This blogger is not happy with the Common Core.

He says it discourages creativity. He thinks it is about preparing workers and consumers, not thinkers.

And there is this too:

“The Common Core is one reason my sixth-grade daughter has yet to read a novel in ELA. It’s also a reason she no longer has time to get to the school library. The Common Core’s emphasis on nonfiction would be fine if it emphasized good nonfiction. My favorite authors are nonfiction geniuses. Annie Dillard, Jon Krakauer, James Herndon, Jonathan Kozol, Robert Pirsig, David Sedaris, Natalie Goldberg, Anne Lamott, and, lest we forget, Thoreau. They write nonfiction at its best, but that’s not what my girls are being fed.

“The nonfiction of the Common Core consists of shorter pieces, often articles, much like what workers will be expected to read on the job. So, there’s no room for To Kill a Mockingbird, The Catcher in the Rye, Speak, or Of Mice and Men. What good is all that novel crap anyway?

“Creativity is a valuable commodity, but the Common Core does not promote creativity. My daughters are about to embark on eight days of testing. Eight days of pissing away ninety minutes at a time on tests that will teach them mostly to dislike school. I don’t want data from these tests. I don’t need it. I know my kids and so do their teachers.”