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.
Business have similar standards in place, for quality concerns. Management is ultimately responsible to the customer whom vote with their hard earned dollars. Make the parents and school kids the customer and your education system will magically improve. Don’t fool yourself with excuses that education is to valuable to throw to the savageries of the open market forces. Education is part of the service sector and being such, price and performance are paramount. We should unleash market forces upon education and regulate the system to maximize competition. Some of the best trends IMHO…..hybrid schools, home schooling, online education, work place schools. We spend a fortune on pathetic education system that appears to have devolved per normal Marxist failures. Power has corrupted the system. Those that benefit continue to exploit per their self interests. The parents and children are just factors of productions. This is a crazy system! Are we so arrogant to think we cant’s trust those whom we educate? Meaning society cant’ trust those whom are supposed to be the benefactors. The present system is akin to incarceration. Why can’t we understand why kids act up in classrooms? How do we value “free” and public services? Education should be totally reinvented….forget the tweaks. Public ed is a dinosaur. Nothing will push the evolution to price, performance, and quality as open market approach.
Businesses come and go. Schools are not businesses.
Businesses manage risks by getting rid of losers.
Schools keep the losers.
Schools are not businesses.
They are community institutions.
Thanks for saying these things.
This is a bizarre line of argument and totally confuses the purpose of schooling with the outcomes required in business. For a start, we are dealing with people, and education of people, as Wendell Berry has so cogently argued for years and years, can never be industrialised. if it is, we de-humanize children and the teachers that teach them. A full humanity is required from our education system, not just animals with knowledge Secondly, schooling (and thus humanity) is centrally about relationship, something that the business world (at the production end) cares little for. Thirdly, as Lev Vygotsky has argued thoroughly, and as argued recently by the amazing work of Sugata Mitra, all learning is social learning – the online variety can never replace the interaction of real humans for the betterment of others.
Yes there is much to be transformed in public education, and yes, classrooms can be hard places, but they are not dinosaurs. The very fact that they have lasted so long, and that every form of public education in the world has retained at least some form of corporate or class-based schooling, and even when there has been a high emphasis on online learning, there is a real requisite to get together with tutors, fellow learners, etc to discuss.
As Diane comments here, a national schooling system cannot be philosophically competitive, because competition means there are winners and losers, and public education has an absolute national and community duty to care for those at the bottom of the heap. As do the winners, of course. This is another area where a business model is wholly inadequate, and way too blunt, to deal with the intricacies of teaching humans to learn and to love learning.
Exactly! But how in the world are we to bridge the gap in perspectives – one might even say in understanding – with the folks whose life experiences lead them to Forrest’s well-stated, although completely not congruent with what many of us know to be true, position?
Competition between schools for students is not the same as competition within the schools determining that some students lose. Personally, as a parent, I am thrilled to have a choice where to send my kids to school. If I am not happy with their outcomes, I can choose another school. I am tired of them being the ultimate losers in this political game.
I have twin daughters in the 4th grade. Our school started implementing common core this year. The math curriculum borders on negligent incompetence and the attitude of the school seems to be, “oh well, kids in 3rd and 4th grade will just have a hard go of it this year.” It doesn’t matter that they are coming to HATE math and that that impression will be extremely difficult to overcome later.
As someone who aced Calculus 1-3, Differential Equations, Linear Algebra, University Physics and more…I can attest to the fact that this curriculum is idiotic. It does not account for how children’s brains mature nor does it take into consideration the importance of enabling parents to help their children when they are struggling. The models used are confusing, overly complex and inane. When I explain concepts to my kids, they get them, only to be told by their teachers that they are not allowed to use the methods I provided. Why? Because they actually work and that will increase the achievement gap? I guess if the goal is to level the playing field, they have accomplished that. The faster kids are now just as confused as the slower ones.
I am happy to report that we have a world-class charter school near us that my kids have been accepted to next year. Thank God.
Concerned Parent, we need more of you out there to save our children from enduring this horrible punishment under the Common Core. At the age of 40, I became certified to teach elementary school. I’ve been tutoring and/or subbing in the system for 2 years, and I’ve just “thrown in the towel” because I refuse to participate in the mental torturing of my students. Likewise, I want to spare the same for my own kids from the insanity. So, rather than to subject my five year old to all this nonsense, I have traded in my public education teacher hat to become a homeschooling mom. For the foreseeable future, I see no good coming from a public school education. Rather, we are churning out kids who will become the next generation of soulless, robots of society which is exactly what Corporations are hoping for by touting the Common Core.
Beautifully said, Huw!
The way our minds work has not changed in 10’s of thousands of years. As Eisenhower was told by his commanding officer in Panama in the 20’s “Ike the tools of war have changed a lot in the last 2,000 years but one thing has not changed and that is human nature.” This was true then and today. We are failing in the way we educate and do not take into account the time we are in and what interests students. Students, in high school, should have more input into their education at the top. The real problem now is the corruption at the top in which their personal career and income is more important than the students they are supposed to serve. Many high level administrators should be in jail right now not the students for showing up 10 minutes late or whatever. We have everything backwards is it any wonder we are having problems. Holding our “Real Public Schools” accountable is the only answer and by that I mean the adults as they are the real problem.
Education is part of the public commons, a resource meant to sustain our society. Handed to the market and turned into a commodity it serves the market.”Regulations” are a well known joke, as they are generally written by the regulated when it comes to any business where enough money is involved that the bloodsuckers whine and buzz about the ears of politicians. “Those that benefit continue to exploit…” is right, as evidenced in the embrace between big business and politics. That is your dinosaur. That is the threat, and it has turned its attention on the commons of public education and democracy to ensure its continued feast. Tightly starved and controlled, educated only to prescribed common core standards, the bulk of what were once known as citizens (not those who can afford better education and a path to the 1%) will have no ability to resist-they will simply be sold on the “free market”.
This is all about dumbing everything down to make all except the elite basically indentured servants. The only way that Russia stopped the Nazi’s was that they had just enough time between the revolution and WWII to bring literacy to the mass of the public, to industrialize behind the Urals and to train the masses of farmers in machinery as the number of tractors and combines went astronomical in very few years. As a result they had the basis to fight off the Nazi’s. Why are we doing this to ourselves? Are we really that self-destructive of ourselves and others? If we are the sooner it ends the better for the rest of humanity as we are only 5% and do not have the right to destroy everyone else as we are doing for the empire. Every civilization which has gone after empire has rapidly crashed. Read your history. I am on my fourth time through “A History of Russia” originally written in 1925 by a Russian, updated, my version, in 1944. It is amazing what you learn from other cultures. We are not that slick.
Apparently the leadership of NYSUT is unaware that Diane Ravitch has made this statement that she cannot support the Common Core since they justify their own stance of “wait and see” by falsely claiming that she has not come against them. They are insisting that teachers should go along to get along because we have no evidence that the CCSS will have a negative effect on our students. I highly disagree. I think we have enough evidence right this minute to stop the implementation of this flawed system now.
The Soviets also threw millions of peasant bodies at the Nazi Army to fend them off. Not to mention the extreme cold of winter. Stalin was no friend to Russia or the common man. As for the Common Core, I think that it is inorganic and is not of the people. This top down approach will not be embraced. The beauty of education in Amarica is that it is locally grown and supports the needs of local children, not taking dictates from the Supreme Politburo.
Dinosaurs died out because of their environment and the conditions surrounding them… Public Ed. will do the same if we continue to have to fight for every bit of funding for the things that will make us (students and teachers) great! Mostly what’s needed is loving,caring, committed individuals that work well with all aged children… who care to see solid citizens that care about their community… the political rampage will go on… but the children and families in our public schools pay the “highest price”… lack of funding to have state of the art technology that can bring our students into the global arena or enough funding to keep class sizes down, so teachers can teach to their greatest potential… will take a toll … but we’re not going away… Where would charters put the students they don’t want to serve. We serve all!
On another, seemingly tangential note, businesses are run can be run by anyone with the will and financial backing . What business model advocates never seem to consider (or maybe it is just that they dismiss it) is that we lowly teachers and education professionals who actually deal with children, have actual training and education in this area. Why is it that we are the people who are NEVER asked?
Diane I have to agree with you about supporting the common core standards. My heart goes out to all the Nevada high school seniors this year who have studied, found tutors and have truly put their hearts and all into these proficiency exams to have gotten the bad news only weeks away from graduation that they cannot walk across the stage with their peers due to failing the test by a few points. Despite the fact they have more then enough credits to pass. My daughter is among one of those seniors who have missed it by a few points in the math section, but math has always been a constant struggle,after switching from a Downey School District to a Clark County School District, but for the most part she has improved. She was even informed by her counsler that despite the fact that she did pass the exam in California in the 10th grade on her first try that it does not count for Nevada. Now the question is what do you tell a student who was actually ahead academically when she attended Downey High School,that she may not be able to walk with her class if she doesn’t pass this make up test before graduation..What do the parents of her classmates who also struggled by a few points that despite their 12 year committment to their education without dropping out in the 10th,11th and even the full 12th grade year that their attempts doesn’t matter, their dedication doesn’t matter oh you have all of your credits well that doesn’t matter either. Oh you’ve overcome the stereotype of teenage pregnancy, high school drop out and forget school i’m gonna be a rapper that still it doesn’t matter. What type of motivation and encouragement do you give these kids who just want to honestly try to make it in this world of limited educational resources from the emotional break down in class from just giving up at this point. The child whose attention was a bit distracted due to their single parents sudden disabilities or what about the ones who have to take on a job to help the family out financially. I understand the point of the exit exams on evaluating the level that the student is on upon graduating. But when do we get to a point when you say now this just isn’t right there should be other factors on determining if a child gets their diploma other than the fact that they’ve missed ONE part of the exam by a few points but passed the other sections, like they have their credits, working one on one with the teachers and tutors to work on their weak points,even passed it in another state and those who still have the heart to even continue when you have a principal who is telling you that you will not be able to walk with your class even to receive a certificate of achievement, what happened to an administrator encouraging their students until the end. I mean really it is already an humbling experience to explain why you’re not getting a diploma to your family and close friends, but when is it ok to say now this is just plain punishment and we wonder why drop out rates are still high or the children of today lack the passion for education that we once had.
Schools are service businesses. They require much capital and provide a product. Schools do need to go under if they can’t attract or hold on to customers whom would vote with their feet and hard earned money. The business would need to continually improve to keep customers happy. Very difficult to improve upon a one size fits all institution regulated by feds, state, and boards whom all appear to be manipulated by employee unions politics. Teachers can’t educate as that’s up to the student. Some kids will do fine if just sliding a book their way. Others need maximum motivation and assistance…but all is lost if the student is unmotivated. How about hiring teachers with extraordinary ability to perform, entertain, and mentor? Well, you won’t find the certification or advanced degrees have much of an impact on this. I would guess retirees from military, business, grandparents may be a good source? I think recent college graduates a poor pool of applicants. “Community institutions” verbiage does not bode well to infer quality and cost effectiveness. Teachers are fearful of their ability to perform within open markets. I will offer the opinion that they will do fine and be happier. They will get the authority, recondition, and compensation upon their performance. Most of us have to do this on a daily basis. Teacher may evolve from daily classroom model to more of control and management, whereupon the knowledge and expertise is used to best advantage. Colleges have this problem as well. Many are predicting the bubble economy will implode as students can’t afford the luxury. Internet educational services are extremely cost effective with the highest quality. May educators evolve to publishers of lectures and training material? That economic sector has huge growth potential. Mindless throwing money at obsolete solutions will not work. Tweaking the present model is not efficient/effective.
Our nation’s achievement has been stalled for years partly due to the consumerist and materialist worldview that “market forces” are somehow a solution to the lag. We have bought into the lie that we can “buy our way” into success with the textbook programs that promise results. According to the brief “How High-Achieving Countries Develop Great Teachers” published by the Stanford Center of Opportunity Policy in Education, funded by a grant from the Ford Foundation, the most highly sucessful OECD countries have not trusted public education to market forces, but solidly back instruction and teacher development.
Public schools are not businesses. Substantial, meaningful, helpful conversations about education reform begin when policymakers step outside of that perspective.
I just found this post, Forrest. I agree with it wholeheartedly, in contrast with most of the posters on this site, who remind me of the priests of Baal.
I wouldn’t call it a bazaar line of argument. It’s actually idiotic.
The writer doesn’t understand the power of capitalism and how business more often than not controls the consumer, not the other way around. One can look at the food industry and see near-absolute control by a single company, Monsanto, and how it owns the forces of regulation. Public education is not a business and businesses that profit from it should be heavily regulated.
Yes perhaps those businesses that profit so greatly from education should be held publicly accountable for disclosing their profits and affiliations. During the height of NCLB a number of “consulting companies” were reaping enormous profits at the direct expense of school districts who were looking for panaceas to make sure they could comply with the mandates of the federal requirements as quickly as possible. The schools failed miserably and many consultants pocketed great amounts of profits. The privatization of the education industry has forced districts to spend outrageous amounts of money on standardized curriculum programs that are soul crushing to students who find no relevance of these programs to their specific life experiences. It has also created a crop of newly minted millionaires who never set foot in the classrooms whose cultures they transformed for the worse. The teachers were left in the dust being measured against standardized data-driven programs that they were forced to spoon feed to disinterested and unengaged students after spending copious amounts of personal investment on their own educations where their graduate departments more often than not challenged them to be autonomous and creative. Disillusionment all around was the end result. Years of personal development have been lost in regards to teaching students to be critical and evaluative thinkers and teachers to be confident in their abilities to teach from a perspective that is relevant to their students. Upholding the unique dynamic of individual classrooms and their ability to invoke and achieve adherence to workable state-provided standards has been lost.
This is the upside down “Orwellian World” we have allowed to exist. We must bring back rationality and that will not be easy. They are now entrenched and have a lot on the line to, in their way of thinking, lose. Yes, it is their new profit center that is larger than the DOD budget, schools general fund and construction bond money where they can double and triple the costs of construction and keep the rewards, as they see it. Obama and Duncan, if they were honest brokers, could have stopped this but since they are a part of the operation and planning of this tragedy it is speeding up and might crash under the weight of arrogance..
Yes. I have found it is hard to put a stop to programs that people feel are well-intentioned when they have never seen them systematically carried out and implemented. The Race To The Top application structure replicates a rating system used for applying for grants at the NIH. The two have absolutely nothing in common and, in my opinion, are developed to achieve vastly different ends. Rating a grant applicant and their scientific ability, reputation, and specific individualized (or at most, small group collaborative) proposal bear no resemblance to the systems-oriented, holistic approach that needs to be applied to evaluating an educational process that must serve thousands of children in a multi-faceted state school system.
Shaw, you are absolutely correct in your assessment. We have found over a long period of time that the real problem is that someone puts up a bill and they do not look or care if it does not work with what else is in place as a unit as it is supposed to. Then there are many conflicts in purpose and intent. A major mess like we have now. Do I think this is an accident, no way. For instance, when I have given multiple state agencies and committees 10 year spreadsheets on multiple school districts I have created havoc or have been told we have never seen information like this. Now how can that be unless planned to be that way to keep lawmakers blind while they rely on the so-called experts. Another one is the recent DOE OIG study on the total lack of accountability of charter schools. Why did the Calif. State Board of Ed. allow a power point on how great charter schools are in Calif. and how accountable they are by their own top people and when I get up and present the DOE OIG study that contradicts their power point and ask them if they have the study and if not I can supply it they answer “We have that study.” That means that they knew they and the public were lied to and did not care. They could not shut down that meeting fast enough. No accidents when big things are on the line or “Nothing big happens by accident.” Like N.Y. telling the parents that the budget was $3.9 billion when the Deloitte and Touche audit showed $23.9 billion. Close, right?
Tell me more about this audit if you would please.
Hi George:
It seems that your Western experience is very close to my Eastern experience.Not only did the education budget seem to have a gaping hole similar to a bleeding ulcer, NYS used the pseudo-austerity budget to coerce the school districts into enforcing the passage of the new teacher evaluation processes that meet the NYS Board of Eds approval. Each district had to submit a new evaluation process in order to receive their allotted budget or face improbable cuts that would greatly impede each districts ability to operate and provide even a marginally quality-oriented education. The unions were kneecapped again and many districts,where there is already an irrectifiable impasse between the unions and administration, were forced to accept the new standards at their own professional peril. The unions were portrayed to the public as “not being interested in the children” because their feet were held to the fire to sign off on the performance evaluation models that the districts were forced to submit to the state. The state tied non-compliance to submit an approved model to a reduction in budget allowance for any district that did not comply.So again, it does end up punishing the students for the unfair management practices that have become all too commonplace in the NYS school system and it is very convenient to scapegoat the teachers for yet another problem where cooperation would have perhaps resulted in a better solution. I have yet to see a teacher performance evaluation model in this state that possesses any validity. They might as well sign off on the fact that any teacher works at “the pleasure of the principal” and leave it at that. At least that would be an honest admittance.
Additionally we are now faced with district consolidations (not all of which would be criminal) but many will be rushed and not properly evaluated before this occurs. Again the feedbag is very low and there are scarce pickins’ at the education table.
Shaw, what we are doing right now is the basis for stopping them. We are discussing common devils. That is how we stopped MTA on a $90 billion 1/2 cent sales tax until 2069 with under $25,000 in under 3 weeks. I do not think that has ever been done before. The next thing they did is to put up legislation to take the passage of transportation bonds to 55% from 2/3 to create what I call “Permadebt.” By us discussing the commonality of the same devil we are fighting just as we did in L.A. No one believed that Beverly Hills would join with the Brown and Black community before we did that. This Thursday we will be in Beverly Hills to support their community from the MTA to be putting the subway under Beverly Hills High. This high school is built on top of the old Doheny Oil Fields. There are large amounts of methane and hydrogen sulfide (H2S). This is expolsive and deadly. The important message is that all communities can support each other as we have common problems and the same devils going after us. We have to be creative. Is that not what the arts is all about. I made my living in my own business off of the arts. I used to make high end Tiffany lamps, know the finishes and made exact reproduction parts for some of the worlds top dealers. We are now helping a friend who now has free arts in 22 LAUSD schools while the district is wiping the arts out. Boeing, Northrup-Grumman and JPL know this is important. They have a grant base of $675,000 for the arts.
We need to continue to exchange this kind of information so we can see the commonality which prevents continuing to reinvent the same box.
Thanks
You are the one person here who is beginning to make sense to me. You are effective because you are fully informed. I am less so. If the partisans of public education were as attentive and pro active as you are I wouldn’t despair myself into accepting charters as a necessary evil. Their whiny passivity, however, suggests to me that they have lost the virtue of self reliance which used to be the American gospel. Now they perpetrate statism on the kids in the name of fairness and equality. Until you can philosophically reform the people who do the teaching, however, can you still argue that they deserve to be saved?
Harlan, you have made my year. This is the last thing I though I would hear from you. Now I understand why you said what you did. I have worked with 100’s of teachers who have been falsely accused and have helped to prevent many from complete mental breakdowns. The first thing they need to know is that they are not the only ones. Then we go into remediation. I have given up trying to make them whole again as it does not happen. If we can help them stabilize their lives it is enough. This is very disturbing to me to see this sooooooo close and the damage they do and not just to teachers. In my opinion the easiest to psychologically ruin is the early elementary teacher. The reason is that their personality is not prepared for warfare which is what this is. If they were they would be a lousy pre-school to 3rd to 5th grade teacher. Early education teachers must be gently souls who understand. That is the opposite of warfare. The two do not mix and they know it. We have to fight. There is no other answer. We have to join together across the country and literally put the troops together with facts and direction. First, you have to realize who the enemy is and how they operate. Then you design your guerrilla tactics to fit the real time occasion. This must be done on a many sided front. Call it a Pincer move. Politically and on the ground. Go to talk radio, TV, You Tube. I also think that if Ravich and others went to Russia Today Al Jazeera and other international outlets and got specials seen around the world that creates political embaressment and heat. Russia Today is seen daily by 250,000,000 people or 8% of the entire population of the planet. If we do not do this from my knowledge of politics, international affairs and military capability, financial reality and stupidity we may not survive as a species. We now have the capability to destroy everything. Maybe not through warfare but through radiation and/or disease getting out of control through pandemics as we continue to have a blind eye to what is happening to the food chain and global warming and its long term effects such as the wars coming over water, food, minerals and just plain craziness. There is way too much at stake to sit and allow this to happen. We must study history for if we don’t we will continue to repeat the tragic lapses of the past. That is why I read a lot of history.
That’s why some people are bailing out of the public schools into charters and voucher schools which are not constricted by the Common Core.
This mirrors what is happening in the UK. With the advent of a more restrictive national curriculum, it is academies and free schools that do not have to follow it. You get the feeling it is part of a dastardly plot by the UK government to encourage conversion to academies. Despite the earlier comments on Diane’s blog that “big things never happen by accident”, I am not sure that the UK government is that clever. It is just pushing ideologies regardless and seeing what comes out in the wash.
Harlan charter schools do not perform and they are totally unaccountable. Go read the latest DOE OIG report. I know many do not like to read especially if it is counter to their ideology. They are doing that as a result of a very expensive PR campaign. I have never seen one of these charter or voucher people at the board of education for all the children of the district or previous to talking charter trying to fix the public schools. This is a business game and only the ignorant of politics and scams do not understand it. Most teachers, and I have met more than my fair share, know absolutely nothing about what happens outside of schools. They do not even know the money or why they are losing their jobs. They will not spend the time. Why do you think I was the one, not a teacher, who got them $1.5 billion over three years extra for textbooks and instructional materials and supplies and also am the only person ever to have LAUSD audited by California to save teachers who were being falsely charged with child abuse for whistleblowing. I work all areas being the director of a civil rights group. We do a lot behind the lines. We know how things work. We know what to do. Who to talk to. And how to assist in promoting and making better legislation. How many do you know who do this everyday? Not many. If they did these problems would not be there. The first thing to do is hold everyone accountable including Obama and Duncan. Duncan is a liar. I have the proof and have busted him in public in Pico Rivera. We do not mess around like most of what I see. Harlan get your facts straight. I would love to have you in public for a debate. That would be fun.
George;
You are the first person who I have heard address the dirty underbelly of the railroading of teachers. It is interesting that you bring this up and it proves again that our experiences although bi-coastal, are very similar. At the school system where I taught, they had a practical system of riding sensitive and creative teachers out on a rail. First they performed untruthful and completely erroneous evaluations of their skills. Then they repeated the process. because one negative evaluation would not be sufficient to completely ruin someone’s career. Then they send another evaluator prompted by an administrator to finish the smear campaign. Add to this the harassing notes that get left in a teacher’s mailbox and outright threats that are perpetrated on teachers who hesitate to exercise their rights. Others know this is going on but watch from the sidelines as if watching a sick wolf get taken down by its own pack. At the last school where I taught, a senior reading teacher actually had a clandestine meeting to help the young persecuted teachers to plan a course of action to postpone their unwarranted (by performance anyway) dismissal. First they are instructed to contact their union reps and give a statement, then they are told to contact a doctor and get a diagnosis of stress and actually solicit anti-depressants or anti-anxiety medications…this then allows them to file for medical leave so that they can look for another job before the guillotine is fully lowered to their trembling necks. After a few weeks out on medical leave, they return to school to await a final evaluation that usually ends their career. Senior teachers might be awarded a slightly better prospect. They might be given the option to transfer, but then when they apply the senior administrator from their present school or the principal gives them a bad recommendation when asked. This truncates that process.
