Governor Cuomo created a panel to review the flawed rollout of the Common Core. His panel is stacked with supporters of Common Core. The governor invited the public to offer suggestions. Here is one from Jeff Nichols, a parent of children in the New York City public schools and a professor at Queens College and the GraduateCenter of the City of New Yrk:
Professor Nichols writes:
The Common Core Implementation Panel has invited suggestions from the public. Here’s mine, submitted to them this morning.
* * *
My suggestion is very simple:
Withdraw from the Common Core.
No recommendation this panel can come up with will salvage the CCSS, for a very simple reason. Ever growing numbers of parents like me reject the entire concept of federally mandated standards. And when standards are tied to funding, that is a form of mandate.
I consider myself a liberal Democrat. I voted twice for Barack Obama. But I am as offended by the design and implementation of CCSS as the tea party Republicans who oppose all federal interventions in their lives.
Why? The CCSS are expensive, mediocre, redundant and were adopted without due democratic process. They are, in short, a boondoggle perpetrated on the public by politicians who are either ignorant of real educational needs or under the sway of private interests that stand to profit enormously from this initiative.
As a taxpayer, I want the state’s education dollars dedicated to measures that actually improve student learning. The Common Core standards are completely unproven and, judging from early results, ineptly designed — too demanding in early grades, not demanding enough in later ones. Moreover, they come twinned with a new wave of useless and phenomenally expensive standardized tests. My wife and I will opt our children out of all state tests at least until all of New York State has implemented universal pre-K and high quality day care for low-income working families, until every child has the opportunity to learn a musical instrument and has access to the kinds of libraries, gyms and other vital faculties that children who live in affluent communities take for granted.
Our position is not going to change because NYSED acknowledges some errors in its implementation of CCSS. We demand the return of control over curriculum and teaching methods to educators, parents and local communities. The state can feel free to issue recommendations for curriculum, but not the kinds of mandates that have been flowing from CCSS.
All my wife and I want is for our children’s teachers to have the same intellectual freedom to practice their profession according to their best judgment as that enjoyed teachers in the exclusive private schools attended by the children of Barack Obama, Arne Duncan and John King.
That was the reality in my own childhood, growing up attending locally controlled rural public schools in Indiana. In that not-so-distant time and place, high-stakes standardized tests didn’t exist prior to the SAT — and that was optional. Teachers assessed children; principals, fellow teachers and parents assessed teachers. It worked a heck of a lot better than the test-based, wasteful and counterproductive accountability systems of the NCLB era.
The Common Core, like all assaults on democracy, is the product of fear — in this case, that our children will fall behind in the global economy. But what those of us who are actually raising the next generation of Americans understand is that the way to address that fear is not to cede control of our children’s schools to David Coleman and Arne Duncan.
Americans of all political persuasions know that the only thing we should fear and fight against is the erosion of our democracy. A pluralistic, locally governed and free public school system is the bedrock of that democracy, and it will be restored — not by state and federal bureaucrats, but by families like mine.

Arne Duncan’s children attend Arlington, VA, public schools.
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I believe VA opted out of CCSS.
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From the Arlington website:
English Language Arts Program Goals
The main goal of the English Language Arts program is to teach students English language literacy skills. These skills are primarily expressed in the ability to effectively read, write, listen and speak. Standards and objectives that describe grade-level expectations for teaching and learning these skills are found within the state of Virginia’s English Standards of Learning.
The Arlington Public Schools English Language Arts (ELA) program seeks to develop students who are strategic readers, effective writers, engaging speakers, and critical thinkers. Work on this goal begins early in kindergarten classrooms and continues in elementary school, into middle school, and all the way through high school. Upon graduating from Arlington Public Schools (APS, students who have met course requirements and passed state tests have demonstrated that they have the literacy skills necessary for success in an increasingly information-based society.
The ELA Office believes all children can learn, and that children learn best when they are recognized as individuals and appreciated for their different interests, backgrounds, and personalities. Teachers and families working together can best help students reach their academic potential.
In addition to teaching literacy skills, the ELA program also emphasizes the appreciation of literature. A wide variety of authors and genres are presented to students throughout the k-12 continuum. Students are taught content knowledge about significant literary eras and specific titles, as well as notable authors. Students are also taught figurative language and other literary devices that enhance and enrich the study of literature.
