. It’s very apparent that you don’t actually read anything posted here, at least not for the purpose of learning anything – all you do is look for what you perceive as inconsistencies that you can attack.
LikeLike
Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Texas Education.
LikeLike
Applause.
LikeLike
“In the use of scripts in teaching the Common Core lessons, teachers are not allowed to use their own methods to introduce the material, manage the classroom, or share their own wisdom.”
The Common Core is a script; they are a set of standards. This article, along with media and politicians, confuse the two, and as a result confuse the public.
In NYS, the modules which were written by paid vendors to support the Common Core came along after the CCSS. Before that, teachers were adapting their own curriculum. Now, we’re adapting the modules, using them as a resource, or ignoring them and teaching our curriculum that fit the Common Core before it was called the Common Core.
The Common Core Standards do not include a script, a forced methodology, or management directives.
LikeLike
Why is it so incredibly hard for our society to want to listen to teachers?
It seems that theme has been consistently present in the US from the 19th Century forward? Do we need a movement like every other marginalized group has had? Do we need to increase awareness of teacher bashing, blame and exclusion?
Was it like that when the profession was dominated by men?
Why is our society afraid to listen to the opinion of the very people who implement, experience and live the life of public education day in and day out?
That is perhaps my biggest question coming out of the reform era and looking back (having read “The Teacher Wars,” and so forth).
I’ve heard that my county has begun to deny personal days requests, has become invasive on the details of sick days, requires teachers to still come in to Work at normal time when there is a weather delay, and has begun requiring arts teachers to take on teaching duties in the general classroom. I also read a scathing email from a principal this week ridiculing teachers for their choice of clothing in a way that minimized them by saying “it doesn’t matter what you are paid, just how you define your profession.” Whatever that means.
I have even picked up on anti-teacher energy from a bar tender once, who mocked me about the Common Core as if I alone had chosen it.
Easy target? Is that the only reason?
LikeLike
I once spoke to a couple of state legislators in person. One listened; she had a friend in K-12 and knew what was really happening. The other, part of an education committee, practiced deaf listening. He was not out-and-out rude, but did not listen for more than a minute or so; he obviously didn’t want to hear; he wanted to TELL me, an actual teacher, what was going on, when I brought up the problems of evaluating teachers according to student test scores. These legislators were both Democrats.
They are not going to listen to you alone, Angie. They are more likely to laugh at and mock you.* They are attorneys, journalists, and other professionals, who feel a general superiority and disrespect for teachers, even though they couldn’t do your job in a zillion years.
Your district is massive and you don’t have a strong union. Many of its teachers do not listen to news. Many don’t even know who Diane Ravitch is. Arne Duncan? You’ll get a lot of blank looks. (I question whether people who are this ignorant of their own occupation and such an important major public institution should be teaching; then I think about how demanding and draining it is, and I understand.)
Many will say, when confronted with the reality of actual legislation, such as eval half by test score, “Oh, they won’t do that.” (Um, they did.), or “Oh, that can’t happen.” (Um, it IS happening.) “Oh, it’ll end, because it’s stupid.” They don’t get it. They don’t have an inkling how corporate influence on politics works. And some even buy into the reform movement; they tend to be young teachers who think that seniority should not play any role whatsoever in personnel decisions.
* However, I am glad that you have the guts to continue to speak up, and wish you luck. I believe that only with a mass movement by teachers who have awoken from their stupor, supported by parents, will anything happen other than legislators going along with the corporate flow. Good luck. I hope you have another source of income if you are retaliated against. It takes guts to speak out so alone.
LikeLike
Joanna, I just read your comments. I sense that you sense that part of the problem is that teaching is full of women. I think you’re right; plus, with teachers playing martyr and patting themselves on the back for their saintliness while they put up with outrageous treatment year after year after year (buy paper yourself, etc.), as well as the fact that yes, teachers do come from a low echelon of college student, it is no wonder. And the gender thing is big, though many men would deny it.
It must become harder to become a teacher, teaching must attract more males, and teachers need to stop eating so much garbage while displaying their halos.
Personally, I think we’re more likely to see the system dismantled before this happens; then will all the king’s horses and all the king’s men be able to put it together again?
I could go on and on, but I have too much work. And my voice is nothing without thousands more.
LikeLike
But Justateacher, think about the statement you made about teachers. You wrote, “teacher playing martyr and patting themselves on the back.” How is that not different from saying, “blacks are always. . . (fill in the blank)” or “gays are always. . .(fill in the blank).”
Perhaps if we were not in the habit of allowing statements like that to go without being called out, we could begin to change the appeal of teacher bashing.
Not all teachers come from a low echelon of college student. I don’t.
LikeLike
or how is it different, I should say
LikeLike
All of my colleagues at my school, including myself, are Cum Laude or higher. I’m tired of being told that teachers, “come from the bottom of the barrel.”
LikeLike
Time to put a new title on the Core: Gates-Coleman Corporate Core. Dump the pretense.
LikeLike