I can’t believe that I am not fabricating this story, but I am not. It has happened countless numbers of times to colleagues,and coworkers. they spend the summer restarting careers in different areas. And I hate to generalize, but the more erudite, empathic and committed a teacher is, the more likely it is to happen to them. It is abominable, but sadly, common practice. It leaves a trail of broken, disillusioned people, fighting nervous exhaustion, sleeplessness, and eroded confidence that can perpetuate for years.
Ms. Ravitch:
You’re spot-on. I am a former teacher that witnessed a rapid succession of changing instructional philosophies in California public schools. Common Core is not only unrealistic, it will indeed contribute to the downward spiral of the already deficient education system in our country. There’s not a doubt in my mind, however, that this plan will get pushed through with all the legislative might that can be mustered. In 5 or so years, when it isn’t improving matters, even more legislation will come through with a new set of ever less effective standards, and we shall continue our spiral downward.
Common sense was displaced in the education system thirty or more years ago. There was a very slow transition, but that, I believe was because teachers used to put up a wall of resistance to changing effective teaching methods. Many teachers used to develop much of their own supplemental support materials for their own classrooms – but teachers now get hamstrung through disciplinary actions or professional reprimand regardless of their effectiveness in the classroom. CCS seems to negate any strong teaching abilities a person might possess. The teacher’s thought process is desired only at a minimum. Creativity does not come from a cookie cutter.
Shaw~ The ugly underbelly needs to be exposed because our profession is losing some of the absolute best and dedicated teachers to the misuse of administrative authority. I supervised teachers for years and would witness, advocate, protect, testify, and console many a teacher who was run out of town, as you so clearly described in your last comment. My blood pressure went up as I read your descriptions of such administrative abuse.
One case comes to mind where the principal sat in the middle of class to do an observation and publically chastised the teacher. This teacher was outstanding, and any school would have built an entire program around him. But, not this school. He was written up for fabrications, told to leave and not return, escorated off property by cops, students had an instantaneous walk-out & sit-in, camped outside the school for days, parents joined in on a march to the BOE, city counsel reps marched, BOE held investigation, stacked all levels with principal’s cronies, kids and peers testified. Nothing mattered! Teacher was let go and blackballed. I know, you are saying that there must be something that we did not know about this case to result in such actions. No, nothing. That principal, six months later was fired for falsifying records, fraud and more.
Extreme case, but not that unusual. All you have to do is read the legal cases related to educators. Not surprised that we have to hire temps(TFA) to fill teaching positions. Not only do Reformers hurt us, but so do some principals. What a shame!
Hi H.A.:
So many of us it seems have witnessed or experienced this abuse. I personally watched a very close colleague undergo a nervous breakdown. It is beyond what would be tolerated in a place with transparency. Very few corporations would get away with this; there would be more whistle blowing and lawsuits. At least that community you refer to took some supportive action-that teacher didn’t have to feel all alone…thanks mostly to the children starting the organization of protest…I commend that community! I would like to find measures to help bring this practice to a halt. I know that no group can stop this type of treatment, but at least it could be mitigated somewhat if people came forward and stories were collected and publicized. The teacher witch hunts have too much backing from the media and certain high profile administrators and the public has tacitly bought the idea that education’s major faults lie with teacher mediocrity and lack of interest in their positions…it’s so much more complicated and people need to hear these stories and realize that schools are places of great heartbreak and disillusionment.
Shaw and H.A., before I had LAUSD audited by the State of California for Falsely Charging Teachers with Child Abuse for Whistleblowing I had about 80 teachers come to me in this situation. By the time they called me everyone of them was ready for a complete mental breakdown. I would have to go and shut off my equipment because I knew I would be on the phone with them for two hours. The stories to this day and now there is a present data base of over 600. Go to perdaily.com and you can read about it and/or read the audit at the California State Auditors website which is Oct. 1997, 96121. Last Saturday I was at a town hall for congresswoman Karen Bass and a woman spoke about her being falsely charged and being terminated. From the audience, and I have a very projecting voice, I stated that I had this audited in 1997 and there was a large gasp from the audience, then I stated that we now had a data base of over 600 and the sound was even larger. Congresswoman Bass stated to the audience that her staff would meet with us on this important issue. The meeting is now being arranged. You cannot just sit there and do nothing or it will continue. It is mindnumbing to be involved in the tragedy these people are going through. You cannot help but be personally effected by what has and is happening to them. They will never be whole again. Our goal is to stop more damage. The first thing is they need to know that they are not crazy and they are not the only ones. All have the same story from 1995 until today. We have kept a lot of teachers from the “Funny Farm” so to speak. We need our great teachers and we will defend them to the end and their rights.
Interesting that you say that common sense was displaced in education 30 years ago…exactly when the war on the working/middle class began. Over and over again the Planned downward spiral of everything that benefits the vast Working Majority of the USA began to be undone 30 years ago…regulation of corporations, financial institutions, insurance companies and Globalization and the vast shedding of jobs for the obcene increases of wealth for the wealthy class. The public Commons is being exploited or destroyed to benefit the Extremely and Obcenely wealthy….it hasn’t been by accident or the hand or will of God or some other diety…it is a calculated plan by the Corporations and the wealthiest class and the colluding government officials and bureaucrats. We need to say No…we’ve had enough! The fact that the Gates Foundation was allowed to singlehandedly create the Common Core should raise the alarm for anyone able to read and think. I read previously that Gates says he wants more students to attend college, but here people are refering to the Commom Core as a “Dumbing Down” mechanism and that makes Gates a self-serving, two-faced liar. And as a resident of NY State it is really disturbing to see the State testing third through eighth grade students on English this past week and Math this coming week using the new Common Core tests even though the teachers haven’t implemented the Common Core ciriculum fully yet. If anyone in NYS State had any doubt that Gov. Cuomo and the State Education Commissioner and the Board of Regents want more teachers and students to fail, the you aren’t paying attention. First the defunding of state school aid, the 2% tax cap and unequal distribution of funding to poor rural and urban districts are driving most of these districts to bankruptcy conditions within the next few years. The Govenor’s Solution? More consolidations…even though some students in rural districts already have lengthy rides to school now and couple that with his desire for longer days and a longer school year plus more universal pre-k (how many of these younger children will have “accidents” on the way to school with the increased time and distance with the resulting “embarassment” for this situation and increased problems for the staff to remediate…so much for the Gov.’s desire for more “neighborhood” schools…another two-faced liar, your schools not in your neighborhood if you ride 20 miles to it.) And how will older students participate in sports with all this (in our local school district the teams are made up of 90% “scholar athletes..shouldn’t studentswith good grades be allowed activites that they choose?). And of course art and music are beginning to be cut because they aren’t “Core”, even though there are studies that point out the value for students with these subjects enhancing the learning of other subjects like Math. And the Regents are cutting back on Global Studies and history curiculum in favor of STEM (another buzz-word, reminds me of the “New Math” and “sight reading”experiments). I’m assuming with STEM you also eventually get rid of English and Literature…oh, yeah that’s covered by the Common Core with non-fiction pieces which may be newspaper and popular magazines which are written to be read by anyone with an eighth grade education….and “critical thinking” does anyone really think that’s going to be taught (does Mr. Gates want more “critical thinkers” or more work Visa’s so he can bring educated foreign nationals here to work for less for Microsoft?). Believe the BIG LIE at your peril…those behind the “reform” will “Let you eat cake!”
A basic education of everyone benefits all.. in a country that has cherished the individual..schools are now mandated to treat every child the same. If you haven’t been in a classroom in the last ten years as a taxpayer I challenge you to go sit in a classroom see with your own eyes.. A child is told he or she is insufficent if they are not reading and writing congrutently by the first 9 weeks of first grade.. For a child who for some reason or another it doesn’t all click all the time there is no longer staying afterschool to get a little help. They are lead to believe they are inferior and incapable of learning.. I have seen many bright children just shut down because someone who says children and teachers should jump on the assembly line and produce at a rate and speed that is inconsistant with childhood development that further destroys the family all while mentally and emotionally damaging our children. For people who say that school should be like private schools then only the children with money will get an education..what of the others.. what of the middle class.. how long until we are back to mill towns .. Our Children are a precious commodity that when given what they need as they are prepared for it will bring us all bounty and rewards that are unimaginable..but when squandere the future is lost not just for them but for generations.. Please spend some time in your local school..just a few hours a year and then decide. I stand amazed and overwhelmed for the teachers.. and desperate for our children..
Kids should have input into the high school curriculum? PLEASE! That was a major bomb back in the 70’s when the students had that power. Know what they wanted and got in the “curriculum?” Literally basket weaving, comparative religion and other subjects that resulted in the plummeting SAT scores! Seems everybody should have
power in the schools EXCEPT the teachers who have intimate knowledge of what SHOULD comprise excellence in education!
You should have been at the 2012 California State Board of Education meeting where they had the 55 top students there for the one student position on the State Board of Education. They were not basketweavers. They are smart and will be our future leaders. Why not let them start now. No one has to accept foolish recommendations. They will not supply any, I can guarantee that. The students talked to us about this outside of the meeting and we have been trying to help them with their input to the “Powers that Be.”
I have tapo agree with George here. If my kids were asked about recommendations, basket weaving would be at the bottom of the list.
Thank you TE. One student I met, and he is still in high school, won the 2011 Clinton Global Iniative for creating with his classmates an ap which text messages the parent/guardian immediately when their student is not at school. This is in real time. In California they are supposed to send out letters also each time they are truant. Of course, LAUSD does not do this and when they do they lie to the state about how much they did, in their favor of course. The student we met at the State Board of Education was the one who wants students to have the input through groups which vet the subject they are looking at before submitting it to the state Board of Ed. We at CORE-CA believe in these students and back this proposal. After all we are a civil rights group who is not controlled by anyone. We finance ourselves to prevent outside control. Also, the founding King of L.A. family, not MLK family, has over 114 years of continuous civil rights activity. We will not give up that legacy for anyone.
Do we have to stick with “reading and mathematics, the sciences, arts, history…” etc. or can we redefine what Education is today ? IMO Common Core is just keeping us from the conversations we really should be having. CC is another aspirin solution when the reason Education has headaches is that it needs glasses.
I have been teaching by the Common Core for almost 2 years now, in anticipation of the switch. Here’s what I like about it. It focuses on analytical and real thinking skills rather than regurgitation of content. It makes sure that all content area teachers (including social studies and science) are focused on being literacy teachers as well as content teachers. It provides consistency in the teaching of essential skills without tying teachers hands when it comes to how they deliver. The Common Core is adamant about not providing the ‘how,’ but the ‘what.’ It is brief and focused with only 10 standards for reading that are consistently applied in Literature, Informational Text, and Content areas.
You will notice that I use the word consistent a lot. I don’t know about other schools across the nation, but inconsistency is a huge problem. Students go into 8th grade with different sets of abilities because all of the 7th grade teachers were not teaching the same skills. Teachers tend to lean towards what they like to teach. It’s understandable and natural, but it creates problems. I like the idea of giving teachers flexibility in style and delivery, but not with WHAT they teach. I like that students get consistent practice when teachers apply common best practices strategies. Repetition and practice is key. There are excellent teachers who will teach excellently all the time, but we must also remember there are those who need more guidance and that is where we run into trouble.
I think we have gone too long in this country without this. As much as I respect your opinion and agree with you on most topics, this is not one of them. I welcome this change. I see the difference in my students with this focus.
I appreciate this comment. I have seen the same thing in my experience with common core. That focus to THINK and understand – the depth of the knowledge — that is what I think is truly needed. Although there is a lot of money grubbing going on, as it always will be while education is such a lucrative business, I think this common core really will be a benefit to all students.
I think there is value with the common core standards because it requires the bar to be raised. It requires me to be reflective about my teaching and where the expectations lie, however, my concerns are so many especially regarding my special education students. I teach reading in a middle school. I service low functioning students who are 2-3 years below grade level in literacy.
I feel exhausted trying to reach these students to the level that needs to be implemented to meet their needs. I feel exhausted trying to motivate them to see the value of literacy and how it needs to be a part of their daily diet like eating and exercise. I feel exhausted because parents are not responsive in a way that will help their child improve to their potential through reinforcement outside the classroom despite my efforts to reach out to them as a support system.
I feel I am open minded and driven to make a difference because I love what I do and will not give up. I know that these kids can do better but it takes so much more than the 40 minutes they spend with me each day or every other day. They come to school every day with cognitive limitations and limitations of family support because of environment issues that I can’t control. I’m being held accountable no matter how hard or how effective I work through continued training, data collection and collaboration. I will still do whatever it takes to help these kids but man; everyone needs to be honest about what these kids walk into school each day with and how much is put on teachers. The stress level in schools is going through the roof. Everything is so out of balance. Obviously all these demands will deeply affect the special education students and nobody wants that for these kids.
Why is student-input in their own education so bad? This is ideal.
My students are not products, to hell with you if you treat them as such.
Why did y’all need Common Core to raise the bar? Are you a teacher or are you a teacher?
By rejecting common core standards, I assume you mean to reject the idea they are appropriate for all states. But they are being evaluated one state at a time, and I wish your analysis had been one state at a time. It may be that Massachusetts was better off without common core. But what about Alabama, where the Legislature is trying to undo the state DOE’s adoption of common core? Do you agree with legislators that believe the common core failure is it advocates evolution over creationism? My point is that, for some states, common core is a clear advance. Your words, though, will be used as an argument against common core in all states. Additionally, I am surprised you did not address the benefits of common core in an increasingly mobile society. Children moving from Alabama to Massachusetts and vice versa are in for a shock, which common core will minimize.
Can you pleas point out where the CCSS mention creationism or evolution?
I do not know about all the standards. I do know who ever wrote the first grade language arts standards probably never taught first grade. They actually have the nutty idea of first graders writing compound sentences as a reasonable expectation. They also skip actually teaching the children to write sentences. I do not know of a way to express the insanity of that idea.
Here’s why I oppose across-the-board standards that are, de facto, mandatory:
Standards tell us what we are supposed to teach at what grades and roughly in what order, and the require that the same material be taught to everyone. What’s wrong with that?
Well, for one thing, the single set of standards hamstrings textbook writers, curriculum designers, and teachers. They are no longer free to create new, innovative, learning progressions. Someone else has already decided for them what should be taught and when There are much more sensible learning progressions in the various domains than are instantiated in these standards [sic], but one can no longer even broach those. One has to follow the authoritarian prescription from on high. This mandate stifles innovation in curricular and pedagogical design. I am already seeing, all around the country, educational publishers turning out programs that slavishly follow the new standards as though they were a curriculum. Big, big mistake.
For another, there are no standardized kids. What is taught and when should be tailored to kids and their needs.
For another, the Common Core State Standards in ELA are themselves very poorly designed. They are extraordinarily regressive. They do not reflect what we now know about what works and what doesn’t in these various domains. Often, they seem to have been slotted very much at random. They combine apples and oranges and shoelaces into single standards. Some are extraordinarily broad. Some are extraordinarily specific. But we are stuck with them. We have no choice. That choice has been taken from us. This is what the standard says. This is what you have to teach, whether it makes sense or not.
I’m baffled by how little has been said about the details of the design of the CC ELA standards. “They combine apples and oranges and shoelaces into single standards,” is particularly apt.
Here’s a good one: “Demonstrate knowledge of eighteenth-, nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century foundational works of American literature, including how two or more texts from the same period treat similar themes or topics.”
Why does this include its own range of reading? Why isn’t that in the explicit “Range of Reading” standard? Are you ONLY supposed to demonstrate your knowledge of American literature through this process? If not, haven’t you messed up the alignment with the CCRS? Is 18th century American literature more important than mid to late 20th century American literature? How many great 18th century American works of literature can you even name?
I don’t think David Coleman has ever been made to answer these kinds of questions in public.
If you mean “literature” in the sense of fiction,poetry or drama, then, no, America wasn’t producing that until the 19th C. Our foundational documents, however, date from that period: works by Paine, Franklin, Jefferson come to mind immediately.
Why would it be a problem to, for example, compare and contrast Jonathan Edwards’ “A Young Puritan’s Code” with Franklin’ List of 13 Virtues? Heck, you can even compare Jay Gatsby’s little Hopalong Cassidy list to Franklin’s daily schedule/scheme for “moral perfection.”
My concern re the CCSS is in the assessment part of it. Will students really be expected to have read from all periods of American literature and understand the broad picture of the history of American Ideas? Will they be tested as seniors (most Am Lit courses are in grade 11)– or will they once again, as always, simply be given discrete passages they have never seen before and expected to answer questions about them, supposedly demonstrating certain “skills”?
Replying to Penny:
Well, there’s a different standard for informational texts:
“Analyze seventeenth-, eighteenth-, and nineteenth-century foundational U.S. documents of historical and literary significance (including The Declaration of Independence, the Preamble to the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address) for their themes, purposes, and rhetorical features.”
It is hard to say how compatible the two are. You would think each standard would be designed to be clearly psychometrically distinct.
Also you have a similar problem with the date ranges — there are only a handful of foundational seventeenth century documents, and I guess the 20th century doesn’t matter.
In both cases, it is content jammed into a skill or task standard, so how important is the range of content, really? If these standards are primarily about content knowledge, it clearly indicates a flaw in the design and organization of the standards.
We’ll just have to see what’s on the tests when they come out.
“In both cases, it is content jammed into a skill or task standard, so how important is the range of content, really?”
Quite true. It may be better than the old NH GSE’s– which I’ve always described as “content-free,”– but I would bet the tests will be the same-old…
Dawn, I have been looking for your comment so that I could respond. The first is the audit I had done in 1997 on Teachers being Falsely Accused of Child Abuse for Whitleblowing and Principals Stealing Student Impress Funds. This audit is at the California State Auditors Website or I could email it to you. My email is georgebuzzetti@gmail.com. The second important one is the recent, Sept. 2012, DOE OIG audit on the Total Lack of Accountability of Charter Schools in Florida, Arizona and California at every level from the district to the state. This audit is DOE-OIG/A02L0002. Thank you for asking. Knowledge is Power and that is all too true. No one pays attention if you do not have the “Goods.” In legalise that is called “Heresay” and it holds no water. We never work that way as it is a waste of time and credibility and credibility is the “Coin of the Realm.”
Thank you for referencing these audits George. If I cannot locate them I will contact you . We need to learn from your efforts and be more vigilant.
Thank you, Diane. How refreshing it is to hear a critical perspective on Common Core! Ironically, the core standards emphasize critical thinking and deep analysis, but until now the initiative has been embraced without question. Like Robert Schank states in his book, Teaching Minds, (and as you point out) “like most things it comes down to money.”
“the core standards emphasize critical thinking and deep analysis, but until now the initiative has been embraced without question”
Excellent point!
“the core standards emphasize critical thinking and deep analysis, but until now the initiative has been embraced without question.” SUCH a great point. My youngest is in high school. If I had young children I’d be looking into home schooling. I am astonished at the idea of adopting untested and unproven standards throughout the country and, in effect, “seeing what happens.” Educational reforms for decades have been supposedly based on “critical thinking,” yet here we go again with “new critical thinking skills” replacing “rote learning.” How can you think critically about something you haven’t actually learned??? Some woman was quoted today in USA as saying “when we went to school, we just learned things by rote… blah blah blah.” When did she got to school, 1890? And as far as learning things by rote goes, it seems to me that people managed to build the atomic bomb and send astronauts to the moon using “old-style rote learning.” They could do math in their heads — including the fighter pilots who became astronauts. How many of us, if we were on our way to the moon looking at our instruments, calculate for ourselves if we were off course? THEY COULD. It’s amazing what all those non-critical thinkers could do!
Absolutely, you hit the nail on the head with the statement, “Ironically, the core standards emphasize critical thinking and deep analysis, but until now the initiative has been embraced without question.” School principals, and their superiors, all over the U.S. Public School System should read this sentence, then have to write their response in an essay of why or why not they agree!!!!!! Hands down, they’d come up on the losing side!
A rule that is forced on and non-tested. Sure…..that will work.
Is this not the definition of insanity?
So what we’ve been doing so far is better? The common core math standards are created in a way that requires students to begin to think critically. My students are able to explain their thinking in a manner that shows me they truly understand what they are learning. I am seeing students transform form doer’s to thinkers. What’s so bad about that?
Diane don’t DO math, John.
I really appreciate this article. I have struggled to come to a real opinion myself. I teach kindergarten and have love how the ccss have allowed me to toss out the kindergarten workbooks and copied pages and freed me to really teach and let children explore math with my carefule, directed guidance. However, adopting the standards should have been a researched option, without any kind of mandates or money bribes. The standards themselves, have been a good challenge for me to embrace and push me forward, but I don’t like the politics attached to them.
Eeeks. In my eagerness to comment, I made all sorts of horrible spelling and grammar error. Forgive me. I am typing on my 3″ phone.
There’s another aspect of Common Core that isn’t being talked about enough… I was recently told that Common Core ELAs and math tests will be graded on a curve, and that kids in low-income minority districts will be graded more leniently than kids from wealthier, generally white districts. By artificially bridging the gap between low and high achievers, one must stop and wonder what Common Core is really about. My conclusion so far: It’s less about education and all about reverse racism disguised as ‘equality and fairness’.
I’ve read a lot about CCSS and the PARCC, but I haven’t read about this curving anywhere. Is there any reliable evidence that you could cite to support this allegation?
(See DR’s 6th paragraph) I was hoping others could shed some light on this allegation. I’m not a teacher, so I haven’t received any of the training associated with CC. My sister has, and she was the one who told me that tests would be graded on a curve, with individual scores adjusted to compare with peers. I don’t know exactly what that means, but I don’t like the sound of it.
Some day perhaps legislators and some educators will realize that attempts to standardize requirements results in failure for many students. People are different, have different abilities and goals. The best educational system … if we could find one in the US, ….alllows choices… flexibility. We should be celebrating these differences in desires and abilities of our students… not destroying them. I worked for 4 years trying to change MI’s graduation standards to reflect reality…. the reality that if children are allowed to concentrate in an area that exicites them…. Get out of the way and watch them thrive.
I agree with you in theory– but how would we get a critical mass in rural areas to do this? Wouldn’t schools have to be boarding schools to make this idea anywhere near practical?
Do you know if the “bipartisan group of governors and corporate leaders [who] decided to create and lead an organization dedicated to supporting standards-based education reform efforts across the states” called Achieve were ALEC members?
Ready or not…here we go!