Furthermore, students in ELA classrooms across the grade-levels are encouraged to create their own texts in a meaningful and supportive manner so that their individual voices and perspectives might be brought to a wider audience.
NO MENTION OF COMMON CORE HERE???????
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NO MENTION OF CCSS TESTING EITHER?????????
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Yes, Virginia is one of the five states not to adopt Common Core, in no small part because they believed their standards were so similar: http://www.doe.virginia.gov/testing/sol/standards_docs/english/sol_ccss_comparison_english.pdf
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That’s hogwash.
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Maybe it is hogwash, maybe it isn’t. None of this changes the fact that Arne Duncan doesn’t send his children to “exclusive private schools.”
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Nor does it change the fact that he does not subject his children to the stultifying boredom of the CCSS. Besides Arlington is a public system that is remarkably close to being an exclusive private school. The mean family income in the Arlington district is $155,000.
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Virginia.
The Virginia Board of Education unanimously rejected adoption of the proposed Common Core State Standards and tests. One of the board’s chief arguments against adopting national standards was fiscal, with members noting that “Virginia’s investment in the Standards of Learning [SOL] since 1995 far exceeds the $250 million Virginia potentially could have received by abandoning the SOL and competing in phase two of Race to the Top.”[7] Indeed, since 1996, Virginia taxpayers have paid more than $379 million to develop and implement the state SOLs. The costs for developing the SOLs include expenditures for the initial development and subsequent revisions of the curriculum frameworks and assessments, as well as the development of new supporting materials and professional development related to using the new testing system.
MONEY TIM – JUST NOT WORTH IT!
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Do you have a link to support that $155,000 mean household income statistic? Even if it is true, 32% of the kids in Arlington public schools receive a reduced-price or free lunch — http://www.apsva.us/Page/1113
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proximityone.com/va_sdc.htm
Try this. See: Arlington VA demographics.
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That site shows a 5-year median household estimate of $99,651 in 2009 dollars, which would be in line with the Census Bureau’s 2008-2012 median household income estimate of $102,459: http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/51/51013.html
Arlington is a fairly well-off place, but 7.2% of its kids live below the Census-defined poverty line, and I don’t think it’s accurate to portray it as an extremely high-end suburb.
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You are dreaming if you don’t think Arlington is a high end suburb.
An annual operating budget of over ONE-HALF BILLION DOLLARS.
Nearly $20K per student.
Total FY14 Budget
$523,048,115
Average Teacher Salary
$74,384
Pre-K-12 Enrollment
23,316
Adult Education Enrollment
14,000
Cost Per Pupil
$18,880
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Dr. Ravitch has mentioned that her grandchildren go to a public school, PS 321 in Brooklyn. Does anyone know if the average family income there is higher or lower than that in Arlington? If it is higher, should we say it comes “remarkably close to a private school” and ask the typical questions about other people’s children?
The only information I have is that the PTA at PS 321 seems to raise around a million dollars annually. Perhaps they have very elaborute bake sales.
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Preach it NY teacher. I’m looking out the window here in Arlington. Beautiful place, highly educated people, and the pentagon and state department are nearby. While there may be some lower income people here, this is very clearly an area of privilege. Why did Arne send his kids to school in a non-RTTT state? Montgomery County, Maryland is an equally good district and an equally upscale area. But wait, Maryland is an RTTT state. Duncan appears to be a hypocrite.
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And a liar, and a fraud, and a poser, but a good friend of Barack’s.
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TIM
This is a flipped blog. We do our homework first and then join together for discussions.
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You made me laugh so hard my drink came out my nose!
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And if you knew that why would you write such a weasely post implying that Arne’s kids go to public schools that have adopted the common core.
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I just need some direction on this: Should people go on writing that Arne Duncan sends his kids to “exclusive private schools”? Whatever helps the cause is ok by me!
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No that’s inaccurate but it is the only state who did not accept CCS and still got their waiver. And it happens to be where he lives and therefore his children will not be subjected to the SBAC/PARCC CCS tests and I believe the decimation of the FERPA law will not apply to them. That is interesting, no? Can my kids be exempt or do I have to move to Virginia?
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NO. But people can go on writing that Arne Duncan sends his kids to a public school in a state (VA) that has rejected the Common Core standards because they were deemed too expensive.