Diana what about DC Public schools teachers we have not received any financial support. We have fought Michelle Rhee and corporate reform for five years. Our accomplishments include but not limited to:
-Defeating Adrian Fenty for mayor
-Defeating George Parker former President Washington Teachers Union for collaborating for the Destruction of DC Public Schools and the demise of teachers
-Creating the only lawsuit to get to discovery on Michelle Rhee
-Removing Michelle Rhee
-Providing Public information on activities of Michelle Rhee
-Giving articles to the Washington Teacher Blog to share with the country
-Advocating and holding rallies against Fenty, Parker, and Rhee
-Stopping Randi Weingarten for selling out the Nations teachers worse than should would’ve have in my opinion
-Opposing Nathan Saunders current president of Washington Teaches Union for collaborating with Kaya Henderson and removing Vice-President Candi Peterson
-Personally getting Senator Grassley and Republicans to oppose Common Core
-Marching and organizing for Journey for Justice
– Personally contacting White House Officials to assure their attendance when 18 cities stated their civil rights were being violated by Duncan Dept of Education policies
and much more………….
-Opposing Nathan Saunders current president Washington Teacher Union for destroying teacher cases that would reveal Michelle Rhee abuses!!
ETC……………
Who are you raising money for?
Jeff Canady and Wilie Brewer
jcan0284@yahoo.com
WillieBrewer6100@yahoo.com
Children should not be expected to become “critical thinkers” in elementary school. This is developmentally inappropriate. Haven’t these curriculum makers, superintendents, and principals ever studied Piaget’s Stages of Child Development? The elementary years should be a time for children to learn through concrete operations, and to be taught “the basics” in terms of reading, writing, and arithmetic. I liken this to making sure to have a solid foundation in which to built your house. Once the solid foundation has been put in place during elementary school, children can then develop their critical thinking skills, in the completion of their house, during their middle- and high-school years. Call me old school, but children must be highly proficient in the 3 R’s before they can adequately use critical thinking skills in the classroom. This comes down to using a combination of common sense and not discounting what the experts before us have already discovered about the learning process. Maybe in business it is good to keep pushing the bar and reinventing the wheel; however, some formulas in education need to be respected and repeated as timeless truths.
Common sense? That’s a rare, if not in some places extinct, quality these days…
I got out of teaching (for pay) 15 years ago when I had my first child…just as all this craziness seemed to raise it’s ugly head. I couldn’t agree with you more on the developmental appropriateness. Piaget’s work is timeless and is supported by close to a century of research. As a middle school math teacher I saw too many students who had not been given the time to develop a concrete understanding of basic math, due to too much information being thrown at them too quickly. In middle school they struggled to use their math to do higher level thinking…they had no concrete foundation from which to build. I would argue that developing a solid, concrete understanding of basic math (or reading, or whatever) in the early elementary years is in itself a form of higher level thinking (that is developmentally appropriate).
THANK YOU!!!!!!!!! Brilliantly put! I personally graduated high school second in my class at the age of 15 with straight A’s in AP Calculus. I had no shortage of education in critical thinking. From a math perspective, we didn’t really start delving into critical thinking until about 6th grade as part of pre-Algebra – understanding relationships, cause and effect. If you try to introduce critical thinking too much before that, most kids are lost and frustrated. They need strong, firm foundations to build upon in order to embrace critical thinking. In math, that means the 4 arithmetic operations in short and long forms, whole and partial numbers. Once a student has mastered long division and the manipulation of fractions/ratios, they have developed the level of analysis, comprehension and precision required for critical thinking. I truly believe that without those skills, the “critical thinking” I have seen pushed for in the word problems of Common Core just causes panic and makes kids hate math. It causes them to feel like failures even though it is truthfully that their minds have not yet matured to the level needed for this thinking.
It is much like reading…my girls’ pre-school teacher had to reassure me that the fact they weren’t early readers shouldn’t concern me. Her comment was that their brains will mature and suddenly they will be ready for reading…forcing it too much before that would just annoy them and frustrate me. She was right, they are excellent readers now at 10. Reading early is not an indicator of overall potential. I was not an early reader…wasn’t even interested until the 1st grade. As noted above – didn’t hinder my long-term success one bit. When I was ready to learn, I learned. Common Core is in complete denial of these biological facts.
Adding on to my comment. We had a saying where I grew up…”you’ve heard of people who don’t know nuthin’. Well some people don’t even suspect nuthin’.” We are so intent on making all these students critical thinkers that we are in denial that many of them just never will be. As a result, we try on all these different theories that screw up the kids that did have potential and then wonder why the less capable ones still aren’t getting it. Let’s be honest…some of them just can’t get it. Let’s go with the methods that help the majority and pull the others out for extra help…that is the place for the experiments. Leave the other kids alone!
California state standards are superior to Core Standards as well….but unfortunately that did not stop CA from adopting them. Great blog!
Do you think this will have an impact on homeschool?
Great blog!
This jumping into something that hasn’t been test driven and proven is exemplary of our country these days. Our implementation of technology in our schools seems to be much more driven by marketing and profit motive than by actual planning and thoughtful implementation of devices—including factoring in support and replacement costs.
Regarding CCSS….our Dept. of Defense schools have been under a unified set of standards for years as I understand. If our nation’s security was the impetus, then why re-invent the wheel? Could we not have just looked at those standards and worked from there? But wait—not the same big bucks to be made by doing that
For 6 years, our district has been using Connected Math Program and America’s Choice. Johns Hopkins Best Evidence (originally funded through US Dept of Ed) does not rate Connected Math as being effective, yet, now that we are gearing up for CCSS, it was one of the only textbooks being looked at by our state. (Gee, the money spent on that study didn’t get us far now did it?)
We are being told that our district will not be spending money on books—-we are to use our old Connected Math series, America’s Choice, Discovery Education, and our Promethian boards instead. This is supposed to improve math and science in this country? Math concepts build on one another—a good text is a reference tool that a good teacher can use to show students how they can teach themselves and how they can review weak concepts. The students’ parents likewise can be actively involved if they so choose rather than feeling disenfranchised because they don’t understand the program being used.
I fear that our schools have become nothing but marketing targets. Things that have a huge impact—-such as class size and and asking teachers what they need to do the job well are disregarded.
Teacherkwrites said it well when she spoke of the irony of being tasked with promoting critical thinking in our students, but if we as professionals dare to question the newest thing being tossed at us (marketed to us) we are labeled as uncooperative, and “not a team player”. We differentiate for our students, but by golly, we better all be clones of “the perfect teacher”.
We need far more people questioning and investigating how taxes are being spent—-a Ralph Nader of education perhaps?
Keep questioning! Through that and thoughtful dialogue, perhaps we can make a difference!
Reblogged this on ramblingsofamilitaryspouse and commented:
For my friends who support this. I do not.
Thanks for finally writing about >Why I Cannot Support the Common
Core Standards | Diane Ravitch’s blog <Loved it!
Wow, what a wide range of opinion…I have been a public school teacher since 1984 first in California, now in Hawaii…I totally disagree with all current forms of standardized testing as a grading tool it is useless. When I was in school (’63-’76) we had to take ONE test at the end of the year (I think it was an “IQ” test) now I am forced to give up to 28 HIGH STAKES tests per year, thaks to NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND and RACE TO THE TOP federal mandates, tied to federal funding. The students fel like failures and so should their teachers. Fight The Power!!!
Hey Diane,
Did you know excerpts from your post were included in a National Review story a few days ago??
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/347973/two-moms-vs-common-core
Dr. Ravitch’s well-meaning post has done remarkable damage in Alabama. Rather than look at the alternatives to Common Core in individual states, she has given political support to those whose goal is to undermine public education.
Mile304,
My post about the Common Core in no way undermines public education. Did you really expect me to review the standards in the 50 states? My understanding is that Alabama has its own standards, and that they are very good standards. My post did not criticize standards per se. It criticized the process by which the Common Core national standards were developed, funded, imposed. It is actually illegal for the US Department of Education to take part in promoting any curriculum.
Just because a Conservative media outlet like NR quotes her, please do not make any connections. They would have quoted Daffy Duck. Diane brings up relevant points. And perhaps the problem is not CC itself, but the way it’s being implemented by states with the help of Pearson and also being used as a punitive measure against teachers. I taught to the standards for many years. I didn’t have a problem with it until the books that were ordered, like the math program, made it impossible to teach math with deeper understanding. Time was taken away from me to use fun activities that helped children comprehend. It was all geared to getting as much information out there and test prep. That’s not teaching.
My question is, since we did have pretty good standards, why are we paying others multi-million dollars to change them when if all they needed was some tweaking.
Today I was listening to a NYC news radio station, and a commentary came on asking why are we teaching high school students history about the French Revolution one year and the next year A Tale of Two Cities is on the English curriculum. Why aren’t the subjects aligned for each grade? That’s a pretty good question.
The ones destroying public ed are the ones pushing reforms that set teachers and students up for failure. Marc Tucker, Bill Gates, Obama, Duncan, and even the teachers union. ALL willing to destroy public ed for their own political POWER.
http://neatoday.org/2013/05/10/six-ways-the-common-core-is-good-for-students/?utm_source=nea_today_express&utm_medium=email&utm_content=core&utm_campaign=130515neatodayexpress
When I am hearing questions from the far left and the far right and they are both share the same concern, that is when I take note. Politics aside, I think we need to stop this movement until quit is vetted. I am a school board member in a district in CA and am a principal of a public high school, both serve predominately EL students, my students will suffer under CCSS.
>>A Tale of Two Cities is on the English curriculum. Why aren’t the subjects aligned for each grade? <<
It is just as sensible for students to have been previously provided with historical background as to learn the background at the same time– perhaps more so, since now they have the historical scaffolding on which to "hang" the story.
Diane,
I had my own take on the Common Core from the point of view of a reading specialist. In the post I focus on the guidance regarding buidling background knowledge for reading, I t is posted on my blog: russonreading.blogspot.com
Sorry, my comments were made from my IPhone and I had a few errors.
My experience in an affluent Bay Area, CA district is the CCSS in math are about one or more grade levels behind California’s 1997 standard. This is a disaster for kids trying to complete high-school calc in 11th or 12th grade and then compete for top engineering programs. Some parents in STEM jobs themselves are looking for outs for their kids. The likely result of CCSS is the weakening of public schools as top students from affluent homes jump ship.
example 4th grade (top difficulty)
CA 1997: Which point is not on the line defined by y=2x+3
CCSS: Explain how you would get the remainder of 24 divided by 5.
Well after only 1yr into having a child doing cc standards in GA I can say I HATE THEM!!!! My child is being held back in KINDERGARTEN. He falls in the scores of placement into 1st grade, but the school says no he is to be retained. I recently found out some local schools along with his are holding back 20-30 kindergarten students. The bar is now TOO HIGH!!! He can read, write, count, add, subtract, & more. However that is not enough. I has a parent thanks to this curriculum have no say in what I want for my child to be placed in 1st. They took away an early intervention program (EIP) from 1st time kindergarteners so no real help for those struggling w/these crazy high standards & they just push them back a year. I’m so mad & frustrated for my child right now. I have gotten his principal to agree to let me work with him this summer & retest him the week before school starts to hopefully place him in 1st.
I do not support cc standards & many teachers don’t either!!!
I agree with Diane, but my response to Katie is: if you’re not happy with the schools, home school.
I realize it’s not always easy to do that (if you’re working full-time, etc.), but if you want your children to get the education that is right for THEM and to learn the way that is best for them (Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences), then take charge of their education.
I’m NOT a huge fan of Gardner, but he does show us that we don’t all learn the same way.
Gardner Website: (copy and past into your browser) http://howardgardner.com/multiple-intelligences/
While Diane makes several excellent points, my concern as a veteran middle school educator and college professor are:
1. if Piaget is to be believed, children are going to struggle with the demands for logical thinking implicit in the Common Core. These are skills developed at a later age. The Common Core states the standards will provide a “clear understanding of what students are expected to learn, so teachers and parents know what they need to do to help them.” Are teachers and parents adequately prepared to teach logic and critical thinking skills?
2. with the demand for increased technology in learning, how will school districts approach the problem of socioeconomically disadvantaged students who may not have internet access at home?
3. there may be a need to be a shift how colleges and universities are accredited (regional and national), and how the schools transfer units and accept degrees.
The CCSS in ELA appear to have been written by complete NOVICES based upon
a. poorly conceived, unexamined notions about how the outcomes of ELA education should be characterized and measured AND
b. vague memories of extremely mediocre English classes that the authors happened to attend when they were in school years ago
It would be amusing that so much money and time had been spent on “standards” (I can barely bring myself to use this term to refer to them) this mediocre if not for the fact that they are going to have dire consequences on many different levels, including dire consequences for curricula, for curricular innovation, for pedagogical practice.
So, what are the problems with the new national standards in ELA? (My God, I could write several books on this topic, but I’ll settle for providing the outline.)
To begin with, as almost any teacher will tell you, the very idea of creating a single set of mandatory standards for every child is crazy. How could it be, I ask myself, that any sane person, any thoughtful or experienced educator, anyone who gave the matter the least critical examination, could possibly conclude that it makes sense to have a single set of ELA standards for every child in the nation? At the risk of stating what ought to be the blindingly obvious:
a. Children differ;
b. We need diversity in outcomes, not identity in outcomes, from Pre-K-12 education;
c. a single set of standards dramatically reduces the design space within which curricular and pedagogical innovation can occur;
d. a single set of standards for all effectively tells every curriculum coordinator, every curriculum designer, every teacher, “What you know or think you know about your students and about outcomes for them doesn’t matter–we have made these decisions for you. Shut up and do as you are told.”
These considerations, alone, should have been enough to have stopped the CCSS in ELA.
But I haven’t even begun to address the problems with these PARTICULAR top-down, across-the-board, one-size-fits-all, totalitarian “standards.” A few of the many problems with these “standards” in particular. The CCSS in ELA
a. are wildly developmentally inappropriate.
b. embody a lot of completely prescientific notions about how children acquire language skills.
c. are full of glaring lacunae that teachers and curriculum designers will not be able to address because they will be told, “It’s not in the standards.”
d.reflect extremely unimaginative, pedestrian, mostly unexamined notions about what education in that domain should consist of. The characterizations of what education in literature, in writing, and in language skills should consist of are particularly unimaginative and uninformed.
e. seem often to have been assigned to particular grade levels completely at random.
f. preclude many logical, potentially highly effective alternate curricular progressions both within particular grades and across grades
But here’s the biggest problem of all with these particular standards, and it’s a problem with most of the state standards that they supplant:
It’s an ENORMOUS mistake to couch desired outcomes in ELA terms of abstract skills to be attained rather than in terms of
a. world knowledge (knowledge of what) and
b. SPECIFIC procedural knowledge (knowledge of how).
In other words, the CCSS in ELA are WRONG FROM THE START, misconceived at their most fundamental design level, that of their categorical conceptualization.
The Common Core is a monoculture. It’s just NOT what is needed by a diverse, pluralistic society, one that prizes, and benefits enormously from, individual autonomy and difference.
Question: What should we have instead of a single set of mandatory standards for all?
Answer: Competing, voluntary standards that can serve as guidelines to be followed, or not, by independent, site-managed schools in which teachers make their own decisions about what should be taught, when, and to whom.
If individual teachers make their own decisions about what should be taught, when, and to whom, will individual teachers be held accountable for these decisions? Who will they be accountable too? What will be the result of poor decisions made by teachers?
Local decision making, local accountability. Let a hundred thousand flowers bloom. The alternative is tyranny.
By local accountability, do you mean to suggest that building principals be given the power to hire, fire, and set compensation for the teachers in the building given some budget from the school district or do you have some other model in mind?
I assume that you would allow the bees to pick their own blossoms, but how should the folks that use the certification of a high school diploma understand what it means when there could be so many answers to that question? Some French students were quoted in today’s NYT arguing that the baccalaureat exam was necessary because of the diversity of education in France. Would you see some national exam similar to the French “bac” would be required?
In NYC we had a hiring committee until Klein and Weingarten took that away. Teachers and parents were also on the committee. Teachers should have ownership in their schools. Schools that have shared decision making show better progress. And I am also an advocate of PAR when it comes to evaluating teachers. Salaries are determined through collective bargaining, not the staff or principal.
I to think that peer evaluation would work very well in K-12, but have been surprised that this opinion is far from universal amoung posters here.
I think that the flexability that Robert Shephard talks about will have to extend to determining things like compensation and work rules. If the goal is to provide a rich set of educational choices to students, there needs to be a high degree of flexability in staffing practices.
We have a curriculum. But IMHO the teacher should decide what needs to be taught without some arbitrary curriculum calendar. This will enable the teacher to review, remediate or advance based on the needs of the students. Now we are tied to computerized quarterly assessments, and that is unfair to both the student and teacher.
The problem with the curriculum now is that it contains too many topics. Other countries don’t do that. Better to teach a mile deep than a mile wide. And we can easily follow the standards that are already in place, ie: ELA Writing: The student will revise and edit. That can still be taught using a workshop model.
Exactly, Schoolgal! And the arbitrary calendar made without reference to the needs of particular students and groups of students is but one example of the kind of problem that results from top-down mandates from distant, centralized authorities. Teachers need to take their profession back from all the distant authorities who would presume to tell them how to do their jobs. They need to start saying to the politicians, the pundits, the education officials, and their own union leaders, “Get the hell out of my classroom. You haven’t any notion what you are doing, and you are doing an enormous amount of damage.” Back in the days of site-based management, I often had the opportunity to be present at the deliberations of teachers about their curricula and pedagogical and assessment practices. These were a glory to behold. When people have autonomy, they take that autonomy VERY seriously. They take pride in their work, they innovate, and they strive for continuous improvement.
TE: I have no problem with something like le bac as long as it is voluntary and one of many, many alternatives for demonstrating excellence. I would prefer a system that involved lots of competing and highly specific competency certificates akin to what one sees with, say, Six Sigma certification.
Let the market sort out which to take seriously.
It’s time we moved past single-source official across-the-board certification. This has already pretty much happened in computer programming. No one gives a rat’s tushy what degree a programmer has. What matters is whether she can demonstrate that she can write the code. I envision competing vendors of highly specific competency certificates and resumes having attachments listing MANY of these.
We’re already seeing something like this in K-12 education: universities offering endorsement certificates in, for example, gifted education and reading. I would like to see the whole certification enterprise replaced by highly specific certifications, ones that would show, for example, that this reading instructor has demonstrated his or her competency in English phonetics, in generative syntax, in classic YA literature, in hi-lo composition . . . there would be a long, long list of these, and no teacher’s resume would have the same list. And, as I mentioned above, these would be offered by competing vendors, and the market would sort out which were prestigious and respected.
Certification that specific per specialties within academic subject areas will create an absolute nightmare in hiring and staffing of teachers. If you are only suggesting adding on to certifications as endorsements, that would work. Teachers certified in SpEd often have a laundry list of multiple certifications. This also leads to the school system plugging teachers into slots where they are needed, but not necessarily where and what the teacher would like to teach.
I agree with you wholeheartedly. Endorsements generated by institutions of higher learning could, given enough time, perhaps remind those in educational administration and policy development , (who seem to possess a very short memory retention period when related to their teaching careers and concerns) that there is nuance to ELA. Without having time to teach these elements students will never be exposed to the beauty and components of language and literature. We graduate students from high school who have never even been exposed to lexicography, etymology, editing, no formal creative writing, journalism etc. They don’t even know that a canon exists, never mind that there is a controversy surrounding its composition. By adding endorsements, teachers would be able to identify and acknowledge their particular interests and passions. This would essentially over time, “force” administrators and policy makers to also acknowledge these specialties and endorsements. It would be a great shift for education if eventually teams of teachers with differing endorsements and passions could team teach ELA classes so that students have the benefit of becoming aware of the branches and particulars of language studies and ELA. It could be presented as a survey class with moderate exposure, not necessarily in-depth study. Imagine if that if you choose to go to college, you might have a general understanding of what you might be interested in studying further rather than having it be a surprise to you or a case of serendipity that you discover your passion.
What a disservice we do to students at the present time,teaching to a standardized test that contains concepts that they learn by rote; not even informed or aware of the concepts and the branches of ELA that the test contains.
Well argued, Shaw!
Thank you, Robert. I so appreciate your contributions as well. There have been many times that dialogue with coordinators, principals, and even union officials has resulted in my wanting to throw decorum to the wind and yell “Get the hell out of my classroom!” My personal experience is that there is so much interference with a teacher’s ability to read and gauge the abilities and educational needs of the students placed in their care. I find much prevalent irony in the fact that I and my colleagues have been through a process of higher education that lasted no less than seven years in NYS and then I am told by people who have no personal knowledge of the dynamics of my classroom that they have a better understanding of what should be occurring in my classroom.
When I went back to graduate school, I found that my faculty professors (most of whom had been high school teachers at one point in their careers) were at odds with the current practices of high school administration and curriculum content in NYS where I reside. Policy developers in NYS don’t necessarily have backgrounds in education. Many are litigators and people with social policy development backgrounds who have never set foot in a classroom as a high school classroom teacher. Then we have the test developers who have been debunked in NYS (who contracts with Pearson) as not being well-regarded educators and teachers as represented, but people who have very specialized backgrounds in test development. As it turns out (but was not readily revealed) you can be a test developer without having been a teacher with experience in the grade levels that you are preparing exams for (pardon the hanging preposition). Pearson has full control over the development of the exams. NYS paid 135 million dollars to them for providing the tests. What could a well-regarded panel of distinguished educators with classroom and teacher preparation experience have done for the education of NYS students (and vicariously other students) given the same amount of funding? My mind soars with the possibilities!
Well anyway, I digress, What I wanted to add to the discussion is that any advocacy for change that will positively benefit the needs and education of elementary and secondary students will come from the faculty of institutions of higher learning that are focused on teaching and learning. If allowed to develop programs and review curricula without the intervention of business model proponents and policy development specialists, they will provide the best evaluation of curricula content for public schools.
Shaw, that post is just brilliant!!! Thank you!!!
Re the Literature vs information flap: The first time I heard the meaningless term ( from the mouth of my principal and in relation to a book order) I knew students were in trouble. To bring up only one point, there was an NEA study which found that high scorers on standardized (pause to genuflect) history tests were regular readers of historical fiction. Further, those interviewed said that they remembered correct answers from their fiction…not their text books. Fiction is chock-a-block with “information.” Reading fiction is also valuable for learning to look below the surface of “information” for truth.
I appreciate this discussion. I am writing a book, and might like to quote the teacher on the “front lines,” called “schoolgirl” regarding her experience with the core standards. It is one thing for a psychologist like me to speak about them, but a teacher who has experienced them first-hand might be taken more seriously. Perhaps you could contact me through my website. Thanks!
Do standardized tests really tell us how our education system is doing? Some people, regardless of race, do not test well on standardized tests, but do well in school otherwise. Also, the system, whether it is “No Child Left Behind” or “Race to the Top”, encourages corruption as we saw recently in Atlanta, GA where the administrators/teachers changed the students’ answers in order to get higher scores. Let’s be honest, teachers can do so much, but it is most often up to the student to decide if he/she will take an interest in learning.
It seems to me that the idea that our schools and teachers have failed is based on erroneous information, comparing apples to oranges, if we are to now believe that Common Core national standards will help students compete with the rest of the world. Apparently, schools have been designed to “fail” in order to “justify” these national standards to push their political agenda. It is appalling that our federal government uses extortion tactics to push their own agenda in the classroom. Unfortunately, all of this is apparently not new, but when will we stop it?
Teachers are not “educators”, but mere political pawns, who have the illusion of educating children. Common Core is filled with old, failed approaches like “new math” being touted as “rigorous” standards. It is “crony capitalism”, giving Bill Gates and other vendors a boost in sales while treating teachers and students like guinea pigs, turning the classroom to look more like a “B” grade science fiction movie than a place for learning. There are so many lies that surround Common Core, such as it is “state led”, “completely voluntary”, “parental/public involvement”, etc., that we all should be leery about Common Core.
Given the reliance on standardized test scores to determine learning of students and the worth of teachers, it seems we are already using standards determined by the testing companies. Common Core at least makes an attempt to reach some kind of broader understanding on what should be learned, and I would argue is more inclusive in it’s development then Pearson. It does not limit what can be taught, but places a baseline. That said, I think Diane makes strong, valid points about the implementation. The potential harm to teachers who may be judge more negatively as “failing students” (if that is possible) concerns me greatly. In the end, I think the biggest flaw in this “reform” movement is the over reliance on high stakes testing. But if we cannot get rid of this, why not have more universal basic standards?
It seems to me that every post and even Ravitch’s article is relevent to the person who is writing it. Standards, no mater who authored them, are a statement of the least expectation for any students. Standards are landmarks to be worked toward and surpassed. Standards are not written to say ALL children must be here. They are written to state this is the minimum, some may reach it, some may surpass it, but ALL must strive to reach that standard.
It is up to the educators, parents, and community members to decide the program of instruction for meeting/exceeding the standard. They must also create the program of instruction that helps struggling student reach the highest level of the standard possible, these students may not reach the full standard requirement but they will have grown academically by trying. ELL are especially volunerable because of language barriers. It is the responsibility of the educators who work to meet their needs to create the path for them to be successful, this would be true of any curriculum or standards program.
Dianne Ravitch herself stated she is not against standards based education, but she is opposed to the method by which the CCSS were bundled into the funding of grants. Here is the bottom line for me on this issue, if the districts or states did not want to adopt ccss they should not have applied for the grant money. Where did they fall down in meeting their responsibility to the children they educate? Did they want the money and thought they could ignore CCSS?
I am curious to hear thoughts about the how/if the CCLS should inform our teacher preparation programs.
The teacher prep programs should show teachers how to go about actually teaching English DESPITE these amateurish “standards.”
I think the concept of core standards is not in and of itself the problem. However, I find it unimaginable to think that my students in rural Michigan will be served by the same standards as a student in an urban setting such as Chicago. I believe that the standards need to be broad concepts, then the states need to take control back and write more specific standards, then put it back into the hands of local districts to implement. Reform movements over the years have revealed a few concepts that are being ignored by ccss implementation. Buy-in is important if reforms are to work, there are many teachers, parents, students, and administrators who do not buy into ccss. Collaboration between educators is important, yet high stakes testing, scores tied to job performance and pay, do not create an atmosphere of cooperation. Instead it creates an environment based on fear and demoralization. This past year was one of theist difficult years that I have had as a teacher and it had nothing to do with my students. I have been entrusted with what I consider to be the most precious and vulnerable part of the population, yet I can’t be trusted to have any input into what I’m teaching. I must push through a kindergarten lesson (because my students have to ready to take the next round of tests- three ” standardized” ones per year) even though the first snowflakes are falling and everyone is too excited to pay attention. A teacher takes these moments to discuss seasonal changes, states of matter, etc. That is what a classroom is. It is a living, changing environment. It is constant opportunity for lessons on sharing, group work, kindness, hygiene, and tolerance. Asking teachers to mechanically follow a set of standards to prepare students for tests takes away the wonder of the classroom experience.
My friend taught them in a pilot state. First graders expected to understand 8+6=14=4+4+6=14=10+4.
I’ve taught first grade for 5 years. Only the top 15% of six year olds could possibly comprehend the associative addition above.
Two my friend’s grade-level team teachers resigned before November, my friend resigned over Christmas Break. All 3 left education. If Texas adopts, I will leave also.
I’d like to add that promoting students who SHOULD NOT be promoted is extremely stressful and adds a very negative element to classrooms. I am, of course, excluding learning disabled students.
When a teacher is expected to teach multiplication, the student should already FLUENTLY understand addition. Third grade teachers get 4-5 students a year that can’t add or subtract simple numbers (5+4, 9-5) without fingers, yet they’re supposed to work up to 999,999. The entire classroom is then handicapped and can not move forward. EVERY TEACHER knows this is true.
A complete Separation of School and State please.
Government shall make no Law establishing Education.
You will hear it again.
The CCSS represents and is one more component of the historic assault on public education by conservatives since Nock wrote The Theory of Education in the US (1931). Diane’s concerns are right on. However, how we actually got to the CCSS is a profound and complex story. Don’t worry folks, Diane’s BLOG did not empower the forces who support the CCSS at the expense of public education. Those forces, as Diane I am sure will admit, have been at work for a long time. She also has some first-hand knowledge of a period of time when this assault was taking place.
What is fascinating is how our supposed liberal administration, with Arne Duncan heading the DOE, is so in line with the administration’s conservative Republican nemesis. They might not agree on much, but when they talk education, they are on the same page.
Our only hope is that China, UK, India, etc… all adopt Common Core so they can all join us in the race to the bottom.
Wake up and smell the dictatorship. Teachers don’t have authority, parents don’t have authority, only a chosen few. The really sad part is the one thing that would correct all this a good dose of liberty. Teachers don’t understand it, Students aren’t taught about it and parents will give it away if someone will give their kid a good grade. Of course the standards were done the way they were done. The interesting thing is few realize both political parties support the dictatorship. Until more choice is given to Administrators, teachers and parents, there will be more not less of this. What, a government monopoly run amuck? Say it isn’t so.
There may be many problems with this program and the way it is being implemented but what is the alternative. I am so tired of the do nothing is better then change attitude that is rampant in our society. We should have a national standard. It is not fair to our kids who have to move from one school to another to be behind or ahead and bored because the curriculum and standards are completely different. I am all for allowing teachers freedom to do what works for them with their students. However I believe we have put to much emphasis on making sure kids feel good then actually making sure they are proficient in subject matter. Kids are fully capable of rising to expectations with support and the understanding that they will not be allowed to make excuses or blame others for their failures. As a nation our kids are lazy and entitled. When are we going to start restoring the values of hard work and the idea that practice makes perfect. I see most of your argument is that more kids will fail. Why because they are not prepared, because they do not want to do the work or do you think them incapable of doing so. I am not for lowering the standards in any school or for removing subjects. I am for quality education and if you want to argue for that then we should all be arguing that every state fully fund education and stop reducing the amount of time spent in school. That would be a much better use of our time.
Some are calling Common Core Standards Corporate Core standards. I just heard this week on the radio, maybe NPR, that ExxonMobile is one of the biggest supporters of CC.
I have respecte Diane Ravitch since she came out against NCLB. As a public secondary sschool teacher I have seen the damage done by that misguided act. Building certain failure into curriculum and testing indicates to me that the destruction of schools as we know them and the privatization (which will ensure corporate profits soar) is the motivation for what has occured in public education over the past decade. I will retire soon to watch the further undermining of the “great American school system”. Thank you Ms. Ravitch for keeping us informed and giving us a lot to think about.
I have no issue’s with raising the standards, my concern is what the schools are doing in order to “appear” to be achieving this. The focus is not on education but on numbers. Schools are now rushing through subjects and lessons so quickly that things my children could do a few years ago, ex. a simple division problem, has now become a challenge to them. They are totally lost because of the confusion this new Common Core Standards is implementing. The children are being force to take in vast amounts of information at one time, with little to no details, not given a chance to actually learn the information, quickly tested on it and then the failing tests covered up with “in class work” and then pressed forward into something new.
My children have absolutely no childhood left at this point, we spend 3 to 4 hours every evening after school trying to keep up with all the extra homework and me trying to “teach” things they should be learning in school, but aren’t. I don’t blame teachers here, don’t let that be the impression you get from this. I have met and have dialog with a lot of the teachers on a regular basis. They have their hands tied and a large portion of them are not happy with the way are children’s futures are being sacrificed either. The classwork and homework is counted on equal grounds with tests, this is the cover up. All the failing grades on test in past would be a red flag to teachers that more time needed to be invested in certain areas before moving on. It used to be evidence the children didn’t learn the material. That isn’t the case any more. The mentality is being forced to overlook tests scores and flood the grades with an abundance of classwork and homework so the over-all grade supports an appearance of a positive result.
This approach is already failing our children! I am not a highly educated man myself, and I can see the negative and destructive effect it is having on my children, how is it then the educated, whose implementing this movement, cannot. I have some theories on this, but will refrain from getting into that at the moment.
I have grave concerns for my children’s future. I would not mind a few sacrifices being necessary if I felt there was some value for my children in it. They have all but given up their childhood but have gained nothing in return for it. They have lost knowledge once known, they are experiencing an abundance amount of stress, their self confidence has been shattered and just flat our worn out, mentally and physically. There is not any regard for our children’s education or mental health, it’s all about numbers and political motives that are sacrificing our children on a national level.
dianerav, have you seen this story from The Blaze yet? A Baltimore parent was thrown out of a school board meeting for interrupting and questioning the adoption of Common Core, then taken outside, cuffed, and arrested for assault of a peace officer. There is video footage from inside the meeting. Would love to hear your thoughts on it.
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/09/20/is-this-america-parent-manhandled-arrested-while-speaking-out-against-common-core-at-public-forum/
Our son just started 6th grade at in San Jose, CA. He has an excellent math book that cost the district over $200, but the teacher doesn’t use it, since it doesn’t comport to Common Core’s Fabian Socialist ideology. As a result, the teacher now hand-writes what she interprets the lesson to be in magic markers, since the Common Core books aren’t in the district budget (as I understand). English isn’t her native language, and her instructions are not entirely clear. No math book, no course outline, just a teacher improvising. Improv is fine for comedy – not teaching math to young minds. To make matters worse, the kids are learning how to multiply and divide fractions by drawing pictographs. My son gets the answers correct using the formula method I’ve taught him, but I also have to explain the teacher’s “draw a picture” method, which is infantile and not suited to more complex problems, or he won’t get credit. Experts claim that this new Common Core math program will put California kids behind by 2 or more years, compared to other developed nations.
Greg, this exact scenario is playing out in millions of classrooms since the giant CCSS Combines are grazing and demolishing our educational landscape. No books, multi-step math solutions & for what? No books on CDs or via Internet, teachers creating ALL OF THEIR OWN materials every day, and parents can’t help their kids at home because we can’t figure out the examples…nothing to look at or work off. What a mess! Systems are saving tons of textbook $$ and the technology is not anywhere close to being available.
Greg, it makes no sense at all. Another issue of concern: kids are not naturally organized as they show up in the world. We have to teach, assist and guide that process. Well, with all the pieces floating and nothing is predictable or available in an organized fashion, it is another mess!
One more HUGE ISSUE: millions of children and parents do not have access to the Internet if etexts are made available by systems to students. Systems could care less! School libraries close immediately after school and public libraries are often too far.
The world vision of Bill Gates does not exist for most of our kids. He and his rich dreamers and exploiters are harming kids and they could care less. The rest of the world is watching and raising their eyebrows. Especially, since we preach at them and tell them how to live. Ha!
I’ll say it, if nobody else is willing – Common Core is GARBAGE. My son’s school is pushing this crap, and what it is doing is creating a lot of anxiety and making kids feel less intelligent than they are for not being able to grasp the material, which in too many instances (especially mathematics) is too advanced for the grade level at which it’s being introduced.
This whole stinking pile is about Federal dollars, not education. It’s test prep, not life prep. I am soon to begin homeschooling my son because I want him to learn critical thinking.
As a teacher and parent, I agree with you 100%. Unfortunately, homeschooling is not an option for me. I have to work. I hate Common Core with a passion. It’s pure garbage!!!
Bingo. My 9th grade son has college level statistics to do,
WITHOUT having ever been taught the equations, or the basic algebra
that goes with being able to solve the equations. That come later
in the year. (What?!) The teachers answer to how to solve the
equations? “Go look it up.” (What?!) Was there some actual teaching
going on here that I am missing? Plus, children with dyslexia don’t
do “Go look it up.” (Try looking up Cattalog…as spelled by a
dyslexic student I know) I can (and have) taught better at home. I
looked up the common core standards, and what is being taught is no
where near what the standards specify. From what I can see, many
teachers are flailing and using whatever they can find (in this
case, college material since that what is readily available)
because they have no idea how to teach to these standards.
I also agree that Common Core is terrible. I’ve pulled one of my children out of public school and moved him to a charter this week and my other child is on the waiting list. As soon as I can pull him I will.
Do people not realize that charter schools use common core as well?
Charter Schools are public schools, Stephanie.
When charter schools are challenged in federal courts, their defense is that they are not public schools. When charter schools are challenged before the NLRB, their defense is that they are not public schools. If that is what they contend, I am convinced. They are not public schools.
When a charter leader closes the schools for a day of political protest, that shows they are not public schools.
A public school principal would be fired for doing that.
Until they’re not..they take the money though….that’s the public part.
That is exactly what the ” reformers” are hoping educated, enabled parents will do! It is the systematic death of public schools as we know them. Parents should fight the Common Core, not walk away from it. If you must pull your children do it, but don’t give up the fight. Defend your public schools!
Why defend a school system in league with Commie Obamie? Public school teachers are the communist cancer within destroying their own host through Utopianism. The money will never be there for better than we’ve got now. Obama has destroyed the middle class. Find a bolt hole and go there as soon as possible. You can no more stop the evisceration than you can stop Obamacare, the worst thing to ever be foisted on an ignorant, demogoged populace.
I really, really hate Common Core, as a teacher and a parent with two of three in public school. I will hopefully have three of three in private school by the start of 2014-15.
The Common Core state standards in ELA were written by amateurs. It is as though someone handed David Coleman a copy of the 1858 Gray’s Anatomy and sent him to a cabin in Vermont to write new standards for the medical profession. These standards [sic] are incredibly backward. They seem to have been written in total ignorance of what we know of language acquisition and in almost complete ignorance of best practices in the teaching of English. Particularly egregious in these standards is the fact that they are a list of abstract skills, and that’s what will be tested by the high-stakes assessments–skill abstracted from any content or context. Right now, across the United States, teachers are being submitted to trainings in these profoundly misconceived standards [sic], publishers are creating curricula based on them, and yet they were subjected to no learned debate and to no vetting. If they had been, then the authors of them would have been laughed off the national stage. The only appropriate response to these standards [sic] is derision. The authors clearly knew nothing, nothing at all, about how to teach writing, about the complexities of learning to read, about how kids acquire grammars–about the various domains that the standards [sic] cover.
I’ve developed a sort of litmus test for whether a person knows anything about the teaching of English: does this person support the implementation of the amateurish CCSS in ELA?
It’s darkly amusing that so much money was paid to create standards [sic] this amateurish, this backward, this rooted in unscientific folk notions about the teaching of reading, writing, speaking, and listening.
Particularly disturbing in these new standards [sic] is the fact that the small group of amateurs who created them did not understand that descriptions of measurable outcomes (that’s what a standard is) in these various ELA domains and within those domains would take very different forms. The authors of the standards [sic] had no clue what they were writing about when they spoke of reading ability, language ability, writing ability, etc. And the tests based on standards [sic] this misconceived will, inevitably, be [are shaping up to be, if one looks at what PARCC and SmarterBalanced are doing] completely invalid. That is, they will not measure what their authors think that they are measuring.
What an utter travesty.
One of the regular contributors to this blog has suggested that a new metric be created and called the Colman. It would be a measure of degree of correlation of arrogance and ignorance. I hereby motion that this metric be adopted.
Great comment, Robert.
We’ll need a Pearson-created test for that. Measuring ignorance might be harder than measuring knowledge, unless ignorance is the inverse of knowledge, but what if knowledge is 0, then we get an undefined quantity, not even infinity. Arrogance can probably be measured, but I’m wondering whether the two aren’t identical, ignorance=arrogance, as for instance in President Obama. I claim a negative correlation for myself, but I’m sure that will be disputed by Linda, Deb, Robert, and perhaps Duane. I got a catalogue advertising among other items, Southern Missouri ribs. What’s distinctive about them, Duane?
Dr. Ravitch seems to want to have her cake and eat it too. She complains both that CC will decrease the grades awarded to students from easier programs, and at the same time complains it will lower standards in more enlightened states like Massachusetts.
I agree it would be wrong to lower standards in Massachusetts. But it is a dire error to oppose raising standards elsewhere. We should be adopting Massachusetts standards nationwide, and then raising them.
In reality the problem is that standards in Massachusetts are not high enough. Only the top schools in Massachusetts compare with average schools in many other countries. For example in fourth grade math assessments 40% of Hong Kong students achieved an excellent rating. Only 22% of Massachusetts students achieved this rating.
The United States as a whole does not have a competitive education system. Even our best schools are not where they should be. And the lesser US schools are shamefully bad.
CC standards are a positive step for many states. And these standards must not be watered down over time. For America to remain competitive this is just the first step.
Warthog,
Massachusetts had excellent, well-tested standards and should not have dropped them. For the rest of the nation, how do you know how good CCSS is? What we do know is that the tests are designed to fail kids. That says nothing about whether the standards are worthy or not. Let’s wait 12 years and see if all kids are college and career ready, or is it just another reformer hoax?
I am not against standards, as long as they are created by actual teachers, not corporations or government. I think the bigger question is how are students to achieve these standards when we have cut instruction days, put 34+ students into classrooms that don’t even have enough desks for students, give them old resources or none at all, force teachers to teach to pass a test, and cut funding to these schools who don’t pass? None of this makes any sense! Yes, lets raise the standards and expect excellence, but set them up to fail. The best part of this stupid idea (sarcasm) is when this all fails lets blame the underpaid and over-worked teachers!
The CCSS in ELA are a joke, amateurish drivel.
Robert, I’m ready to read your own masterful example of an ELA standard that is not “amateurish drivel”. Please share with us what you would have for an attribute to describe, say, one’s capability with detecting and using irony.
OK, Susan. I am game. Here’s one:
Students will learn vocabulary in semantic groupings in the course of extended study within knowledge domains and engage in and demonstrate active use of said vocabulary in reading, listening, writing, and speech. Said use will require both comprehension and production of variant morphological forms of base lexical items, including inflectional and derivative forms of those items.
Lovely! This sample standard makes it very clear to teachers that students will engage in high-level word chunk analysis to inform the way they make sense of text and produce precise writing of their own. Would you call yours an Anchor standard, or is this specific to a level of practice (be it a number grade or qualifier, such as “intermediate”)?
Susan, what I wrote mentions nothing about “chunk analysis.”
I vehemently oppose creating invariant standards for all students, Susan. What I wrote merely says that kids will learn vocabulary in the context of language activity in a domain and that because their use of that vocabulary will be active, it will involve inflectional and derivative forms.
Let me be clear about this, Susan. I vehemently oppose invariant, one-size-fits-all standards, the use of such standards in high-stakes tests, and the creation of curricula and pedagogy driven by such standards. If I were writing statements about measurable outcomes, which is what standards are, then they would be used in things like diagnostic and formative tests, NOT in high-stakes summative exams.
Now, to the specific issue of what I wrote about vocabulary. As you know, almost none of an adult’s vocabulary was learned via explicit instruction. It was learned in semantically related groups in a meaningful context that involved active use of language. So, for example, a person takes an art class at the local YWCA and, in the course of a few weeks, learns the terms stippling, chiaroscuro, filbert brush, gesso, tableau,and titanium white, and this learning sticks because the terms were learned in a meaningful context. And because the person was actively using the terms in discussion with the teacher and other students, he or she incorporates them into his or her internal grammar and uses them properly in their inflected and derivative forms.
I would NEVER force kids to cough up a list of inflections or conjugations as part of some summative exam, not unless I were teaching a course on some topic like generative grammar at the college level. However, it’s quite sensible to give kids a unit of material within a knowledge domain, to ensure that they will be exposed to and use a lot of new vocabulary in that domain, AND to use diagnostic instruments to note use by kids, in speech and writing, of inflected and derivative forms of those terms because such use is an excellent indicator that the terms have been incorporated into the internal grammar. They are not isolates, learned for a test.
None of that would be done for summative purposes but, rather, to inform something like Japanese Lesson Study in which teachers, empowered teachers, work together to go over what worked and what didn’t in order to ensure continuous improvement.
And here’s the reason for the Lesson Study, which is extraordinarily effective if teachers have the time and training to do it: Quality flows from the bottom up. Everyone knows what flows from the top down.
So, the morphological analysis in my scenario–what you have referred to as chunk analysis, would be done by the teachers for diagnostic purposes–to diagnose the effectiveness part of a lesson. In other words–it would be used to analyze the lesson, not the kid.
So, the morphological analysis in my scenario–what you have referred to as chunk analysis–would be done by the teachers for diagnostic purposes–to analyze the effectiveness of part of a lesson. In other words–it would be used to analyze the lesson, not the kid’s attainments.
To follow on the concept of “morphological analysis”: an example would be students who are able to transfer suffix knowlege from word to word, given the use of the word in a meaningful context. They have acheived a measurable level of proficiency in morphological analysis, especially if they can change an irregular verb they’ve never seen into it’s past participial form by applying a known pattern to the unknown word. I agree that it’s an attribute of language use (a standard), but doesn’t require a separate testing scenario to measure.
However, are not teachers free to work with language according to the standard you produced even though the standards they’ve been handed by administration are the Common Core? And are not they also free to engage in conversations with their colleagues about taking the Common Core standards to deeper levels of understanding, which may produce a conversation similar to the one we’re having here?
Susan, I strongly encourage teachers to continue teaching well DESPITE the Common Core. I see, every day, in my work the grotesque distortions of curricula occurring because of these sloppy standards, which are interpreted by the ed book houses as holy writ–worse yet–as the instructions on high for the building of arks. I have at this point worked on some 20 or so Common Core-aligned programs. I have seen firsthand, up close, how writing to these amateurish standards [sci] has created incoherent, junk curricula.
It sounds to me as though you are a dedicated and thoughtful teacher. I always enjoy thoughtful discussion of the teaching of English. I bet that you ARE able to make some magic happen in classrooms. Good for you.
There are a few differences between me and Mr. Coleman, BTW. I have been working as a teacher and textbook writer for more than 30 years. I have spent 30 years thinking very seriously, every day, about curricula and pedagogy in these various domains. I have spent 30 years educating myself in the sciences related to tthe teaching of English–linguistics, cognitive psychology, logic, assessment, statistics, etc. I have spent 20 years training people on pedagogical approaches and on approaches to curricular design, and I have compiled extensive, exhaustive, annotated and sourced lists of these approaches. And all the while, I have read deeply and widely in literature in English. I have contributed to hundreds of textbooks and online programs. I have written many that were national bestsellers. I have designed many, many multi-grade learning progressions. I have thought very carefully about fundamental issues regarding the teaching of reading, writing, grammar, speaking, listening, and thinking, and I have written a great deal on these topics.
And yet I would not DREAM of having the breathtaking presumption to tell every teacher, curriculum coordinator, and curriculum developer in the country what the measurable outcomes in ELA must be–of foisting some set of invariant, one-size-fits-all standards that I have created on everyone else.