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With a waiver for NCLB without accepting the CCS are Arne’s kids exempt from SBAC/PARCC testing as well as the FERPA privacy changes? Do you know?
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Linda
Go to the Arlington website. There is a link to testing and assessments. Looks like they are still taking NCLB tests but definitely not being data mined. In fact their schools only have NCLB accountability under AYP if they are classified as Title 1 schools. That could be checked easily. At $155K per family seems unlikely.
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Nor are Arlington teacher evaluation tied to test scores. No modules. No scripted lessons.
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How convenient for Arnold and his children.
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It’s not all Dewey and Freire in Arlington!
“The social studies teachers at Gunston Middle School are reading the book Teach Like a Champion by Doug Lemov and implementing these strategies in the classroom to help engage students.”
http://www.apsva.us/Page/20901
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Really? That book doesn’t engage students. It controls them. Maybe it’s helpful for crowd control your first year or two, but that’s not good teaching. Some of the videos are embarrassing. It looks like training at Seaworld: signals, hand gestures, SLANT, clap for your minnow. Good grief.
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From the Arlington website:
>In October 2012, the Virginia Department of Education (VDOE) announced school and division accountability determinations under the Commonwealth’s ESEA Flexibility Waiver, awarded by the U.S. Department of Education to 33 states. The waiver, as described below, exchanges sanctions under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (also known as No Child Left Behind) for new school improvement benchmarks and supports.
Under Virginia’s differentiated accountability system, new benchmarks, called Annual Measurable Objectives (AMOs), have been set for each student reporting group with the goal of reducing the gap between the lowest and highest performing schools statewide by 50 percent over the next six years.
17 APS schools met the new federal benchmarks in reading and mathematics for all reporting groups: Abingdon, Arlington Science Focus, Arlington Traditional, Ashlawn, Barcroft, Claremont Immersion, Glebe, Henry, Jamestown, Long Branch, McKinley, Nottingham, Oakridge, and Taylor Elementary Schools; Swanson and Williamsburg Middle Schools; and Yorktown High School. In addition, all but one APS school met the federal benchmarks in mathematics that are based on new more rigorous standards, first assessed in 2011-12.<
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By the way in case any one is confused, the NCLB has been re-re- branded as ESEA (Elementary and Secondary Education Act).
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>When asked this question: As the second education secretary with school-aged kids, where does your daughter go to school, and how important was the school district in your decision about where to live?
Duncan replied: She goes to Arlington [Virginia] public schools. That was why we chose where we live, it was the determining factor. That was the most important thing to me. My family has given up so much so that I could have the opportunity to serve; I didn’t want to try to save the country’s children and our educational system and jeopardize my own children’s education.<
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Evidently the only ones he saved are his own children.
The rest of us are getting screwed.
Stop Arne…you’re kiling us. Play basketball or just hang out with Bill.
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Arne “The Savior” Duncan. He is delusional.
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Tim…
Case dismissed
MY Teacher and Linda…Spot ON
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A great post.
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This posting should be in every newspaper throughout the country! Of course I can relate to this particular parent because I live in New York and have been a reading specialist, administrator and staff developer for over thirty five years in at the largest public school in the state. I also am a huge Obama supporter but am so disappointed that under his leadership, the state of public school education continued to weaken. I never thought things could get worse than George W’s NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND debacle! Sent from my iPad
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This is absolutely the best article I have read regarding the Common Core mess we keep hearing so much about. As a retired teacher emeritus, I shudder when I hear this debate…today I felt like Zi became enlightened by this stellar article, concise, to the point and full of common sense.
Sent from my iPhone
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Jeff
As you probably know, Cuomo will only follow this sage and sound advice if his poll numbers are threatened. If anyone reading this has a direct ear to Andy, please let him know that he has already lost 300,000 teacher/administrator votes and countless thousands of parent votes. Add in all the gun owners he has infuriated with the SAFE act and HE IS IN POLITICAL TROUBLE NOW and its only going to get worse.
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“New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s approval rating among voters statewide remains high at 63%, according to the results of a Quinnipiac University poll due to be published Thursday [Feb 13].
“Voters gave Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat facing re-election this year, virtually the same marks on his job as governor as they did in November, when 62% approved of his performance, according to the poll.
“In New York City, Thursday’s poll found, Mr. Cuomo’s approval rating was 72%, while upstate it was 55%.
“In hypothetical match-ups against potential Republican gubernatorial candidates, Mr. Cuomo emerged with easy victories. Against Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino, Mr. Cuomo wins 58% to 24%, while against Donald Trump, the governor wins 63% to 26%, the poll found.”
http://blogs.wsj.com/metropolis/2014/02/13/cuomo-has-highest-approval-rating-in-nearly-a-year-poll/
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I’m well aware of those poll numbers. George H.W. Bush polled at 90% one year before he LOST to Bill Clinton. You probably believed Romney’s poll numbers too.
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They’re dropping and will continue to drop and then watch him change his tune.
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They are dropping AND at the highest point they’ve been in a year? Remarkable.
(not a Cuomo fan at all, but a reality check, please)
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Its not remarkable, they’re bogus poll numbers.
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Nate Silver rates Quinnipiac as a very solid pollster, with big samples, live calls to a mix of land-lines and cell phones, a slight Dem lean, and a relatively low margin of error. You do realize it’s you who’s playing the “unskewed polls” card here, not me?
Things could certainly change before now and November. But the polling certainly doesn’t support the narrative that Cuomo will suffer a Common Core-related backlash.
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Things could change. Remington rifle manufacturing just listed Cuomo’s safe act as the number one reason they are building a new plant in Alabama. And his proposal for a free college education for prisoners is not going over well with all those who upstanding students who are getting socked with interest on college loans. There is unrest, just no other viable candidate. Many people may simply choose not to vote for governor, including lots of teachers and parents.
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I voted for Cuomo in the last election, but this time around I will remember that is was his pen giving us the horrors of the core, and I will remember the following:
A vote for Cuomo is a vote for the Common Core…
Here’s to sending both of them away!
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CUOMO-CORE
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NY Teacher..:-)
You are a winner!
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Thanks but the tag “Cuomo-Core” was originated by another poster a while back. Sorry but cant remember who to give proper credit. But it is a perfect campaign commercial slogan for whomever runs against the destroyer of public education in NY. Keep the faith.
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You’re not telling me anything I don’t already know. I seriously doubt that he will lose to the Donald. Let’s face it, no one gains any political credibility by beating Trump ( the walking, talking punch line). But I am gaining confidence that he will not receive anything close to the landslide victory he so desperately craves as the launch pad for his hopeless presidential ambitions.
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Thank you jeff for speaking out. Here are two links that explain who was on the CC Validation Committee and why two of its five members voted agianst the standards. They are certainly an eye opener into who actually wrote and rubberstamped them.
Common Core’s Invalid Validation Committee | Education Freedom Ohio
PDF]1 Common Core’s Standards Writers and Validation Committee
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Holy cow! This tea party conservative feels the same way! Well said!
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Wonderful essay.
As a high school teacher, I do take issue with the point that CCSS isn’t demanding enough in high school. Of course, the students ultimately taking Calculus will go well beyond CCSS and will be the ones who pass the Algebra II end of course exam (as freshmen). The typical high school student who takes Algebra II as a junior will be blown away by the exam. The creators of the exam knew this, of course (if that wasn’t the case, we wouldn’t be having this discussion). What I don’t understand is how, if students are expected to have learned material in the younger years that was too demanding, they are suddenly thought to be facing underwhelming material in the upper grades. It’s not the case. Look at the (very) small sample of PARCC released questions, and I’d feel comfortable not expecting many legislators to get the questions correct.
I’ve found it interesting that in the media, Cuomo comes off as anti-Common Core. Look on Google News, and you’ll primarily see him blasting the testing implementation and the recent decision (since recanted) to delay tying teacher evaluations to the tests. King and his colleagues are taking all the heat in New York.
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Cuomo is NOT anti-common Core. He appointed a very pro-CC panel to review the botched implementation.
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I wasn’t clear. I know Cuomo is not anti-CC. My point is that you wouldn’t easily know this from the media portrayal.
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Cuomo blasted the NY Board of Regents after they voted to alter the implementation. He was especially defensive about the teacher evaluation piece which he claims is one of his landmark pieces of legislation. He delayed a change that would allow teachers identified as “ineffective” to use the rushed implementation of the CC as a defense.