If we were to create a metric to measure the correlation of arrogance and ignorance, we could rightly, I think, call it the Coleman.
David Coleman certainly stole the pig while the farmers were sleeping… I’m not such a fan of him myself, and I’ve heard him speak to the standards in person. Harvey Daniels describes Coleman style instruction as “Rigor, with a healthy dose of mortis.”
As I’ve stated in another post here, at this point the Common Core represent teacher’s best, current hope for turning completely away from packaged textbook programs and returning to the kind of inspired pedagogy that has always buoyed teachers over the hurdles into this profession and sustained their practice across wave after wave of education “de-forms”. There is nothing inherent to the standards that would prevent teachers from the depth of understanding you would advocate.
Susan S., still awaiting your response to my earlier questions. I don’t recall all of them but here are a few: how many teachers were involved in the writing of the CC standards? how many experts in early childhood education? were the standards field tested anywhere before they were imposed? do you think the standards and related tests will increase or narrow the achievement gap between kids at the top and bottom? can you explain why “passing rates” in New York dropped to only 30% on the CC tests in NY?
I totally agree with Ashley. It is part of the game of teacher bashing, but at the cost of our children’s education. It is the most serious threat to our national security.
Why are the fools all up there?
Do you know who Diane Ravich is? …little episode in education history called NCLB? …ring a bell?
Susan,
Where have you been? Catch up and start by getting a copy of Reign of Error.
Do YOU know who Diane Ravitch is?
Considering the flip/flopping… I’m not sure any of us knows who she really is. Interestingly, my students have recently arrived at the conclusion that “people don’t really change” after wrestling with several pieces of literature and pop culture articles. Diane seems to know where the money is, I’ll say that much.
You’re ignorant and rude. Yeah there’s lots of money in a daily blog. What a joker.
Susan,it is true. I know where the money is. It is with Bill Gates, Eli Broad, the Walton Family Foundation, the U.S. Department of Education, Michael Bloomberg, Rupert Murdoch, Art Pope (North Carolina), major corporations.
Susan S., I am not sure what your point is. NCLB was written by Sandy Kress (now a lobbyist in Texas for Pearson), Margaret Spellings (now running the U.S. Chamber of Commerce), Rod Paige (when they let him), George Miller (Democratic Congressman from California, still in office), Senator Ted Kennedy (deceased), and John Boehner of Ohio (still in office). I supported NCLB, but I turned against it in late 2006, as I described in some detail in my last book. Did you read it? Congress still supports NCLB or at least refuses to relinquish it, and the Obama administration’s Race to the Top incorporates NCLB’s assumption that Congress should set goals for the nation’s schools based on test scores. But you knew that, right?
Linda, I’m intelligent and sincere. Without calling me names, perhaps you could revisit your statement that Diane is merely a daily blogger. Did she not recently publish a book decrying corporate education reform?
Susan S., you are a troll. I allow some trolls on the blog, because they are amusing. You are not amusing. You are insulting.
Yes, Susan, I checked your URL. It leads nowhere. I get 404, page not found. That means you are using a fake address. Please identify yourself. Also familiarize yourself with the rules of the blog.
1. No expletives with very rare exceptions when they are integral to the story.
2. No insulting me. This is my blog and if you choose to insult me, go elsewhere.
3. No conspiracy theories, especially about the Sandy Hook massacre. It happened. It was not staged.
After taking the period out of Susan’s email link and googling, I’m guessing this could be her. She seems to be passionately engaged in making the standards work for teachers.
Susan Schripsema — http://atfunion.org/2013/07/01/teachers-own-the-common-core-take-over/
Unfortunately, I think Susan is totally missing the big picture and the point of those who criticize the standards, but who also strongly support teachers and their unions and oppose the conservative efforts towards corporate take-over of our schools.
I was at NSF during the time that Diane supported NCLB, so I’m very familiar with the horror stories. I recognize and highly respect her for how much her position has changed since then. Not many would admit so publicly (or even to themselves) how wrong they were.
Liz, the “big picture” for teachers includes the “small sphere” of their classrooms. It is with the people who occupy that small sphere that I stand. For many of us the Common Core standards are less about the process by which they were “foisted” (not my word), and more about the pedagogy teachers may use to bring these attributes to life within students.
My name is Susan S. I teach 8th grade ELA, and I have 20 years of experience in public schools. I also work as a staff developer in pedagogy at my own site and districtwide. I write the blog “Teachers Own the Common Core” at http://www.atfunion.org. I am entirely against “corporate reform” initiatives, and yet I know that many teachers who have recently entered this profession have never known anything else about their practice except what the corporations, the politicians, and the administrators have handed them. Diane, I understand that you no longer advocate for NCLB style education reform; however, that genie is out of the bottle, partly because people with your level of influence did not stand with teachers at the time the policy was being drafted. My disagreement may sound like “insult”, or trolling, but I have only genuine intentions of discussing what I see as the merits of the Common Core standards. I believe that when we uncouple the standards from political reform, they have the potential to unite teachers in returning to pedagogy instead of “program”.
Susan S.,
NCLB would have passed if I never existed. The people who drafted it were part of Education Trust and other DC think tanks. Its architect was Sandy Kress, now working as a lobbyist for Pearson. Ted Kennedy called it “historic.” It passed with nearly 90% of both houses voting for it. And you blame it on me?
Your URL does not connect to any website. Why don’t you supply your real email or website. Mine is public. Why isn’t yours?
Diane, I have not “blamed” you. I merely identified you as a former advocate. Dichotomous thinking may have skewed the intent of my message. To be clear, I advocate for teachers, which means I disagreed with you years ago about the potential for NCLB to close achievement gaps and bring equity to education. I disagree with you now about lack of support for the Common Core. My perspective is that the best we can do for education in our nation is support highly professional, accomplished teachers (outside of address the glaring effects of poverty). The link I provided works every time I click it. I cannot say why you are unable to access my blog. Try a Google search of the Albuquerque Teacher’s Federation. I write the blog. Here in New Mexico, we are fighting with the PED to uncouple testing and value added accountability from teacher evaluation. Perhaps you could weigh in?
Susan,
I oppose high-stakes testing, period. I had the good fortune to spend a week visiting schools in Finland and to see happy youngsters engaged in learning, playing, and creative activities. They never take standardized tests, and they don’t begin school until age 7. I am totally opposed to VAM, linking teacher evaluation to test scores. The right proportion is zero for this linkage. It encourages the worst of high-stakes testing.
If you are angry about NCLB, take it out on George Miller, the Democratic Congressman from California, who still takes pride in that noxious piece of legislation. I renounced it. He didn’t, and he is the ranking Democratic member of the House Education Committee. He is also heavily funded by DFER (hedge fund managers for education reform).They think all children must be tested, and their teachers must be evaluated by those tests; except for their own children, who are not in public schools.
Diane, I get it that you’ve renounced NCLB, and I’m encouraged about the subject of your latest book. I’ve also been following your conversation about the critics and the double-standards for women who speak out against current edu-politics. However, once bitten–twice shy, I’m wondering whether your substantial voice against the Common Core could again be throwing teachers under the bus. My colleagues and I are doing everything within our power to resist the push to further standardize curriculum and instruction, but it doesn’t help that the first word about the Common Core from the pundits has been overwhelmingly negative. Teachers need these standards in order to get out from beneath scripted, corporate-designed textbook programs if only because NOTHING else has stepped up to help us with that challenge. We cannot go backward to the days of 50+ sets of content standards and too much variance of instructional quality from state to state (and even classroom to classroom). Perhaps the Common Core will usher in some unity of teacher voice so that the next level of education reform, based on teacher professionalism this time, can take root.
Susan, do you have any idea how these standards were developed? Do you know anything about the process? Do you know how many teachers were involved? Do you think it might have been a good idea to try them out somewhere before they were imposed on almost every state? Do you know if any early childhood educators were involved in writing them? Or do you just accept on faith that they must be great because someone said so? Do you blindly accept what is offered because so-and-so likes it (Jeb Bush? the U.S. Chamber of Commerce? ExxonMobil? Joel Klein? Arne Duncan?)? What evidence do you have that these standards will make all students college-and-career-ready? What evidence do you have that these standards will not increase the achievement gap? Please tell me. I am listening. I am eager to know. You accuse me of being too credulous about NCLB, and I said I was wrong. I suggest you are too credulous about “standards” whose validity and effects are unknown. Do you think you might be apologizing a decade from now?
The AFT developed review teams for early iterations of the standards. These work teams made substantive changes to the way the standards were organized as the initial drafts from the Achievement Partners were difficult to navigate. There were several K-2 teachers on the AFT ELA CCSS review team, and they found the standards rigorous but developmentally appropriate. In addition I know that Dr. Marilyn Adams and others whose work and research included young children were on the national review teams. There is a lengthy list of community and professional organizations who made a commitment to implementing these standards (including the IDEA partnership). My first work with the standards was during the 2011-2012 school year on the steering committee for my district standards pilot at the 4th and 8th grade levels.
I’ve read the claims that the CCSS were written “without asking us” from early childhood experts and others. To me, these claims sound more like step-sister lament that they weren’t invited to the ball than serious flaws in the development of the standards themselves. Of course, you may see it differently…
Susan, please name the early childhood experts or teachers who were involved in vetting the standards. Please let me know how you feel about a pass rate of 5% for students with disabilities on the CC test in NY. Please name where the CC standards were field tested.
Diane, if you need names of the teachers on the standards work teams, Lisa Dickinson at AFT will provide them to you. As mentioned in their brochure http://www.aft.org/pdfs/teachers/CCSS_brochure2013.pdf there were a number of teachers involved at all levels.
As for “field testing”, my district here in Albuquerque was one of many “pilot” districts associated with the Council of State School Officers to pilot the Common Core. Ours was with 4th and 8th grade, ELA and Math only. During that year, the teachers who self-selected to be part of the pilot were given bi-monthly opportunities to discuss the implications of the CC on instruction and student achievement. We were also given the opportunity to plan together and share the best pedagogy we have with each other. Our district also developed benchmark assessments aligned with the Common Core, but as I’m not an advocate of a “teach to the test” culture, I (and several others) regularly spoke out against this practice. FAT LOT of good that’s done….as you know. Teachers, although primarily responsible for actual instruction, have the most limited voice in education policy.
As for what’s been happening in New York, I see the situation as more the problem of a “testing is learning” culture and the way for-profit education industry has overstepped their rightful place in a free-market system than as a problem with the Common Core standards themselves.
I’ve made my point about uncoupling the standards from so much standardized testing. I’ve also already said my bit about how the CCSS has given teachers a bridge out of corporate textbook programs; although, you and others here would say it’s an inadequate bridge.
Now, would you mind acknowledging that my web link isn’t fake and that I’m not a troll?
And did 70% of your students fail the Common Core tests when they piloted the standards? That is what happened in Kentucky and New York. But maybe Arizona, with its Wild West charter culture, where there are no laws barring conflicts of interest, is far more advanced than the rubes in New York.
Diane, Albuquerque is in New Mexico, and although we have a storied history of lawlessness, rumors abound that everyone here packs a six-shooter, and most of the people I’ve puchased from north of the Mason-Dixon ask whether they need to send my packages international rate, we still have quite a bit of local control over what and how we teach. Or, I should say, we did before the ALEC backed governor appointed her posse of edupolitic reformers to take over the PED and implement 25 additional days of testing in our schools. As for student performance on the pilot exams: those students who were being led like sheeple through the Springboard curriculum, published by the same company that runs the ACT, did better than other students. So, teachers who were working in “failing schools according to NCLB rules” rushed to “get us some of that Springboard.” Our battle then became “good pedagogy with solid literature and a compelling reason to read it is the only springboard students need.” We’ve been working to make that a reality for a few years now.
There is a big difference between reviewing a draft and actually being involved in the drafting. For example, review team can’t address the radical narrowing of the goals of the CCSS compared to high performing countries (even Singapore sees “As speaker, writer, reader, listener and viewer, the learner will respond creatively and critically to literary texts, relate them to personal experience, culture and society, and use language creatively to express self and identity.” as being essential. Now, we don’t).
The changes and improvements between the first draft of the CCRS and the final version were relatively superficial. The many, many basic structural flaws in the CCSS could not be fixed by an external review team after the important decisions had already been made.
I agree that the framers of the CC intentionally left out language related to “self, society, culture.” But they also built in language such that a portion of standards could be added and addressed by individual states, and they included language in the introduction that the standards address the “what” but teachers determine the “how”. For my classroom practice, big ideas about worldview drive everything we do.
great
There is no formula for good writing. That was the one problem I had and it was they wanted me to write to the formula. I am a big reader for a long time and there are many styles including industrial. Read Aviation Week and then read National Geographic. They both have the best writers and photographers anywhere and yet the way they write and the way they take pictures is different and for those specific worlds. I suggest they read both. I like a more direct style and they wanted me to be the other way and I never would do it and those were my lowest grades even though by most standards today they would be high. That is how much it has twisted down.
I say, like all the best I have read, do it the way you feel comfortable doing it. That is what is right for you, only know how to spell and the rules and use them for your way of doing it.
George
On Wed, Oct 16, 2013 at 2:10 PM, Diane Ravitch’s blog wrote:
> ** > Robert D. Shepherd commented: “great” >
I agree, George.
Well said, Tom!
I’ve enjoyed reading about Finnish schools and the way they prepare teachers. That you have had the opportunity to travel to Finland and see their practices firsthand is an example of why I said you are one of those “people up there” or some such… I don’t remember how the respondent phrased it here and I’m too lazy to look it up right now. Teachers rely on people in positions of high influence to look out for us in decision making that sets policy. I agree with you that there are too many people currently looking out for hedge funds and political clout. Who of us wants to be “on the wrong side of history”? I hear you when you ask whether I might be naively giving the CCSS my support. My reply is that I’ve never been to Finland, but I’ve been to Little Rock, Arkansas and I’ve been to Philadelphia and D.C., and I’ve been to Denver. I’m glad to have a set of standards in common with teachers in those places because now we are doing great work in common with each other, supporting each other in our practice, learning more about great teaching with each other. I couldn’t say that three years ago.
Then you should thank Bill Gates, who made CCS possible. He paid for every part of the CC,from the writing to the development to the evaluation to the implementation, to the advocacy and to the promotion.
And he continues to support the development of teacher-generated curricular materials through a grant to the Literacy Design Collaborative. If Bill and Melinda Gates use their substantial resources and voice to support teachers in the work of developing and distributing high quality resources and a platform for on-going dialogue about teaching, then peace be the Gates Foundation.
I understand, Susan, that you adore the Common Core standards, but don’t you feel a little bit sad that one man with his billions bought them, paid for them, owns them, and paid everyone who advocates for them? Remember democracy? Sure you recall that we are a government “of the people, by the people,for the people,” not a people bought and paid for by the Gates Foundation.
“a little bit sad” is an understatement. However, consider that corporate backed discourse and the branding of people is the water we swim through in every aspect of our lives. To expect otherwise at this point may be chasing windmills; although, there are many people who continue to put up a fight. John Steinbeck famously observed in Travels with Charley that every highway exit looks exactly the same regardless of where one is driving. As one of your other respondents has alluded, people who travel within dual worlds create secret language so that the group in power doesn’t detect their subversive actions. Many teachers who entered this profession within the last six years have little to no understanding about pedagogy because all they’ve ever used to teach are scripted textbook programs of “scientifically research based” skill strategy. Gates grant funding has released a monster of a different sort that teachers can ride to slay the Kraken released by NCLB.
Thank you for allowing this discussion. I realize you are a person of conviction, as am I. I hope we have mutually gained additional perspective on the context even though neither of us seems to be moving toward any middle ground.
Well said, Susan!
I have seen firsthand how junk from the Literacy Design Collaborative is being foisted on experienced teachers and destroying what they do in their classes. It is sickening.
Susan, do you realize that teachers are being handed LDC units and being told that they have to implement them, slavishly, as if they were robots? Completely scripted lessons!!! And the kids’ responses to these when they are finished? Gratitude. Gratitude that that is over with. Yeah, we’re teaching them something by that means, certainly. And it’s not pretty, what they are learning.
Robert, “by teachers, for teachers” is a dual-edged sword. As one teacher expressed it to me, ” LDC will tell you what to do, but not tell you what to do.” Her meaning is that teachers are the primary source of instructional choices for their students, not a pre-fabricated lesson plan. I agree with you that LDC modules should never be mandated curriculum and pedagogy. That said, I’ve taught within that framework and written several modules myself. Since my practice is largely “student-centered”, I had to completely revise the sequence of instruction laid out in the LDC module.
Robert, I’m also intrigued by the way ELA teachers persist in their heavily skills based instruction to the exclusion of any conversations about narrative and the human experience, our deep connection to symbolism, or our hard-wiring for irony. If Literature were an iceberg, their children have long since sunk to the floor for lack of vision.
Well said, Susan!
Here’s my problem with LDC: I have on my laptop an outline I created for a book on lesson design that I’ve never gotten around to completing. It covers about 400 distinct designs, all useful for particular purposes.
Susan, I just had a long conversation with one of the most creative, most inspiring elementary school teachers I know. She was sobbing as she was telling me about how she has had to throw out all this wonderful stuff she does each year with her students in order to do mandated LDC lessons. At the trainings, she and her colleagues are being told that they have to follow the scripts EXACTLY. Using these is ruining her classes. All the great work that she had developed to create really engaging, interesting learning communities that kids couldn’t wait to get to is out the window. She is expected to be a parrot. She used to create readers. No more. She’s sick to death and doesn’t thing she can continue in the profession under these circumstances. And believe me, if I shared her classroom approaches with you, you would be thrilled to hear them. She knows how to capture the kids’ imaginations and take them places they had never dreamed of going to, and she gets astonishing work out of them. But no more. She is being expected to be a wind-up toy that spouts an LDC script when its string is pulled.
What a horrific perversion of teacher collaboration that is!
Cheap and easy in our post-industrialization society has the worst of unintended consequences. Please tell your friend to speak truth to power and get herself out from beneath the curricular mandates. Maybe she could enlist parent support and fill the seats at the next school board meeting. I don’t see anywhere in the the LDC materials that their modules were ever intended to become mandatory and leave teachers with no curricular or instructional choices.
Again, well said. About LDC: A voluntary, collaborative portal for sharing lessons, strategies, learning progressions, insights, info on tools–that’s a great thing. The mandating of canned lessons is an abomination.
And there really needs to be a lot more discussion of how kids actually acquire language skills–of what science teaches us about that–and how our understandings of those processes should inform our teaching. NONE OF THAT will happen if everyone is following a set of backward standards and implementing scripts based on those.
This is very well said, Susan:
“I’m also intrigued by the way ELA teachers persist in their heavily skills based instruction to the exclusion of any conversations about narrative and the human experience, our deep connection to symbolism, or our hard-wiring for irony. If Literature were an iceberg, their children have long since sunk to the floor for lack of vision.”
Americans as a whole do not read enough, do not think enough, and do not engage in critical analysis of critical issues enough. We must increase the rigor involved with learning and teaching and thinking. Standards are necessary if we are to operate on a world stage and solve complex problems created by our corporate arrogance and ignorance.
However, the implementation of imposed measures without the required support structures in place is both an educational and social disaster ready to unfold. Far too many of my high school seniors are reading and thinking on en elementary school level. They are no where near college or career ready. They might be ready to be employed at minimum wage in deadend jobs that demand obedience and prohibit true awareness and critical thinking.
Bill,
From what I hear that’s pretty much the only jobs left out there, minimum wage, deadend jobs, that demand obedience. Oh wait, they could Teach For America for a couple of years while they figure out what they really want to do when they grow up.
I am not a fan because I oppose one-size fits all models like the CCSS and the proliferation of testing that will be associated with it…BUT the reality is that in the majority of the states teachers are already having to implement them, whether or not they agree and without much support…so they are already affecting kids in schools, NOW. What ideas do you have about how to help teachers navigate the immediacy of implementation?
Do your best. In most states, the standards will come to look more or less like what you are used to because you just can’t standardize people in a free society. Many states will withdraw from the tests. That frees you to teach what you think is right. This too shall pass.
Katie, you ask an excellent question. Conscientious teachers all around the nation are being forced to try to figure out how to continue teaching well DESPITE the egregious new standards, the new curricula that are distorted egregiously to prep kids for junk tests, the formulaic CCSS-based lesson plans that districts are forcing them to follow, etc.
Here’s some advice: to the extent possible, pay whatever lip service you can to the CCSS nonsense while at the same time teaching what you would teach, in the manner that you would teach it if these amateurish standards and these absurd tests didn’t exist. Say, “Oh, we’re covering standards blah, blah, blah and doing our text-dependent questioning and our PARCC-format performance activities, and go blithely ahead teaching what you would have taught anyway in the manner that you would have taught it. So, for example, if you do a great oral history assignment with your kids, say that it’s in fulfillment of the standard for narrative writing and the standard for research and the standard for discussion. To the extent possible, put the big-box store crap CCSS-aligned curricula from the major publishers on the shelf and make up your own. Use real literature–novels and poems and plays; build an in-class library of these. Concentrate on coherence of content and substantive work over time in particular knowledge domains, and justify what you are doing by reference to the CCSS Publishers’ Criteria. Find knowledge domains that really excite your students and have them do writing about what they have learned.
Henry Louis Gates has written extensively about how enslaved persons had to learn a kind of double-speak, an encoded way of talking that signified one thing to the white overseer and quite another to those who understood the code. To a considerable extent, you will have to practice that kind of double speak with administrators and others who buy into the CCSS and the tests because the people who do aren’t deep thinkers about the teaching of English and are not often willing to go beyond their shallow, amateurish ideas. However, do not miss opportunities to draw attention to the amateurishness of particular standards and test items. It’s important for people to keep hearing just how sloppy these are. Perhaps it will start to sink in.
You owe it to your kids to continue being a great teacher DESPITE the awful standards and tests. This adds burden and complexity to you job, true, but you are in this for the kids. That’s what, finally, matters.
“Use real literature–novels and poems and plays; build an in-class library of these. Concentrate on coherence of content and substantive work over time in particular knowledge domains…” There is nothing in the Common Core standards that precludes this. If a teacher is compliant to the corporate-inspired reform initiatives of their district and state, it will not be for the sake of the Common Core standards, but rather out of obedience to the inappropriate coupling of these standards to flawed value added accountability measures. The CC is not pedagogy; it’s just a list of attributes.
You lost me on compliant and obedient…is that really what you said? Teaching is a profession not a job when one follows specific steps like a rat in a maze or else.
Are you a teacher in the classroom with children now?
Yes, I’m a teacher, and I work with many teachers providing PD in pedagogy. I know what “compliant and obedient” teachers are going through, especially when we start talking about novels, plays, debates, and writing for a blog. Many of the teachers in my district have only ever taught from the boxed resources with “fidelity to program”.
A teacher in the classroom solely responsible for instructing, guiding and mentoring students….not someone who works with other teachers. Do you teach children every day? Are you promoting obedience and compliance to corporate core packaged lessons? That’s what I am trying to figure out.
Absolutely not! Re-read my previous posts. If teachers are complying to corporate reforms, it IS NOT for the sake of Common Core standards. It’s because of all the accountability and testing that has been INAPPROPRIATELY attached to a set of standards. Standards are just attributes; they aren’t pedagogy. I teach a full day of 8th grade ELA, and I provide PD and mentor teachers.
Susan, if you don’t mind my asking, why are you using a fake email address?
I write that blog.
Susan, clearly you have not been examining the CCSS-aligned curricula now being produced. Putting aside the big elephant in the reform room–the fact that the CCSS in ELA evince no understanding of the sciences of language acquisition–it would be enough to move us to back away from this standards-and-testing mania to look at what is happening to U.S. ELA curricula as a result of these “standards.” Those curricula are treating the standards AS the curriculum. Every educational publisher in the U.S. is beginning every project by making a spreadsheet with a list of the CCSS in ELA in one column and a list of the lesson where those are “covered” in the column next to it. The whole notion of curricular coherence is out the window. That would be bad enough, but when one compounds this predictable consequence of high-stakes testing with standards drawn in complete ignorance of how kids actually learn vocabulary and grammar and writing skills and complexes of information within knowledge domains . . . well, one has a real disaster on one’s hands.
Robert, I agree that the CC are not a curriculum, nor are they a pedagogy. I also have zero tolerance for “big box textbook programs,” and in 20 years of teaching ELA I have never used the district purchased textbook programs. That said, I also have no problems with the CC standards. Once again, they are merely a list of attributes, and I find them acceptable. I’ve asked you to provide a sample of a content standard you would support: one that you have written, preferably.
Great, Susan. I am pleased to learn that you are horrified by the ways in which the CCSS in ELA are distorting curricula and pedagogy.
I do not believe in the creation of invariant standards, Susan. I am happy to discuss best practices in the teaching of English, which has been a passion of mine for 40 years.
So, for example, if you do a great oral history assignment with your kids, say that it’s in fulfillment of the standard for narrative writing and the standard for research and the standard for discussion. To the extent possible, put the big-box store crap CCSS-aligned curricula from the major publishers on the shelf and make up your own. Use real literature–novels and poems and plays; build an in-class library of these. Concentrate on coherence of content and substantive work over time in particular knowledge domains, and justify what you are doing by reference to the CCSS Publishers’ Criteria. Find knowledge domains that really excite your students and have them do writing about what they have learned.
This is your best argument on this thread. It doesn’t sound like you have to fake anything because you are doing exactly what the standards are suggesting. Good teaching is just that! Every state has standards.
If a teacher likes a certain curriculum and wants to implement it, that is a prerogative. It is difficult when you know what to do and what works, but are forced to use a new adoption. There are committees, though. Be an advocate for the best materials. When you can do better, you do! When I was given a curriculum, we went through it and focused on what we saw as the strengths, and worked out a way to enhance where it fell short. That took collaboration from teachers sitting down together and talking about teaching and learning for the students we serve. Not everyone comes to our profession with experience. Some are second career professionals, especially in the upper levels. And there is so little time for this type of collaboration in a high school teacher’s day. An aligned curriculum with a good teacher edition is necessary for those that don’t have the resources you might have. I see your point of view and don’t disagree with you, but there is a different perspective on the same topic.
Now, this post is one with which I whole heartedly agree. Perhaps your abuse of Robert arises out of vigorous talent for leadership. Certainly you are not intimidated by and submissive to the scripted lessons many other teachers are complaining of.
Thank you, Harlan! And I agree with your assessment of what Linda just wrote.
Two more things, quickly, Katie:
Your goal is to get kids excited about reading and writing. Never forget that. You will NOT be able to do this with the CCSS-aligned curricula from the big-box publishers, of course. That goes without saying.
And, if you want some quick tutorials on how NOT to teach a lesson to kids, watch any of the ones created by David Coleman.
These will make excellent negative exempla for use in English methods classes.
Some districts are so smitten by a) Gates money and b) standards-and-testing mania that they have implemented extraordinarily intrusive lesson design formats that make it almost impossible to continue implementing coherent curricula in one’s classroom. I hear this from teachers all the time–many, many stories of the great lessons and units that they have had to throw out in order to implement some mandated test prep. Many of those teachers are looking for other jobs. The drones who replace them WILL implement the test prep, with predictable results. It’s all very, very sad. What a tragedy for out country!!!
Social promotion is total insanity. As my friend Lenny says “How am I a high school credentialed history teacher supposed to be held accountable if my students do not have basic reading and comprehension skills when they come to my classroom?” I second Lenny. Are we doing the student a favor? Are we doing society a favor? Don’t think so. This is the “Not my job” game. Someone will fix it later stuff or you take care of it which is the one I hear the most. No, what happened in elementary school is the question through all those grades. How did they year by year get to this point is the question to answer and then to remediate.
Social promotion is the natural consequence of a school system that cares about its students’ collective self-esteem while not having the resources to do anything about its collective socio-economic plight. The test scores, more than anything else, are related to the socio-economic statuses of the parents. So social promotion is not “insanity” at all.
Your friend Lenny can’t be held accountable for standards because the standards aren’t appropriate to the students your friend Lenny was asked to teach. Sure, your friend Lenny can do everyone a favor by teaching meta-learning — teach the students how to learn rather than merely what to learn. But we can’t write meaningful standards for meta-learning, for the same reason we can’t write meaningful standards for mere absorption of facts.
Aw geez, why won’t the kids at lower-class Lexington Elementary School in Pomona learn at the same rate as those at upper-class Chaparral Elementary School in Claremont? Hint: the parents of the Lexington kids move around a lot because they can barely afford the rents or because they do seasonal or temporary work (or drug dealing, whatever) and because household stability is so much more precarious down there in south Pomona. If you want to change the educational system you will have to change the economic system. Stamping your feet a lot and uttering pompous pronouncements about standards and teacher accountability will not do you any good.
As usual these days, things are worse even than most of us imagine. For a truly eye-opening exercise, I strongly urge everyone to read John Taylor Gatto’s short speech, On the Shocking Origins of Public Education:
http://4brevard.com/choice/Public_Education.htm
Private, corporate influence has been a hallmark of compulsory schooling since 1906. Gatto includes some stunningly explicit quotes revealing the purposes this new schooling. I include only a couple here. The first commenter above states that the Core Standards make children feel less intelligent than they are. According to Gatto, this is actually the purpose of modern schooling: “The secret of American schooling is that it doesn’t teach the way children learn — nor is it supposed to. Schools were conceived to serve the economy and the social order rather than kids and families — that is why it is compulsory. As a consequence, the school can not help anybody grow up, because its prime directive is to retard maturity. It does that by teaching that everything is difficult, that other people run our lives, that our neighbors are untrustworthy even dangerous.”
Gatto sounds almost insanely radical at first blush. I urge anyone to refer to his many direct quotes from documents explicitly stating the purposes of the masters of industry who were spending more on developing educational “standards” than the federal government. Here is one from the original Rockefeller mission statement as he and Andrew Carnegie alone began to spend more on public education than the national government: “We shall not try to make these people or any of their children into men of learning or philosophers, or men of science. We have not to raise up from them authors, educators, poets or men of letters, great artists, painters, musicians, nor lawyers, doctors, statesmen, politicians, creatures of whom we have ample supply.”
Lest this seem too long ago, here is another of many stunning quotes taken from such documents as The BEHAVIORAL TEACHER EDUCATIONAL PROJECT of 1967. “the impersonal manipulation through schooling of a future America in which few will be able to maintain control over their own opinions”, an America in which (quoting again) “each individual receives at birth, a multipurpose identification number which enables employers and other controllers to keep track . . .”, “and to expose them to the directors subliminal influence of the state education department and the federal department acting through those whenever necessary”.
It is my opinion that noble, devoted teachers for a long time prevented the successful implementation of the dehumanizing, infantilizing goals of corporate titans. What we see now is attempts to solve this “problem” by taking such control that teachers can no longer practice their occupation on the basis of their personal democratic, humanistic values and rather become automatons raising a generation of malleable automatons.
George,
You must watch Schooling The World……
http://schoolingtheworld.org
It is available on youtube in mini-parts. It has completely changed me. I don’t know what to think of the last 17 years I thought I was serving others. This documentary, along with The Economics of Happiness are game changers for me.
I encourage all intelligent beings to watch both.
So great, Green Party Teacher, to see that this film covers the evil of the schools set up to rob Indian children of their cultures. We have this example before us of one educational “reform” that was EVEN UGLIER than the current standards-and-testing mania.
Thank you so much for the recommendation. As I said, the more one knows, the worse the news. This is an effective and therefore very upsetting film. I am still in the first half, but I wanted to thank you. I will check out the Economics of Happiness later.
As to what you have been doing, we are all complicit in this and in so many other sins in these dark days of empire. Yes, we need to face this fact, but I don’t intend to become a Jain and refuse to walk because walking kills microscopic creatures in the soil. We do what we can; simply maintaining a presence and bringing what humanity and subversion we can has to be enough for now. At least that’s how I try to live with myself.
If you haven’t read Gatto, I strongly suggest you do some reading. His collection of essays from various periods is a great place to start. As a former NY State teacher of the year, he doesn’t just critique–he knows how education should look.
If there had been any real vetting of the CCSS in ELA–these supposed “standards”–then experts in how kids learn to read, write, speak, listen, and think–in how, for example, they acquire the grammar and vocabulary of a language; in decoding of texts; in what a coherent learning progression in literary studies might look like; in the wide variety of attainments that constitute writing ability or rhetorical ability; etc., would have had their say. An enormous opportunity was lost when the creation of these national standards [sic] was turned over to someone with, clearly, no depth of knowledge of either the relevant sciences or of best pedagogical practices in these areas. The lack of vetting of these standards [sic] before they were foisted on the nation is inexcusable.
I am encouraged by the vibrant give and take I’ve read here. I was recently contacted by a former student, now middle school teacher in NY where the Expeditionary Learning scripted modules are rolling out as “adopted” by his district. As many of you know doubt know, it’s a heart-breaking and traumatic time for some teachers with punitive or frightened administrators and few advocates. My student asked me how he might fight back rather than play along. For those of you like Robert Shepherd and others here who are engaged, what evidence, research, etc., would you recommend he bring to his board? He and his colleagues don’t feel like they can wait for this travesty to run its course.
I will NEVER vote for additional funds for the school system because of ANY involvement with Common Core, partial or otherwise. It is PURE POISON!
There are some very good comments, well put together and cogent, but what it seems, is that many may be missing the main point, even though it is only slightly touch upon.
It is this: Any time a government issues mandates to be adhered to by the public, it always creates a dichotomy where arguments on either side will never come to see eye to eye, thus it allows ALWAYS for the human element to sink to the lowest common denominator.
We would have hoped that a compilation of additional mental capacity in any group of minds, would enhance an overall bright idea, but alas, when it comes to the supposed controlling minds in government, it proceeds into the opposite.
Remember; When government is involved in anything, the outcome will always be designed to encompass that lowest common denominator. I believe it to be part and parcel to our heritage where we don’t want to believe that there are some of us more capable than others, thus we fault the bright to try and enhance the not so bright.
This is the legacy of the ignorant liberal mind, who with their Phd’s try and sell their personal pet concepts as the latest innovative strategy. What most are telling you is that they also subscribe to a socialist agenda, believing erroneously that only the Central Planners in government with their supposed bright minds can be correct in interpreting how humans “Should Be”.
These men and women are the true Sociopaths !!!
What an articulate article. I’m extremely concerned for the well-being of this country and direction of education. This information isn’t at the top of any news cycle not the opposing view Explaining all the many aspects of Common Core and an additional push for socialism. Keeping informative literature from young people is a way to indoctrinate ideology.
The common core standard has brought up an uglier monster called the IEP.
For the children that can’t keep up. It is the way schools like Vestal in NY
keep the school testing scores so high. Many children are being labeled as disable
and put on IEPs. Now the school faculty can assist these children to get a better score.
These children are being left behind and actually are learning much less the the rest of
the children. Out of 468 children on IEPs in 2011 Only 1 tested out.
The special ed directed seemed very proud of this.
IEP as I was told by the school district was to help the children get caught up.
My son brought home home work in almost every class ever day. Two chilldren
I know that are on IEPs brought home work home no more than once a month.
How does this help these children? And by the way. Being labeled as disable now seems
to be a plus. 10 to 15 years from now it will again be used against you in the future in the educationalfield.
Here’s another thing that I simply cannot stomach about the CCSS in ELA: These encourage a barbarous reduction of the study of literature to the “mastery” of a few randomly chosen abstract “skills.” It seems to me that anyone who can think that such a list captures much of significance in literary studies really needs to be in a different field altogether. In our time, major poets are published in editions of 2,000 copies, which are bought by a few libraries. Byron and Tennyson were among the best-selling authors of their times. Why? What happened? Well, one of the reasons for this sad state of affairs is the sort of crude teaching of literature that reduces the reading of “Sailing to Byzantium” to making a list of the symbols that the author used. I used to type poems out as prose pieces to give to my students because they had all learned to despise poetry so intensely because of that sort of terrible teaching, which the CCSS in ELA will do nothing but perpetuate.
And that would be bad enough, but this particular list, the list of literary skills that makes up the CCSS in ELA for Reading Literature, is simply inept. It doesn’t demonstrate any literary scholarship or understanding on the part of the “standards” authors. There’s a breathtaking amateurishness and tone-deafness to the CCSS in ELA, as though they had been written not by experts in literary studies but by undergraduates based on very crude notions of what “study of literature” might mean. If the authors knew more about literature and its origins and history and its forms, they would have been able to envision more clearly how a skills map covering this area of human endeavor might unfold over 12 years’ time, building upon true literary fundamentals of a number of different kinds. (Hint: phylogeny should recapitulate ontogeny here.) These standards instantiate no new insights into such a rational progression of literary study. One might as well have thrown darts at a handbook of literary terms from some hack-written junior-high-school lit text from one of the big-box publishers. I look at the CCSS in ELA and I see no coherence and no instructional vision. I see, instead, randomness and misconceptions and glaring lacunae and crude, unexamined assumptions about matters that are actually quite interesting, quite deep, and quite controversial—assumptions that they authors have made as though they were completely oblivious that they were making assumptions at all or that these were at all controversial.
And what happened to the writing standards? Looks to me like the authors ran out of time or money or energy and just said to hell with it and made a list of three “modes” and copied and pasted it into each grade level of the “standards,” and, of course, doing that just encourages the sort of awful, formulaic five-paragraph theme writing that everyone has been doing since NCLB turned most writing instruction in the U.S. into instruction in producing the canned essay response for the state test. News flash: most writing is narrative writing. News flash 2: most of the rest of it is multimodal. News flash 3: there are reasons why it is multimodal. And that five-paragraph theme in one of the three modes sort of crap is the antithesis of decent writing—it’s what any writing teacher worthy of the name teaches students TO AVOID DOING.
The CCSS in ELA looks to me as though it could be called a very competent list of every hackneyed misconception in English studies.
Writing has to start with having something to say. And then form has to follow function. We’re not going to get THERE by teaching formulas for producing five-paragraph themes.
phylogeny should recapitulate ontogeny here.
I believe the standards progression does meet this criteria. I’m not sure I follow your argument. Again, you bite, but fail to clearly articulate or argue your point with any specificity.
Granted, I don’t profess to be as smart or well read as you, but I would like to know exactly where the lacunae may be. You throw darts with no target, too. I’m simply applying the very standards to your argument that you deem abhorrent: Cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text, including determining where the text leaves matters uncertain. You say there are holes, but do not offer what is missing.
I’m starting to think you are nothing more than a pompous windbag with an expansive vocabulary and over inflated ego.
Just for the record, where have you been published? What makes you such an expert? What have you contributed academically to your district, state or peers in the forms of professional journals or development? What makes your opinion one with any credibility? What makes you a thought leader in our profession? Diane has a valid argument as to what is going to be done with the results of the assessment and legitimately questions if these standards close or widen the gap. She is a well respected author with over 40 years in academia. She has published books, is an adviser to Presidents, and is taken seriously because she makes her point without bombastic language. You could learn a thing or two from her. I know I do. That is why I am following her blog and read this article when it was published in The Atlantic. I have written 6 textbooks for my school district, one national text book, currently in permissions, and am working on textbook number two for one of those publishers you have cavalierly dismissed. I have led professional development on a local, state, national, and international level. I have written over 200 lesson plans which are accessed by 17K teachers in my district. I’m not going to bitch about the standards; I’m going to work with them and try to help my colleagues refine their craft. It matters not if I like them or not. These are the standards by which we teach the material we choose to present. There is no demand that we teach any specific text. The exemplar texts are just that, exemplars. They are not mandates.
While I appreciate that you have an opinion, I am underwhelmed over the course of this blog as to how poorly you develop your arguments. You do like to throw the big words around to make you sound like your opinion is correct, perhaps it is; however, you don’t provide evidence through meaningful examples to help the lesser plebes like me understand your point.
In the mean time, put your big boy pants on, suck it up, and pray that you retire soon so that you can enjoy some good old fashioned schadenfreude. I get the feeling you would enjoy that.
Well, that was quite a speech, Linda. If you would like the brief resume, here it is:
I have worked as a teacher, writer, and editor of textbooks and online educational materials for thirty years. I served as Executive Vice President and Director of Development at a major textbook publishing house. I am the primary author of Grace Abounding: The Core Knowledge Anthology of African American Literature, Music, and Art; of Writing Research Papers (McDougal, Littell); of Introduction to Computers and Technology (EMC/Paradigm); and of a series of social studies supplementary textbooks on document-based questions. I have been a contributing author, often one of the primary authors, of many, many market-leading K-12 textbook programs in literature, grammar, composition, and speech. I was editor-in-chief of a basal literature program for grades 6-12. I was the lead editor of the two bestselling speech textbooks for middle school and high school. I was the editor, and author of the study apparatus, of a series of study editions of classics in American and British literature, including Shakespeare’s Hamlet and The Tempest, Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, Twain’s Huckleberry Finn, Shelley’s Frankenstein, and Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass. For the Shakespeare texts, my work included writing all the glosses on the Elizabethan English. I was the primary author of a daily oral language program for grades K-8. I have created the outlines and learning progressions for many of the country’s best-selling textbook programs in the English language arts. I have written and edited high-school and college-level texts on writing, research, computer science, literature, grammar, government, and history. I have edited textbooks and popular works by many of our country’s leading scholars, in a number of fields. I have done ghost writing of a number of best-selling trade titles, including works on Hindu philosophy, physics, learning disabilities, and the psychology of synesthesia. I have played key roles in the planning, editing, and writing of online programs in writing, literature, elementary mathematics, and adult vocational education. The Canadian Ministry of Education requested permission from me to reproduce and disseminate to all English teachers in the country an essay that I had written for the Core Knowledge Foundation on approaches to the teaching of grammar. I’ve published a lot of short fiction and some poetry. When I was sixteen years old, I won a National Academy of Arts and Letters award in Creative Writing (for poetry), and I have earned my living as a writer and editor all my life. My publications list, single-spaced, runs to eight pages, and I have spent 30 years studying English language arts curricula and pedagogical approaches. Although not formally trained as a linguist, I have had a lifelong passion for the study of syntax and have devoted many years to this study. My other major research interests include continental philosophy, discourse analysis, hermeneutics, ancient religion, and oral traditions. I recently completed and published a modern verse rendering of the Sundiata, the traditional national epic of Mali. I have created the outline for, but not yet written, a comprehensive textbook on pedagogy, on the many, many possible approaches to textbook design.
But I would not dream of cooking up some invariant list of “standards” and foisting it on every teacher, curriculum coordinator, and curriculum designer in the country. I wouldn’t be so presumptuous.
On standardization:
“There’s no bullet list like Stalin’s bullet list.” –Edward Tufte
“I believe in standardizing automobiles, not people.” –Albert Einstein
You are becoming amusing, LKS. Phylogeny recapitulate ontogeny, eh? Are the CCSS the species or the being?
Linda, I suspect from what you have written that you are a great teacher. I sincerely wish you the best in creating and implementing engaging, fruitful instruction based on the CCSS bullet list. You are right that my comments about the CCSS in ELA are overwhelmingly negative. There’s actually quite a lot in the Publishers’ Criteria documents that I approve of. But I have been horrified by the CCSS-based curricula I’ve seen, and I detest standardization, and I honestly believe that a lot of the standards themselves instantiate backward, discredited notions about how to teach in the various domains that they cover. The implied approaches to the teaching of grammar and vocabulary horrify me. So does the three modes approach to writing. So do many of the specific literature standards, which make controversial assumptions without recognizing that these are controversial. I work in the educational materials industry. I’m seeing how the CCSS in ELA is being turned into the curriculum–a set of bullet points to be “covered.” I see this every day, and it angers me that kids are being subjected to such narrowed curricula and pedagogy. I don’t want their love of learning to be stolen from them by English classes that have become test prep that works its way down the bullet list. I feel very strongly about that. Kids are being harmed by this standards-and-testing juggernaut. A lot of what I’ve seen done in the name of the standards looks to me like child abuse.
Harlan, Linda was quoting me. I had used that old phrase as a way of suggesting, metaphorically, that one way to approach teaching kids about narrative structures and about much else in literature would be to begin, in the early grades, with archetypal forms from the very beginnings of the human literary endeavor. The idea would be to begin with basic narrative forms and then treat themes and variations on these developed over time. And, of course, we need to rediscover in our classes the oral and performance roots of literature, and this is best done, I think, in the early grades. It’s difficult in these blog posts to go into details.
I knew this was going to be fun.
Robert, Your resume is amazing, and I am honored to meet you virtually. With 40 years of experience, I would hope it would look like that. Very cool stuff. You and I agree more than we disagree. For instance: Sub-standard curricula at the high school level. Our schools were “provided” a curriculum by our district and when our scores started to drop, so did the curriculum. Committees try to get it right, but they don’t always. You have been on enough of them to know. The PD has been substandard and not practical. Taking a narrative form and developing it is an important skill that should be honed, as is oral and performance roots. So is taking a persuasive form, and learning to write cogent arguments.
I believe this speaks right to the heart of the standards when looked at collectively. This is where we disagree. That’s okay. I don’t complain about the standards because these are the standards by which I am supposed to teach and have been hired to write. I am trying to be pragmatic about them and take the good about them and work with them. I understood the metaphor in your argument, and feel that the standards do build on one another from year to year. I am asking for clarification as to why you don’t think they do. What is your idea of a bullet list? Like, I covered that standard, check? Is it fair to criticize that which you have not seen? I’d be happy to share a sample lesson plan that I use for training. Hit me up if you want my email. I’m open to constructive criticism.
There are many in positions of leadership who still need to grasp what these standards mean and they aren’t necessarily qualified to dictate curriculum. The PD keeps telling us what the standards are and how to unwrap them. But how much time has been spent taking all teachers in all contents through the actual planning process of close reading of complex text, with language, writing, speaking, listening, and technology integration in a teacher friendly format that doesn’t overwhelm the new teacher, and make the veteran teacher go hrumph? So your frustration is warranted. Just consider the audience here on this blog. We are classroom teachers from all over the US and from disciplines beyond English. We are concerned parents who want our kids to get a great education from a well-trained teacher who is going to treat our children with dignity, respect, and high expectations. It’s not that I disagree with you completely. I am just a little disappointed in the bashing without concrete solutions. The teaching disparity is too great from district to district, state to state, and within a school. There should be standards. Perhaps not these, as you would wish, but what in its stead?