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Right. I wasn’t clear in my post about viewpoint. I consider Cuomo’s stance to be extremely damaging to teachers. To me, it seems like an attempt to distance teacher evaluation from the flawed testing system while tying the evaluations to those very tests. Tactically, imo, it’s an effort to prevent parental anger from empowering teachers.
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“On February 26, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan will participate in Discovery Education and the White House’s “Of the People” webinar series. This special event is part of the second annual Future@Now forum to discuss the transition from traditional classrooms to digital classrooms.
Joining from a classroom in Washington, D.C., Secretary Duncan will explore the digital transition firsthand and answer questions from a student about how the Department of Education supports classrooms around the country and why education is the foundation of our country’s future success.”
Is the US Secretary of Education now endorsing a specific commercial product, Discovery Education digital content?
I think this private/public partnership this has gotten ridiculous. How is this different than an ad for this product?
http://www.discoveryeducation.com/aboutus/
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Is Duncan violating the Constitution?
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That surprises you, given the general constitution-ignoring of the Obama administration?
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2016 can not come fast enough.
I hate to wish years away as I cherish each day but this man has gotten my goat!
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Now here’s a post I can totally agree with, in contrast to my usual reactions (no pun intended). I only wish Jeff would see that Obama’s approach to education is his approach to EVERYTHING ELSE IN THIS COUNTRY. And the President tries to support his policies almost uniformly with lies, until he loses credibility on the one or two things he might be getting right (e.g. ‘fast track’ trade authority). But every journey, even to political wisdom, has to start with a first step. Bravo Jeff Nichols. You have had a narrow look at the ugly face of statism. Perhaps more will be unveiled to you eventually.
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Now here’s a post of Harlan’s that’s not short and cryptic and that I can totally agree with. Well said, sir.
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George Bush and Barack Obama joined forces to create a series of federal policies that have profoundly undermined public education in this country; now citizens of a wide variety of political persuasions are uniting to oppose those policies, and that has to be a good thing! And yes, I’m learning a lot from people I used to disagree with — as by the way did Diane Ravitch as I’m sure you’re aware.
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Jeff:
1. From start to finish, that was an excellent letter. Thank you for writing it.
2. You are exactly right that this is not a party thing. The “reformers” are a bipartisan lot, and so are those of us who oppose them. Those who continue to see this solely in terms of party affiliation are choosing to operate with blinders on.
3. Another commentor said this: “That the President and the Secretary of Education know so little about what they are talking about when it comes to public schools makes me seriously worry about whether they know anything about the other things I don’t have any expertise on, and therefore have to take their word that they have a competent level of mastery on the subject.” What scares me is the thought that many of our politicians in both parties know exactly what they are doing.
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Bravo Prof. Nichols! Outstanding letter.
Unfortunately, Cuomo and his political ilks will most likely place you and your letter in the “special interest” group. So far Cuomo’s political philosophy has been to listen to suggestions from the pro-CCCS groups. The only way to stop CCCS completely is to vote Cuomo out of office, remove Tisch and King, and remind the other politicians that the power of the vote still belongs to the people and the vote is more powerful when it comes from a very angry parent.
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Cuomo’s panel to review the merits of a vegetarian diet, the stockholders of Outback Steakhouse. What a complete farce.
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Does it really matter where Duncan’s kids go to school? Think of the opportunities they get outside of school that free and reduced lunch kids don’t.
Unless you believe that what goes on in a student’s life outside of school doesn’t matter and their classroom teacher determines their entire success and failure in life.
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It matters because he is pushing a set of national standards that he is unwilling to subject his own children to. That is the antithesis of leadership. Do as I say, not as I do. A prescription for top down failure.
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Would you say the same of Dr. Ravitch? She sent her children to an expensive private school, her grandchildren go to PS 321, what I understand is a legendarily wealthy public school.
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TE, it is you who is being ad hominem. My family paid tuition to use a nonpublic school, without asking to take money away from public schools got out choice. We paid taxes for public schools as all citizens do and should. My grand children’s public school is not “legendarily wealthy,” it is overcrowded and has trailers on the concrete playground. And frankly, it is none of your business, is it? I am not interested in the schooling of your children or other relations, and I will thank you not to be interested in mine.