Your arguments are lofty and they caught my attention more than anyone else on this blog. You can’t blame me for challenging you. You are too delicious to pass up. I still think your posts make you sound like a disgruntled old windbag ;), so thank you for just keeping it real in this reply. Except, now I am saying it with a twinkle in my eye.
(I loved Daily Oral Language, and used the daily grammar activities every day, but that was middle school. I showed it to the 9th grade teachers and they all wanted copies. Trust me, that one is still getting circulation!)
Linda, again, I suspect that you are a fine teacher and that you are making these “standards” work for you. I have very serious objections to the standards, in just about every domain, but these are not expressible in sound bites. I am working on a book that will spell out precisely how I think they go wrong. The promulgation of national standards is a VERY SERIOUS undertaking. These standards will have, are having, dramatic consequences for pedagogy and curricula. Every textbook publisher in the country is now starting every project by making a spreadsheet that lists these standards in one column and the lesson where each is “covered” in another. So, if particular “standards” instantiate misconceptions about the teaching of English, and I think that very many of them do, those will get propagated throughout the K-12 educational system. I vehemently oppose the creation of invariant, one-size-fits-all standards for many reasons, many of them quite practical, but I won’t go into those here. But if we are to have national standards, then these should have been vetted by experts. The CCSS in ELA were not. I will be quite happy to engage in discussion of specific “standards” and discuss just where I think they go wrong. But the point is that NO ONE should foist one set of standards on everyone else. This undertaking is too important. You say that I do not offer alternatives. Here’s the alternative: Competing standards that are vigorously debated and continuously improved, ones that individual districts can adopt and adapt based on those national debates about best practices in the teaching of English.
I deal every day with publishers who cut off any discussion of important innovations in pedagogy and curricula with this mantra: That’s not what the “standards” say. And they are right. Much of what we should be doing in our classrooms is precluded by these standards, especially if they are taken, as the publishers are taking them, as holy writ.
No one died and made David Coleman and Susan Pimentel king and queen of English language arts instruction in the United States. They were appointed to this position by a small group of plutocrats, and they were way in over their heads.
Like in a game of poker, we deal with the hand we’re dealt. Since the majority of my teaching experience has been in Florida (with two years in Washington Heights, NY), I only had the Florida standards to compare to the CCSS. I’m working with them. Do I love them? No, but I like the expectation that reading, writing, speaking, listening, and language are not done in isolation and in only one department.
You are right about the publishers wanting to ensure that all the standards are covered multiple times and my new publisher is trying to spreadsheet my material too. Obvious attempts at accountability and compliance. I agree with you on that point about meeting a bulleted standard. But this is something curriculum supervisors are looking for. More troublesome, publishers are looking at their current publications and trying to force their square holed plans into the round hole opening. Slapping a label on something and saying it aligns to the new standards is misleading and upsetting. I don’t write that way. I choose great pieces that are thematically related or chronologically similar and start from there.
Granted that we are both English teachers and have spent the better part of our careers teaching students how to tackle great works of literature head on, examine the craft, and write in response to it. However, this is not the overall goal of the standards as I see them. While I understand your frustration from the English department’s point of view, these ELA standards for literacy (reading, writing, speaking, listening, and language) are an attempt to take the burden solely off English teachers and to spread the accountability for these literacy standards in all content areas. Could the physics teacher take a section from Stephen Hawkings, A Brief History in Time, and develop a CC lesson for their students that would integrate all or part these literacy bullets? Or could a biology teacher present an article on stem cell research and help students develop a good argument on the ethical use of these cells? It is important to take off the English department filter and look at what is needed at your school in your history, science, world language, math, career/tech, and electives departments where literacy skills also need to thrive. Would these other professionals with limited experience in literacy instruction benefit from teaching to these standards?
Sure, we were force fed these untested, unvetted standards. Got it. That comes across loud and clear. I just don’t see them going anywhere anytime soon, so I am doing my level best to make them work for me, my students, and the teachers with whom I support at my school.
It took me a while to warm up to what David Coleman was peddling. I agree he now carries a lot of power. When I vehemently disagreed with his ideology based on all I had come to know about improving literacy skills for our struggling readers (my area of expertise), I decided to sit back and try what he suggested. Scale back the prefatory teaching and abridged text and allow students to simply read, and even struggle with complex text on their own. It seemed counter-intuitive and maladapted to me. But then I thought, what if he has something there? When we pick up a book at an airport or at our local book seller, what do we go on? The title, the author, the annotation, a recommendation? I think of the great care author’s take to come up with the great opening line. Why all the lead up? So, we started to do things “his” way, to see, to experience things in the DC way. It actually worked. Students got the gist, the big ideas after struggling for a few minutes. Then we took the time to look at the background, build in the supports, and take some time with the author’s craft, tie it to something trending on Twitter or Instagram or find a video from United Streaming that goes along with the topic. Did my low socio-economic students complain when they read Oedipus Rex and Hamlet? Heck ya. But they got through them and felt pretty proud of themselves for even getting through the selection. Next thing we knew the students were quoting the bard. We have tried this same technique in the content areas as well. History departments are asking students to read seminal US documents and analyze them in terms of their rhetoric, pacing, validity, etc. The way I interpret DC’s goal with these standards is to make AP level curriculum available to all students regardless of ability. This does not mean that students will respond at that level, but they should have the exposure. We don’t do things “his” way all the time, but with selected texts. It is just a methodology, not a mandate.
You are so right that this is a serious issue. This is a healthy debate now and you are making more sense to me. I like specifics, not abstracts. When it comes to textbook design, there are many approaches. When I sat down with the original publisher (since closed down the doors last year in NY, and my manuscript was picked up by a different publisher) we talked about what was available at that time and we dissected what worked in their design and where it fell short. We sat with the director of education from NYU teacher college, who vetted content, pacing, delivery, and soundness. We then provided the manuscript to 8 different reviewers in 8 different states who provided feedback. Through this collaborative process we are creating material that is more fluid, dynamic, and aligned with what high school teachers are looking for. Small publishers have the luxury of fine tuning a product for a niche market. My focus is on the kid who doesn’t get it. It also included built in supports for a teacher who does not come to our profession with the same level of experience as you and me. We have to think out of the box to meet the needs of our clients who are tech savvy, social network media hounds, dealing with the immediacy of information at their fingertips. We fight our students over smart phones in the classroom when those are the very tools that should be integrated into the lesson. Edmodo, Poll Everywhere, Khan Academy, Ask Cha Cha, Twitter to name a few are powerful teaching and learning tools for us. Just search a hashtag for whatever you are teaching: #TKAM, #beowolf, #johnsteinbeck, #gunsgermssteel. This sort of innovation may be a cut off discussion of which you speak. These big box publishers aren’t in the trenches and their distance is noted in their product.
If you are interested in looking a sample chapter and lesson plan, hit me up. hdsander71@yahoo.com. Now that I have this dialogue, I would like to hear your critique of what we are trying to accomplish. Challenge my bullets! This is how we grow. As I learn from you, you learn from me. A good debate is crucial in all content areas, which is why Socratic Discussion is also part of my textbook design! 😉
The “Common” Core State Standards in ELA are common, certainly. They are a list of hackneyed half truths and misconceptions about studies in English. They are common in the old sense of being vulgar or base–what one would expect from “man-in-the-street” interviews about what ought to be the measured outcomes in English language arts. They are common in the sense that Einstein had in mind when he said that “Common sense is that layer of prejudices laid down before the age of eighteen.”
OK… So I finally gave in today and dug through the archived version of CCSSI’s original benchmarking documents for the ELA standards and dumped the text into a Google Doc. I got through essentially the first half of reading standard 1, doing minimal reformatting. It is about 7 pages of state and international references, with a couple missing from the Internet Archive.
The document thus far is here: http://bit.ly/H3WvCO
No, it is not particularly easy to digest, which is one reason I’ve not tried to deal with it before, but it is the best way to REALLY start a conversation about the Common Core ELA standards. That conversation will start with WTF? and go from there.
So… getting the rest of this together in a usable form is mostly a matter of cutting and pasting and reformatting. I might be able to grind through this a bit at a time, but it is also the kind of thing that a little crowd-sourcing among obsessives could knock out pretty quickly.
Any takers? Comments?
A voluntary, collaborative portal for sharing lessons, strategies, learning progressions, insights, info on tools–that’s a great thing. This sort of mandating of canned lessons is an abomination.
Thank you Susan, creativity is not all being the same but looking for alternate avenues of knowledge and understanding. That is “Thinking Outside of the Box” and if we do not do this we will all lose as the world goes totally out of control. All physical things have a point of no return like those species we have eliminated. Now we are in the position for the first time in our history of wiping ourselves out and the earth slowly coming up with something new and will see if it exterminates itself. The earth has time on its side, we do not.
Harlan, when you come down from whatever fantasy drug your were on in reality just listen to sage advice from someone who has known more than most of us ever will my friends grandfather “I hear real good, but I see a whole lot better.” Obama, when you see, not hear him is in reality a right wing corporate privatizer and war monger. Stop the right wing diatribe as the so called, in reality now democrats are right wing for the most part, of the other side also. This country since Clinton signed the 1996 Telecommunications Act and eliminated a real “Free Press” has through the now totally corporate, in cahoots with the government, has twisted enough messages into peoples heads with the nitrous button being Fox, no news, to get them to believe they are doing this taking away of our rights and money with the results of Clinton’s 1999-2000 Banking Deregulation Acts ongoing financial crisis. Is this enough yet from a “Real, not Fake Democrat.” No “Real Democrat” would ever do what Obama has done and sold us out. I will ask the right wingers this “When are you going to call your crooks crooks also? You cannot even begin to convince us of anything you will say if you will not be honest about your own guys also. What happened to a Republican Teddy Roosevelt and the anti-trust legislation? How about FDR, and do not forget the real person who got us these benefits, Eleanor Roosevelt. How many of you know the inside on that one? The we get lucky and get Truman and again, this time a republican, Eisenhower, who republicans hate now, then lucky again with Kennedy and they had to kill him and his brother, I cringed at Nixon, but now he would be a liberal with the EPA and all, Then triple tragedy with Reagan tripling the debt, dealing with terrorists and killing mass quantities in Central and South America, then the first Bush with more debt and war and Clinton saying, like Obama, I love you while all the time plotting to rip us off. And now we are here with democrats way right of Center and Republicans saying they are in the middle when in reality they are right of “Attilla, The Hun.” Let’s all get real here and not be “True Believers.” I saw enough of that too up close with cults in the past. Remember Jimmy Jones? That is what happens to “True Believers.”
It’s been really interesting to read up on this issue. I’m 20 years into teaching (elementary ed in Northern CA) and I have had the good fortune to work in a progressive area that has allowed me to teach outside the constraints of the “big box curricula”. However, I am well aware that most teachers and worse, students, have had to contend with deadening, mandated scripted curricula, and a test-driven reality.
I have to admit that I was unaware of the disturbing background regarding the genesis of the Common Core. I am also bracing for the corporate curriculum and testing that is no doubt in production right now. But, at least as it’s been introduced in my district, the CC seems to give teachers permission to slow down, teach more creatively and deeply, and teach from a more student-centered place. I wonder how much depends on local interpretation?
Good point, Susan. There do seem to be some dedicated teachers who are taking seriously the CC rhetoric about teaching more creatively and deeply. Unfortunately, most of the implementations that I have seen treat the CCSS in ELA as a curriculum and have responded to it with dreadful canned scripts for teachers to follow.
I have many teacher friends who are excited about Common Core going into effect here in TN this year. The odd thing is those friends who have left teaching over the past few yrs cite common core implementation as a big reason for leaving. Not sure what was put in the water over the summer, but I too question this decision. It is sad that money dangled in front of people is all it takes instead of what is best.
Teachers pick up the clues to survival at the first staff meeting of the year. Everyone waits to hear what the current year’s administrative folly is, and then by lunch everyone ostensibly is on board and enthusiastic. All we wonder is how closely we’ll be watched. If supervision is light, we go back to doing what has worked for us in the past and just put on a dog and pony show for the visits. If supervision is heavy, we do the best we can to jump through the flaming hoops because we have a mortgage, a car payment, and two children in college. When one is a government employee, one knows better than to put pepper of the nose of someone in power over us. And one hopes one can do work that is “good enough for government work.” In private education in my experience the mantra is “get the job done; you decide how.” Results matter. Can a kid subtract three digit numbers? Figure out how best to teach it to Melinda or William. Just get it done. In the one charter I know, the teachers work as hard as in a private school. The tuition cost comes out of public taxes. So far, nothing there not to like. Just impressions though, not facts.
I notice more math teachers are excited than English teachers or elementary teachers. Can you be more specific on the grade level and subject of your teacher friends? My niece is considering putting her daughter in kinder at a private school in Tennessee next year because of the lack of fun and exploration in kindergarten other parents are experiencing.
Let’s get over the CC. It simply says what career and college ready students should be able to do by the time they are ready to graduate from school. A teacher will have more instructional choices with the CC and that is great for good teachers.
Look at this ELA standard:
Read closely to determine what the text says explicitly and to make logical inferences from it; cite specific textual evidence when writing or speaking to support conclusions drawn from the text.
When did a good teacher NOT require this?
You need to turn your attention to the assessments that are being written by PARCC and Smarter Balanced. Do you know that students will be given a number at the end of 11th grade– 1-4 or 1-5 with 4 and 5 deemed career and college ready? Really “college ready” because career is a relative term.
Look at some of the sample released items. What is going to happen when 1s, 2s, and 3s are all from high need schools?
The testing organizations are also writing optional formative assessments to prepare for the big test. What if state one buys the formative assessments but state two opts out?
This is about money. Those of us in higher ed need to raise our voices about the assessments and labeling.
Michelle, When I read that standard in the CCSS I also went, “Duh, who doesn’t do that.” The problem goes much deeper, however. As folks have noted above, misapplications, even well meaning ones, are already happening. Reduced reading of literature, boring lessons based on “text dependent questions”, sparse activation of prior knowledge, abusive use of Lexile levels in the lower grades. Pile on top of that, the development of these standards with no field testing and minimal input from teachers and you have a recipe for disaster.
One problem with the standard you cite is that it is poorly aligned with the grade level instances of the same standard. For example, the 11th and 12th grade literature version is:
“CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RL.11-12.1 Cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text, including determining where the text leaves matters uncertain.”
Why is there any difference at all between the 11th and 12th grade standard and the “college and career” version? Why does the grade level version seem more “rigorous?” Why does the grade level version seem to more narrowly circumscribe the purpose of citation?
Is this anything more than careless editing? Is there any official commentary on individual standards at all?
Tom,
Some states are considering legislation to make the 12th grade and in some cases the 11th grade year optional. Dual enrollment with a community college is a common occurrence. The PARCC ELA summative assessment is given at the end of the 11th grade year.
The standard hinges on the complexity of the text.
So… what? College ready at the end of 11th grade is the new standard? The grade level standards aren’t actually important compared to text complexity? Is any of this written down anywhere?
Another reason to be concerned about the CCSS. Could misguided early reading policies widen the achievement gap?
http://russonreading.blogspot.com/2013/10/could-common-core-widen-achievement-gap.html?spref=fb
I am a literacy specialist in Broward at one of the lowest performing high schools in the county. When I first started to educate my self on the new standards, I started to think that my students would never be able to work up to these standards. This is when my out of the box thinking started to kick in. We took the lead in our district to change the intensive reading curriculum to include at least one piece of highly complex grade level text per unit. Many of the selections came from Appendix B, of which your book, The American Reader, was the source for many of the selections in the upper levels. By using the standards as our guide for lesson planning, teachers actually started to see a change in the students’ performance with some of the exemplar texts and others of equal rigor. They could identify the big picture, the author’s craft, and integrate it to new information through a variety of different media. These students who have traditionally scored low on our state FCAT actually liked the challenge and the maturity of the lessons. Our Non AP teachers hadn’t been versed in rhetoric or fallacy, so we had some PD to do. Now that we have been at it for two solid years, we have created an amazing library of well constructed lessons that challenge our students appropriately. Would we still likely fail the assessment? Probably. But, we didn’t water down their curriculum just because they have a low score on a previous state test. We just take our time with the rigorous text and scaffold the necessary support.
What are teachers really afraid of in the long run? If we use the standards, (we need good standards), and combine it with sound pedagogy, the students will still demonstrate growth. Ultimately, that is what we want for our charges. I can’t say that these standards are such a bad thing. They are really workable standards if you just take the time to plan with them in mind.
I like the standards because I feel there is a logical progression from the grade levels, at least for the literacy aspect. Our teachers are relying more and more on SIRS for leading issues and pro/con articles to help our students write better arguments. They are moving out of their comfort zones and including more quarterly projects with tech integration.
What I see as the danger here is the teaching of these literacy standards in isolation. The test results come back and on this year’s assessment, students might be weak in identifying the author’s point of view or rhetoric. Next thing you know, the focus of the lessons becomes solely author’s purpose, to the exclusion of the standards that follow it, like evaluating the argument and identifying the fallacy in it.
On a personal note, I have read The American Reader cover to cover. It is a well balanced anthology with diverse opinions. It chronicles America. When using this book with my high school students, does this mean I should dive right in and ask a struggling reader to read Garrison’s Liberator? No. I massage the student into the topic by making them familiar through other texts on the same topic. Then, I give them a few minutes to struggle with the text. We take the time to look at the three proofs of his plea. Add to that, Frederick Douglass’ appeal to keep the anti slavery society open. the comparisons of these two texts in context helped students see the same topic from two different perspectives. Just because a student has a reading difficulty, doesn’t mean he has a thinking difficulty. From there, we asked students to research their own slavery footprint and challenged them with the question, Does the purchase of consumer goods make you a participant in the trafficking of humans for slavery and organized crime? This is what we believe it means to teach with standards driven instruction. This kind of lesson planning is what is needed. There has to be a passionate, well trained teacher in front of these students who knows the best order in which to teach a difficult piece of text. This requires professional development, professional learning communities, and lesson study to increase the efficacy of our instruction. It also means that teacher planning time needs to be respected by administration and respected by the teachers themselves who don’t always have the best time management skills.
The standards themselves are not the issue. The assessment is, as long as it is tied to performance. For the teacher, like me and many of my colleagues who do want to improve their craft, the standards are forcing many like us to up our game. For the teacher who has simply survived year after year on the same tired lesson plans and isn’t interested in the government’s latest panacea, I feel a little sorry for them. Their hubris is so great that they don’t feel there is anything new under the sun that they need to learn. I’ve been at this for 25 years. I still have a lot to learn, but with the new standards, regardless of the assessment and outcome of the results, I am ready to tackle the core head on.
My suggestion for the actual teachers who follow this blog, get on board. Regardless of your opinion, these standards aren’t going anywhere soon.
Linda, good for you, better for your students.
I had actually read this article in The Atlantic. It was through an Edmodo group called the Anthology Alignment Project that a teacher posted the link to the blog. Not all of us view these standards as a negative thing. What we are most concerned about it is the lack of quality training available. I am underwhelmed at our state roll out. They offered one lesson plan template called the Comprehension Instructional Sequence as a means to teaching with the CCSS in mind; however, the CIS template does not rely on the reading standards for lesson delivery. That happens incidentally. I have found a concrete/sequential way for any content area teacher to plan with the standards in mind, and through collaboration and PLCs my teachers are starting to see the scaffolded nature of the standards themselves. Single room school houses are not going to cut it. We must work together to plan, observe each other, provide feedback, and figure out a way to deliver instruction in an improved model.
I agree with your position in this article in that we don’t have the time to figure out if the assessment will help close or widen the achievement gap. We just have to press forward and do the best we can to prepare our charges for life beyond high school.
Although we have never met, I want to thank you for being a tacit contributor to my professional development and my professional writing. When you put yourself out there the way that you do, you never know the lengths to which your tentacles will reach. After reading The American Reader (of which I finally got my own copy and paid off my debt to the Broward county library for keeping their copy for soooo long), I knew exactly how I wanted to tackle the common core…One theme per quarter. For example: herstory… Daisy from The Great Gatsby, Sojourner Truth, Elizabeth Stanton, Ella Wheeler Wilcox, Lady Macbeth, Betty Frieden…take the time to look at their words and analyze those characters, all while addressing current more pressing social issues like the marginalization of women around the globe, glass ceilings, and equal opportunity.
So I will openly state here and now how much I appreciate you and your position. We may never meet, but I wanted you to know that you are respected, admired, and even placed on a very high pedestal in my eyes. Thank you for your contributions to the field of education. I appreciate you for asking the tough questions of those in power and for advocating for the rights of students. You are my new muse.
Reign of Error is on my list for winter break reading…
Another HUGE issue with the amateurish CCSS in ELA, of course, is that they seem to have been written in almost total ignorance of what we have learned in the past forty years or so about language acquisition. Bill should be asking for his money back.
Yet another is that students differ, and there are as many ways in which to be a good reader, writers, speaker, listener, and thinker as there are readers, writers, speakers, listeners, and thinkers. These “standards” appeal to people with a totalitarian rage for order, who cannot conceive of the possibilities that they kill in the cradle.
A nice thought, Robert. But totalitarianism seems to me to arise from Utopianism, whether Nazi or Islamofascist, or of course feckless Obamafascism. “We’re going to get education right THIS time, or we’re going to get health care right THIS time,” but to do so, they must compel and mandate and bring order to chaos. Except too much order stunts growth, even as no order wastes energy in pointless generation.
Robert,
It seems to me that you have a very strong negative opinion about the common core standards. Perhaps, you should start your own blog and get your own followers rather than troll on Diane’s blog to get others to validate your opinions.
I’ve read through each of your opinions and it sounds to me as if you pretty much teach to the majority of the standards anyway, so I don’t really get why the negativity. I will admit though, that you are weak on two of the standards based on what I have read from your arguments.
School districts have adoption committees for textbooks. Before trashing what your district’s colleagues felt was the best option for the students you serve, get on the committee and be part of the decision making process. Otherwise, move on. Your passive aggressive tactics only show that you believe that because of your tenure you think you know more about teaching than someone with less experience. I know plenty of veteran teachers who resort to ad hominem attacks against their administration, or current state/national executive leadership instead of focusing on the positives that they are doing to improve student achievement and teacher efficacy. Please stay focused on what the standards are attempting to do: establish standards for literacy and problem solving across the nation with the goal of making a diploma more equitable. Just because you have been at this for 40 years doesn’t mean that you have always been effective. Although there is a science to teaching, it is the art of teaching that separates a great teacher from a mediocre one. Could 100% of the 6000 students you have taught over your career demonstrate mastery on a Massachusetts state test? Do they have complete mastery on your state test? Textbooks and programs are only as effective as the teacher who uses them. Textbooks and programs don’t teach. Teachers teach. On this point, we both agree. To blame a text book for the decline of teaching is a red herring argument. Standard 8.
Please use logos to discuss these standards, instead of pathos. Diane has established her ethos with a career spanning 40 years as well. She is well recognized authority on this topic and has a well thought out argument against the implementation of these standards. She isn’t against the standards, per se, but the intent of what will be done with the results and the implications for students who will suffer who do not meet the standards.
As to your point in this post “[standards] have been written in almost total ignorance of what we have learned in the past forty years or so about language acquisition.” P. 6 of the CCSS states: It is beyond the scope of the Standards to define the full range of supports appropriate for ELLs and for students with special needs.” Regardless of a student’s stage of language acquisition, a diploma in the USA is going to mean that students are college and career ready in this country’s language: English. Why should the diploma my child receives be different than the diploma one of my Caribbean students receives simply because he or she speaks Creole and my daughter doesn’t? Your argument contains Straw Man argumentation and is therefore flawed.
All I have read from your posts on this blog is negative negative negative. Not once have you suggested a viable alternative. You maintain that you refuse to implement these standards and will only put on the dog and pony show for the powers that be. I just hope you have the data and results to support your position. To say that these standards are flawed without using specificity as to what those flaws are weakens your position and quite frankly it makes you sound like a disgruntled veteran teacher who would piss and moan about any change in your state’s standards. I have no respect for your opinion. You criticize without alternatives. For someone with so much ‘experience’ in addressing standards I am surprised by your inability to see the flaws in your own arguments. You would definitely benefit from some professional development in the area of rhetoric and fallacy, since you are weak in this skill. But, wait, oh! You don’t need to because the standards are garbage.
The standards are not the problem. It is the accountability piece that goes along with it that may prove problematic. I encourage you to be open to alternative opinions and draw conclusions based on factual evidence rather than ad populum arguments. Not everyone agrees with you.
Obliged to you for hearing me, and now old KalSander ain’t got nothing more to say.
Even if Robert were a grumpy old veteran teacher opposing all change, I would characterize you as the archetypal offensive young know-it-all who hasn’t seen three or four of these fads come and go and in your wide-eyed, bright-eyed idealism thinks that the concept of national standards will be the salvation of public education, just as so many fools think the concept of national health care through the ACA will “fix” health care delivery by imposing billions of administrative costs on top of the practitioners.
We ancient sages say: “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” To WHAT is that an appeal? Logos? Pathos? Ethos? More likely something like “Been there; done that.” But with the young, experience means little or nothing. Welcome to the English Department meeting. Some of us are going to die sooner than you, but you too will grow old and die eventually, wiser or not neither I nor Robert will be around to assess.
Dang, there is a compliment in there! Young and still idealistic after 25 years! Yea me! So don’t fault me for not having as much experience. This isn’t a competition; it’s a debate. I’m not an idealist; I am a pragmatist. The standards aren’t going anywhere anytime soon. I have to work with them. When used together, they work fine. My students thrive. Please don’t put words in my mouth. I never said they were a salvation, I simply stated that I like them and am willing to work with them. However, I want to thank you for your red herring in the first paragraph.
Agreed, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. What does that have to do with my rhetoric? I don’t get to look through the prism of just the English department. That is just one of 10 different departments who have to apply these standards. ELA standards apply to every teacher in a school. Nor can we look at these standards based on our own experience. There are too many who don’t have your longevity. What is the 1, 5, or 10 year teacher supposed to work with when they don’t have the resources a person with your tenure or my tenure has come to collect? What do they use?
You have the right to be disgruntled. You have the tenure to back it up. Hell, I’m disgruntled with the lack of decent PD and quality instructional materials, along with the poor roll out, yadda yadda. I’m not drinking the snake oil totally. I’m just saying that I’m okay with the standards. If you don’t like them, I get that. But be specific as to why.
I’m not suggesting you die or retire, but rather contribute. Be positive. The next generation of teachers needs constructive support. Be that kind of teacher. You and Robert just seem so damned bitter about it all based on this one blog. So if you own grumpy and old, then that is your label. Hell, I’m grumpy and old too. But I still think I have a thing or two to learn from guys like you, and from guys who are young and idealistic. Just use an argument I can sink my teeth into. If I am calling Robert out on his bitterness and his weak argumentation, then that ultimately helps him refine and develop some concrete suggestions.
There is no panacea. These standards are simply that, standards. I don’t have control over who created them, what curriculum will be used, how this will impact test scores, or how this will be tied to performance. Those to me are the more pressing questions.
Thanks for engaging in this discussion.
Susan, the CCSS in ELA appear to me to be extraordinarily amateurish work. If these had been handed to me as, say, a Master’s thesis, I would tell their author that they aren’t ready to present to a committee–that the author needs to go back and learn a LOT more about the various domains that these “standards” cover. Do you have any idea how dramatically these putative standards will curtail innovation in the teaching of English? They will stop real innovation in pedagogy and curricula cold because anything that isn’t aligned to these backward “standards” will get no hearing. What a tragedy for our profession. Don Marquis ends his wonderful poem “The Old Trouper” with this line: “Come, my dear, both of our professions are being ruined by amateurs.” I think of the CCSS in ELA, and I think of that line.
But then I guess we’ll have innovation in conceptualization of desirable outcomes in the English language arts when the Common Core Curriculum Commissariat meets again in five years to make these decisions for everyone else. Lovely.
There’s a facebook post of an empty PTA and the crowds at Kmart at a sale. The thing is this is related. It’s bait and switch. People are tired from trying to maintain a lifestyle and corporate America likes it that way. “Let’s sell them some computers and let’s make the curriculum to go with it! We will tell them it’s all good for their kids. That it’s SCIENTIFIC!” I am a Social Worker 35 years in the field, 21 of those in Public Education. It’s so sad to be this disillusioned and this angry, at this point in my career.
If one more mucky muck makes a list of what is “ensured” for kids, I’ll scream! Isn’t it like carpet baggers after the Civil War? All the social services, special education, etc. are being dismantled, as Bill Gates and the ghost of Steve Jobs sell more. Where are the Koch brothers on this? Are administrators getting paid kickbacks to “drink the Kool-aid”?
Hi Cindy,
You make great observations regarding corporate America making a fortune hawking a bunch of “stuff” to parents. They apparently are hawking it to the schools as well since Common Core was primarily funded by Bill Gates. I would argue, however, that many parents do not attend PTO meetings because they are busy shopping at Kmart. I vacated my seat on the PTO years ago after realizing it was not a watchdog, but instead a lapdog for the teacher’s union. I could make much better use of my time. (And, no, I did not spend it at Kmart)
My first visit to your blog–I am hopeful that constructive dialogue will lead to positive change for our students. Sure, corporate backed initiatives such as common core and other ventures continue to shape our profession, and more importantly, the educational experience of our students. In the absence of dedicated state funding for senior educators and competent public educational leaders, it is sadly, our accepted state of affairs. Regardless of the standards and other corporate backed programs, the fact remains that no program or educational system can remain solvent without quality control regulation at each level. Students who don’t,won’t, or can’t read but who are moved through the halo of common core will simply fall on the heap of illiteracy. Teachers will be fired/replaced, students will not receive services to which they are entitled and learning/ teaching will limp along despite these odds. Until we as a society view K-12 through an unbiased lens, assess the entire public educational needs and make small qualitative changes instead of quick Giant Leaps onto a bandwagon, our students survival will have to depend on their ability to learn in spite of the well intentioned corporate interests.
Your mere mention of “solvency,” Mr., Miss, or Ms. Panther, sets your post apart in this company. The problems of solvency will become even more intense as the ACA kicks in and school boards are faced with health-care premium costs at least triple what they are now and deductibles well beyond the usual capacity of the average teacher. It is especially difficult when two putative entitlements, “health care for all” and “education for every child ” come into conflict.
That they do, suggests to me that neither education nor health care is a genuine “entitlement” because a genuine entitlement is or should be cost free, that is, it does not require the government to pay someone (doctors, teachers) to provide it.
A genuine entitlement is something that the government refrains from doing. Examples would be freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom to defend oneself, and freedom to keep the proceeds of one’s work.
You also believe that a genuine post is free from logic, ideas, and relevancy.
My post has ideas, logic, and I hope relevancy. The idea is that neither education nor health care is a genuine constitutional entitlement. The logic is that the two seem to be in conflict, will be in conflict contending for the same pot of money. Relevancy is that all school districts will face solvency problems soon. Detroit’s disaster was just a little sooner than others. The DPS are under an emergency manager, and Detroit itself is in bankruptcy course. In Michigan three school districts went insolvent just this fall and were absorbed into neighboring districts. Compared to the money problem the CCSS and RTTT and NCLB and even charterization is just diversionary spume. One can cry bad, bad, bad and shame, shame, shame all day.
The ACA will result in little or no change in health insurance costs for school boards. Health insurance policies for public employees already have all the minimum requirements of ACA. They are not policies that don’t cover hospitalization, or have lifetime caps, etc. The measures to eventually control health care costs in the ACA should reduce costs over time.
By the way, the anecdotal claims of the woman in the recent Koch funded anti-ACA TV ads about her costs under ACA have been shown to be completely false, as was the claim about one woman in Washington in the Republican response to the president’s SOTU speech.
Harlan’s comment was not related to the topic, and just a right wing fantasy besides.
If federalized education bothers you so should federalized healthcare. I hope you are not sufficiently deluded to believe that ACA is not simply a stepping stone to single payer.
janinelargent, your satire is well taken.
Time will tell. I hope you are right and that I am wrong. You shouldn’t dismiss right wing notions so rapidly, however. How would you like me talking about left wing fantasies of actually being able to save every child in the nation? Or the left wing fantasy of global warming. Or the left wing fantasy that Russia is not interested in recapturing Ukraine, Lithuania, Estonia, etc. Or the left wing fantasy that eliminating the Tomahawk and Hellfire missile programs will result in a more peaceful world. Or the left wing illusion that capitalism is oppressive rather than freeing. Or the left wing fantasy that Obama actually knows what’s best for the country. You bought him; he’s breaking you.
Will the CCSS divert our attention from the centrality of story in the classroom? Why story is a necessary part of learning and growing.
http://russonreading.blogspot.com/2013/11/stories-matter-where-does-story-fit-in.html
My own cllose and critical look at the Common Core for E/LA
http://russonreading.blogspot.com/2013/11/the-common-core-in-englishlanguage-arts_8560.htm
When I clicked on your link I received this message: “Sorry, the page you were looking for in this blog does not exist.” Cutting and pasting the url into my browser gave the same result. Thoughts?
Sorry about that Linda. I am trying again.
http://russonreading.blogspot.com/2013/11/the-common-core-in-englishlanguage-arts_8560.html
Got it – thanks so much!
I don’t know the future but I do know this:
1. making claims based on evidence is far better than eliminating three bad answers out of four, which is what we’ve been reduced to teaching kids since standards tests emerged
2. you can use any text in any subject area to practice this essential skill
3. I am freed of the burden of teaching all areas of communication; math and science teachers must help their students effectively communicate in our common language
4. regardless of how the assessment looks ( and it will be a s#!# bag if I know government) students will be better thinkers if they can read, connect details and make conclusions on their own.
Don’t fall in the trap of wishing for a crystal ball.
What makes this issue so difficult for many of us is he agenda of many who are so opposed to CCSS. Consider this FB post:
“Stop Common Core in South Carolina
22 hours ago
Father God, we decree that there will be an explosion of interest in Common Core – an energetic passion to protect our children. We ask that You draw people to every Facebook and website that opposes Common Core – that there be an explosion of interest there, as well. Multiply our numbers for the world to see. May our numbers overwhelm the numbers of “likes” of officials, education non-profits, or any tool of propaganda. Open eyes and grant hearts that seek the truth.
Thank You for every answered prayer. These are Your children we fight for – in the holy Name ABOVE every other name that is named… JESUS…”
It doesn’t mean supporting CCSS, but it makes for unacceptable bedfellows.
Standard anti-evangelical bigotry. What HARM are they doing to YOU?
Read my comment below for your answer on how this affects YOU, too.
I totally agree, Nana, with your analysis, but when someone says the Evangelicals are “unacceptable bedfellows” I see that as pure liberal bigotry against the religious among us. Will they catch a conservative cold? No, but other liberal bigots would ostracize them. Those who worship at the altar of liberalism don’t want to be thrown out of the congregation of our Lord of the Liberal Litmus tests, global warming, tax the rich, and compassion, oh so much compassion for the downtrodden, the poor, the weak, and the ignorant.
Harlan, I agree entirely. It has always been my belief that the right to worship usurps the “right” to a public education. That is why the Constitution makes provision for the former and not the latter. Of course, similar to our founders, we all want our children to be “educated” understanding that the term “education” is a dynamic term that can be defined differently by different people.
The very beginnings of public education like the rest of our government find their roots in Judeo-Christian heritage. Though we had some differences in the specifics of how we worshiped, generally we shared a common culture.
The feigned embracing of diversity has led us to this current crisis in education. The process of dismantling the individuals faith system, to some shape of “spirituality” without any real substance of belief has left a spiritual void that the department of public education is ready and willing to fill with their version of virtue, godliness and spirituality.
Conscious and deliberate attacks on the family and on faith (the mantra of any despotic regime) have created an undefined culture that begs to be defined. Those who would promote the hard science of embracing matter over expression of faith have not rejected the soul they have simply replaced it with their own version of acceptable worship.
To assume one can continue to grow the amount of time, money and energy spent on “education” exponentially while decreasing the available time for individual expression of faith, talent or individual pursuit of happiness is reducing society to some mass of humanity looking to more “enlightened” individuals to rule over them.
Plain and simply, while I truly sympathize with the obviously dedicated teachers who frequent this blog, the aspersions they cast towards people of faith do not in anyway assist their cause.
The right to worship (and everyone does so) usurps the “right” to education. and while I support public education I do so at the local level where citizens can participate fully in the curriculum and pedagogy. There is absolutely no role for the department of education to even exist, but somehow it is ruling the minutiae of our children’s lives.
Already the first generation of kids that have been raised exposed to this oppressive and controlling form of education have graduated and now their children are beginning to attend school. These parents have been conditioned to accept as gospel the word of the department of education. Their own innate competitiveness and egos have been manipulated by the state to believe that their children won’t be able to compete. They have no other king, but Caesar and thus look to Caesar to deliver them. I say “render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s” and leave leave our children and our faith alone.
Amen.
At Kempenfelt Bay school Underachieving Ontario students
are passing out more academically deservingstudents for
university spots and lucrative scholarships with blown up grades purchased from
privately run, for-profit schools.
After well over thirty years and 10,000 students passing through my classroom’s doors, I cannot help but bristle when paper-pushing, unrealistic, and out-of-touch bureaucrats become toadies for the wealthy and ever-greedy peddlers pushing their wares upon us in the guise of some malevolent fiction that this poorly conceived immaturity is good for our society.
Thank you for your blog and raising awareness regarding Common Core. In California, those of us who are joining your fight against Common Core are thankful to have Lydia Gutierrez running to State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Lydia is our outspoken candidate against Common Core! We appreciate your support! On behalf of the children, thank you!
I think you ought to read the common core standards before you comment on them. Just listening to others say they are bad is not a reason for you to think they are bad. If you would like the students of the United States to compete against students around the world we will need some consistent expectations. What are those to be? Who will decide them? Common Core doesn’t come from the federal government. It actually began in Kentucky. Individual states realized that some consistency was needed for students across our country to compete globally. They also aren’t dumbed down standards, they are actually a baseline that each state could add to. Please read them all before judging based on someone else’s opinion. Also, really who would be naive enough to believe that a curriculum would track students’ personal information? That’s nutty.
Their inception alone makes them “bad”. They were created via a collusion between agenda driven federal and corporate interests without any representation by the citizenry. This does not bother you!?
Here, an analysis of two Common Core ELA “standards”:
http://bobshepherdonline.wordpress.com/2014/02/25/a-brief-analysis-of-two-common-core-state-standards-in-ela/
Diane, thanks for sharing your view. Do you have information on how Common Core will impact the largest and fastest growing population of learners – ELLs? Where is the developed CC curriculum for ELLs and why don’t ELL teachers know that they also will be tied to CC and Assessments? Thanks again.
It’s the “Food and Drug Administration”, not the “Federal Drug Administration.”
A retired experienced classroom teacher of both math and English, I am watching horrible results in my very intelligent grandchildren and their friends. Learning is no longer fun to any of them, not even the smartest children. All mathematics is cumbersome and requires pages of drawing circles instead of brief demos of why and then moving on to tested algorithms. Memorization of simple arithmetic facts such as multiplication tables is discouraged in favor of “figuring them out” over and over again. I have to teach them the CCC way (for testing purposes) and then the traditional way when I am sure they understand the concepts. The math curriculum, according to THE CCC LEADING MATH STANDARDS WRITER is dumbed down 2 full years by the end of high school to “prepare all students for admission to a non-selective college,” and even CCC creators admit now that a student who goes through CCC won’t even be able to take Calculus as a freshman in college. Most of the math standards writers refused to sign off on the final product! Language arts is full of socialist propaganda and incorrect “facts,” disguised as grammar lessons, as has been amply documented on many Internet sites. High school students read “excerpts” of classics instead of whole books and spend 70% of their English class time on “fact based documents” that have nothing to do with literature. This is the opposite of what is presented by lying proponents of CCC defending the literature component. I am not going to answer any follow-up comments. Everything I said here can be documented on many reliable Internet sites. Having spent hours and hours working with our state legislative committee on CCC and groups of parents and teachers, ALL of whom condemn CCC, I am not interested in hearing of a random apparent feel-good moment here and there nor another brand new ignorant teacher’s glowing report on being able to teach rather than participating in “forced memorization,” apparently unaware that much excellent teaching has been going on for a very long time before CCC. CCC has thrown out nearly all the positive accomplishments in education in the past 60 years, including individualized instruction and learning styles accommodations in favor of a one-size-fits-all straight jacket that treats our precious children like identical sheep instead of unique individuals. This straight jacket could never produce another Bill Gates or Thomas Edison or Steve Wozniak or Stephen Jobs. It aims everybody for mediocrity. It ties the hands of teachers instead of getting out of their way and letting them teach. It needs to be thrown back to the controlling federal government that created it and illegally maneuvered it into 46 states under false pretenses. God bless our teachers, and God save our children!
My concerns with the ACA have similar roots as my concern over Common Core. Increasing federalizing of healthcare and education are precursors to tyranny.
Having grandkids, I know and hear from my children that some form of this debate rages almost daily in our educational system. Not sure where I fall on the issue and that’s probably because I don’t have children directly being affected. However, reading both sides of the argument is definitely in everybody’s best interest.
You might be an attorney but that statement is ludicrous. My grand children are learning somewhat but they cannot sound out their words. Phonics is very important and is from what I can see, not really being taught. I haven’t read about what is actually in Common Core but the fact that is what they are using. In my opinion, after raising four children of my own and then living with my twin grandson’s who are seven, it’s a really terrible program and I say that from working with them. The other thing I can’t stand is what do teachers do now? I know some classrooms are still over crowded but my parents didn’t have to spend all the time they think they can order you to spend now with us and I learned faster than my grand children. The amount of work and the homework for elementary children is beyond conscionable. Pouring on more and more work doesn’t necessarily go with understanding the work they are getting. Half the time I don’t understand it and they want us to sign for everything and I’m frankly sick and tired of it. I’m home with these children and the one expected to sit and help them. How are some of the parents who speak no English be doing this? I live in an area that is over 95 percent so-called minority. I stand in the office on various days and parents come in and they don’t speak English…most of the employees are dual speakers. How can they help their children if they don’t understand the language they are being taught in all of the schools? It boggles the mind. Their writing regressed since kindergarten and they don’t test the same as they perform at home either. I’m hoping that they don’t stop teaching cursive in CA. We are too dependent on computers and if we would go back to some of the old ways these kids might learn more. Maybe they should do some research on how they are actually teaching in other countries, the ones where people actually know the main language? It is holding everyone else back yet it’s discrimination to have them in a different class so they have the time to learn but honestly the problem is the parents, not the children really except a few, because most of the kids started in school with English and it’s the parents who have not taken the time to learn the language.
Why is it called PTO now? When my kids were in school it was the PTA and parents don’t show up because they are working. It needs to be held in the evening around 6:30 at night. Maybe if it was at a reasonable hour you might get more people. The ACA topic is not relevant and should not be mixed into the conversation in my opinion or religion either. I’m totally against Common Core, it just doesn’t work.
Why mince words. The debate about public education has never been about being globally competitive. Literacy levels have dropped as values and discipline have dropped. The standards where never an issue and a good teacher with attentive and disciplined children could make more progress in a one room school house with slate tablets than a teacher in an inner city classroom with Ipads.
The manufactured crisis has everything to do with the understanding that “the hand that rocks the cradle rules the world”. The state has a goal that may not be congruent with yours.
If you want to pass on your values to your children you had best be the one spending the most time with them. You had also remind the state they work for you not vice versa. The time is coming where action will be ineffective. If you want to protest something, protest the state attack on the American family.
The state is not only guilty of attacking the family, family values, and the education of the populace, but for attacking our basic founding freedoms and the sovereignty of the United States. Be afraid, America, be very afraid. The water in the frog’s pot is nearly boiling.
Obamas race to the top program meant race ISSUES to the top. Obama is a divisive race baiter.
J, I do not believe that Race to the Top is race-based in any way, except for the fact that most of the schools closed by RTTT serve children of color.
Possibly, but Barack Obama IS a race baiter.
So you believe RTTT is race-based in that one way?
I do not believe that RTTT is overtly racist. I believe generations of presidential administrations have used race issues to advance a statist agenda. The results of many of these policies have had the result of decimating the black family. And I believe Barack Obama is the biggest race baiter of all time.
I was asking Diane.
And what was her answer?
Look down.
Geez. Seriously are you on here 24 hours a day. Still don’t understand the answer. Yes, Diane thinks RTTT is racist or, no, it is not racist, but unintentionally has harmed more people of color? I vote for the latter. I don’t think Obama is racist, he is an elitist and an opportunistic race baiter.
I can’t explain her answer to you.
FLERP: when schools are destroyed in black and brown communities because of low scores, yes, that is race-based because it is totally predictable. About 80% of the schools affected are in those communities. The record of “turnarounds” is unimpressive.
Please see the earlier post in which Bob Braun said that Cami Anderson’s plan for Newark are racist. Yes, racist.
I was just told yesterday by my administration that teaching creative writing is not in the standards and that I shouldn’t be teaching my students how to write in a creative way. I was told that I should pick an ELA standard and the whole lesson should teach that standard. Wow! I feel like I want to quit teaching. Here is an analogy, I go to the doctor because of a bladder infection. They see that I have other problems but they don’t address those problems because they only can treat the bladder infection. Really? No, we expect doctors to know how to treat the problem because they have training and are professionals. Teachers are not treated as professionals with gifts and knowledge.
Elly, especially with younger children, these standards are developmentally inappropriate and indeed are hurting our students. A teacher assistant told me, “Oh, the kids told me they had a belly ache before our writer’s workshop.” Reply, “Maybe because the work causes too much stress and their brains simply aren’t developed enough for what you are asking them to do?”
I see a lot of busy work. These younger children don’t understand what they are doing.
In common core we teach to a standard and not to a child.
Cathy Sapeta