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TE, it is you who is being ad hominem. Forty plus years ago, my family paid tuition to use a nonpublic school, without asking to take money away from public schools for our choice. We paid taxes for public schools as all citizens do and should. My grand children’s public school is not “legendarily wealthy,” it is overcrowded and has trailers on the concrete playground. And frankly, it is none of your business, is it? I am not interested in the schooling of your children or other relations, and I will thank you not to be interested in mine.
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TE, it is you who is being ad hominem. Forty years ago, my family paid tuition to use a nonpublic school, without asking to take money away from public schools for our choice. We paid taxes for public schools as all citizens do and should. My grand children’s public school is not “legendarily wealthy,” it is overcrowded and has trailers on the concrete playground. And frankly, it is none of your business, is it? I am not interested in the schooling of your children or other relations, and I will thank you not to be interested in mine.
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Sorry that was posted in the wrong place:
And just like Gates, Obama, Rhee, John King…who did I forget?
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TE..get a clue. Is she in charge of the USDOE and shoving national standards down our throats? Give it up.
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Let’s focus on the positions taken, not ad homonyms.
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TE
You twisted pretzel logic is getting tiresome. Give up the ghost will you.
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Sigh. Is PS 321 a near private school or not? If so, is that a reason to criticize the arguments about educational policy advocated by parents (or grandparents) who have children attending those schools?
I don’t think these ad homonym arguments are particularly helpful to the discussion despite their popularity.
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The point was that what happens outside of school does matter.
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TE — There’s a lot of money in Park Slope (particularly in the real estate), and PS 321 does have resources that a lot of NYC public schools don’t. But if you were to tour it, I doubt you’d come away with the impression that it was “legendarily wealthy.”
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Would you expect that a tour of Arlington public schools would be significantly different from a tour of PS 321? If not, surely both should be characterized as near private schools (and we should add many more suburban districts to the list).
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TE — I know next to nothing about Arlington or it’s schools. Never seen them, can’t really say.
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If real estate is the measure of whether a school is legendarily wealthy, then PS 321–despite its overcrowding, its transportables, and its generally depressing standard-issue DOE aesthetic–easily qualifies. I could fly to the moon sooner than I could afford renting or buying in the PS 321 zone.
For a NYC DOE K-5 elementary school, its student population is fantastically wealthy and astonishingly non-diverse. And it is about to get richer and less diverse–just this year, its zone was redrawn to eliminate the 12 blocks that were home to almost all of what little ‘affordable’ housing the zone contained in the first place.
I’m happy to have the discussion about the exclusive private schools and how we can make more public schools like them, but not if it isn’t going to be a 360-degree conversation. The exclusive private schools cream, employment is at-will, employees bear a far greater share of benefit costs, and work rules are streamlined and totally child-centered. Just about all of them adminstered annual standardized summative assessments, too.
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Tim, my grandson is in public school. I am a graduate of K-12 public school.
Are you?
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Tim and TE,
Your harping about PS 321 is nothing but a shameful straw man argument. Don’t you find it somewhat embarrassing to openly display your lack of critical thinking skills?
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Right on NY TEACHER.
He would never send his kids to a school that teaches the cluttered chaotic mess they call a curriculum…Never..
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It is correct to say that the educational choice a person has made for their children or grandchildren has no bearing on the validity of the person’s policy position. Many who post here send their children to public school, many who post here send their children to private school, many who post here send their children to “near private schools”. This is true for Dr. Ravitch as well as Secretary Duncan. They are all ad homonyms.
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TE
Not sure why you don’t understand the difference between teachers who oppose the imposition of CC and Arne Duncan, US Cabinet member, Secretary of USDOE and head cheerleader for CC. It behooves a real leader to put their money where their mouth is. It behooves an educational leader to “Do as I do” not “Do as I say”
Arne Duncan loses any shred of credibility as an educational leader with this position. John King – same empty rhetoric with no kin in the game (not a typo but a decent pun); Bill gates spends a fortune pushing an agenda he wont let his own kids anywhere near.These reformers have brought hypocrisy to a new level.
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TE
Please don’t continue to embarrass yourself with another piece of your pretzel logic. Read the posts and try to understand the difference between Diane Ravitch and Arne Duncan and their roles and responsibilities in the grand scheme of this disastrous reform movement. You are doing yourself no favors by prolonging this discussion; playing devil’s advocate only works when you can make a reasonably logical argument.
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Yes, Diane, I attended traditional public schools for K-12, and my children are enrolled in traditional NYC DOE public elementary schools. I’m not a teacher, nor do I work in an education-related field.
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“They all are ad hominems.”
True.
Apparently, here are the “salient” points to take away from this thread:
1) TE is muddying himself to prove that the mud is dirty for everyone. How very . . . , I guess, “gallant” (perhaps that is the word) of him.
2) Grandparents determine/dictate where their grandchildren go to school and we can chart this with data.
3) The people who live in the PS 321 zone apparently could afford a flight to the moon.
4) The adjectives that are employed to prove “completely” vapid points all end with “ly.” (fantastically, astonishingly, legendarily).
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Great list, Morrigan! If I may humbly add to it, I’d suggest,
5) Keeping score of what types of school the various players in the education game send their kids to almost never leads to a worthwhile discussion, and
6) Saying “because exclusive private schools” is meaningless, vapid rhetoric in the absence of specifics. There are many real and significant structural and financial barriers obstructing that goal–how should they be dealt with?
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Tim,
You can “humbly” add to the list if you want.
All I ask is that you remain consistent to the form to extend the wit. If you deviate from it, then you just turn kinda into “that guy.” You know. The guy at the party who turns points into questions.
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As posted above from the Arlington website:
“Furthermore, students in ELA classrooms across the grade-levels are encouraged to create their own texts in a meaningful and supportive manner so that their individual voices and perspectives might be brought to a wider audience.”
WHAT!?!? Individual voices and perspectives??
That must bring shivers down David “Don’t give a $hit What you think” Coleman’s spine. How does Virginia stand for this insolence?
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Jeff-well said, concise, and a terrific summary of why we need to scrap CCSS. We are right there with you in regards to opting out until every child has the same opportunity and vital faculties as children who live in affluent communities. Thank you!
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And just like Gates, Obama, Rhee, John King…who did I forget?
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BRAVO. As I’ve always stated: ABOLISH THE US DOE. The 10th Amendment to the Constitution is the resource.
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The Common Core is one of the most costly escapades foisted on districts across the country. Gates should be held financially accountable, and foot the bill(s) associated with the cost of breaking free of this malpractice nightmare!
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Great Idea!
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Can you imagine if Gates had spent his hundreds of millions building more public schools, more parks, more after school programs, helping to hire more public school teachers to lower their class sizes, and assisting areas economically depressed, he would instead be remembered as an American hero.
Woe to the harm of poor judgement.
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I once emailed the Bill and Melinda Gated Foundation with the suggestion that he spend his millions air conditioning schools. Of course I got no response and millions of students and tens of thousands of teachers are still forced to teach and learn under inhumane conditions during May, June and even September.
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Thank you Prof. Nichols for taking the time to write your concerns and reiterate the concerns of our parents and teachers. Most importantly stating: ” Withdraw from the Common Core!” for all the reasons you gave.
Children are developing a negative attitude toward school at the young age and because of the CC Syndrome, need therapy. Teachers need therapy because they are so stressed out from being denied academic freedom to develop concepts in a meaningful and interesting way as the need arises. They are stressed out because they must follow standards that are not in the best interest of all their pupils.
As you said, “useless and phenomenally expensive standardized tests.” What really is upsetting is that the Sequester reduced the amount of money districts received from the state. Practically every districts had to lay off teachers. The govt. turns around and takes that money and bribes states to accept the CC. The Sequester money was suppose to reduce our national deficit but instead only increases it with the CC and wasting money on the corporate world. As Steve B state, “The Common Core is one of the most costly escapades foisted on districts across the country.”
I don’t agree on the issue of universal pre-K. High quality day care for low income families has a different connotation. With daycare a parent/caregiver would be freed of the fear that direct teaching, paper and pencil activities, along with homework would become part of their child’s day.
Instead of spending money on pre-K, use that money to reinstate all the teachers that lost their jobs due to the Sequester. Spend money on workshops for parents /caregivers supporting them in becoming active in their children’s intellectual, emotional, and physical development. Schools/society can’t do it all; parents must take responsibility. With so many people out of work there has to be many a parent/caregiver at home.
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Hi Tim, Thanks for the correction! I got the impression I believe from a fantastic speech by Chicago parent Matt Farmer (I’m sure it’s on youtube– watch it!), in which I remembered, perhaps mistakenly, that he protested the fact that Duncan sent his kids to the U. of Chicago lab school, whose learning conditions were very different from those resulting from Duncan’s initiatives as education secretary. I should have been more careful about his current situation.
I agree with some of the responses that public schools in wealthy suburbs are tantamount to private ones — some rich people do it one way, some the other, but almost none send their kids to under-resourced public schools. But that doesn’t excuse my inaccuracy.
In any case, Barack Obama and the NY state commissioner of education, John King, both send their kids to private schools.
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I don’t think the oversight takes anything away from the gist of your letter, but I’ve seen the same mistake made so many times, correcting it is a knee-jerk reaction.
For many reasons, I’m also not a fan of the argument that public schools should be modeled after the exclusive private schools. At least provide specifics of what should be emulated (surely we don’t want the public system to completely forgo educating special ed and ELL students the way the elite privates do) and what compromises might need to be made.
A minor detail at the end of your letter intrigued me: “Teachers assessed children; principals, fellow teachers and parents assessed teachers.” Can you expand on what you mean by “parents assessed teachers”? Sounds interesting!
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I’m glad to know I’m not alone in that error!
About the remark you quoted — I don’t pretend to be an informed historian of the history of education policy in my home state of Indiana! I was trying to be brief, and in that sentence what I had in mind was that parents and community members had a say in how schools were run, and therefore in how teachers were evaluated. Maybe I shouldn’t have ventured into that territory, because it’s such a sore point in our society right now. I know that my childhood teachers were not living in fear of being fired based on my test scores — because other than a 1-hour standardized test in fourth grade, for which the preparation was “bring a # 2 pencil” and the consequences were zero for me, my teachers and my school — there simply were no such tests!
All I’m getting at is that educators and parents need to retake control of our schools, and that no matter what the problem, suspension of democracy is never the solution.
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Simple Tim….Real Simple…
Check and Balance..
Like the three branches of Government’s ……Check and Balance..
Parents knew when their child was in a classroom of a “lazy hire”..and they knew when their children were in a classroom where the teacher worked for their children.
Of course, as is always the case, the parents that want you to give their child an “A” will always be around.. Veteran teachers know how to handle this situation in a very professional manner.
Teachers were able to assess their students, and were then able to use these assessments to improve the weaknesses ..and constantly reteach an objective.. Feedback..Feedback..Feedback…they had it in their hands..immediately..
These CC$$ tests are Invisible and leave teachers to guess what to teach and it is impossible to teach ALL of it all and it is so CHAOTIC in the first place…you can not get from A to B..you are going around your elbow to get to your thumb…and all the while..they have amputated your arm before you even knew they had the knife in hand. Gory but true.
The students get COUDY feed back in the form of CODES…REI-.2-345A ..They nor the teacher ever know what the H*ll they missed on the test…and the tests are so bad in the first place..my dog could do as well….by pawing his way through the cr*p
Teachers are teaching a very chaotic curriculum thrown at them .
CC$$
It is like Building an Airplane in the sky.
It is like a lab using children as Test Rats.,
It is like the worst ever curriculum known to mankind put together by greedy corporations that are in it for the $$$$$$
How long have you been teaching Tim????…and do you teach the Duncan children?
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Jeff, could you please post instructions for the rest of the group on how to respond to a simple correction without hyperventilating? You did it so well in this post, and I think others might benefit from your guidance.
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Jeff hits the nail squarely on the head. The Common Core movement delivers a blow to democracy from which it will take years to recover. The only thing that will stop it is the loud voice of the people.
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WHERE’S THE POLLING? I was surveyed by phone twice in the last month and I was asked about Common Core both times. Where are the results of these surveys?
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Bravo! His last paragraph is especially well written!
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Everyone following this blog topic should take note to what is transpiring, a rare agreement between two quarters which rarely agree. Common Core has done this, as the author reminds us.
And Gov. Cuomo should be applauded for joining other states executives in revisiting the decision made it haste without evidence of success in any education environment to adopt Common Core.
All those who have followed the Common Core topic and continue to raise the warning are making an extraordinary effort
to reject it, and replace Common Core with Common Sense.
What the map of our country, as state after state which adopted it are moving through their legislatures to stop it.
Let’s win this battle, our kids deserve our help, as they received none from the US DOE.
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