Lyndsey Layton of the Washington Post interviewed Bill Gates in 2014 and told the full story of the origin of the Common Core “State” Standards.
In case the Washington Post is behind a paywall, the full text of the Layton article is here.
Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and other friends of the CCSS insisted that the standards were developed by governors, state superintendents, education experts, and teachers. No, they were developed by David Coleman, formerly of McKinsey, now CEO of the College Board, and a committee whose members included no working teachers but a full complement of testing experts from ACT and SAT. Google David Coleman and “architect” and you will see that he is widely credited with shepherding the CCSS to completion.
It would not have happened without the enthusiastic support and funding of Bill Gates.
Layton writes:
On a summer day in 2008, Gene Wilhoit, director of a national group of state school chiefs, and David Coleman, an emerging evangelist for the standards movement, spent hours in Bill Gates’s sleek headquarters near Seattle, trying to persuade him and his wife, Melinda, to turn their idea into reality.
Coleman and Wilhoit told the Gateses that academic standards varied so wildly between states that high school diplomas had lost all meaning, that as many as 40 percent of college freshmen needed remedial classes and that U.S. students were falling behind their foreign competitors.
The pair also argued that a fragmented education system stifled innovation because textbook publishers and software developers were catering to a large number of small markets instead of exploring breakthrough products. That seemed to resonate with the man who led the creation of the world’s dominant computer operating system.
“Can you do this?” Wilhoit recalled being asked. “Is there any proof that states are serious about this, because they haven’t been in the past?”
Wilhoit responded that he and Coleman could make no guarantees but that “we were going to give it the best shot we could.”
After the meeting, weeks passed with no word. Then Wilhoit got a call: Gates was in.
What followed was one of the swiftest and most remarkable shifts in education policy in U.S. history.
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation didn’t just bankroll the development of what became known as the Common Core State Standards. With more than $200 million, the foundation also built political support across the country, persuading state governments to make systemic and costly changes.
Bill Gates was de facto organizer, providing the money and structure for states to work together on common standards in a way that avoided the usual collision between states’ rights and national interests that had undercut every previous effort, dating from the Eisenhower administration.
The Gates Foundation spread money across the political spectrum, to entities including the big teachers unions, the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association, and business organizations such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce — groups that have clashed in the past but became vocal backers of the standards.
Money flowed to policy groups on the right and left, funding research by scholars of varying political persuasions who promoted the idea of common standards. Liberals at the Center for American Progress and conservatives affiliated with the American Legislative Exchange Council who routinely disagree on nearly every issue accepted Gates money and found common ground on the Common Core.
One 2009 study, conducted by the conservative Thomas B. Fordham Institute with a $959,116 Gates grant, described the proposed standards as being “very, very strong” and “clearly superior” to many existing state standards.
Gates money went to state and local groups, as well, to help influence policymakers and civic leaders. And the idea found a major booster in President Obama, whose new administration was populated by former Gates Foundation staffers and associates. The administration designed a special contest using economic stimulus funds to reward states that accepted the standards.
The result was astounding: Within just two years of the 2008 Seattle meeting, 45 states and the District of Columbia had fully adopted the Common Core State Standards.
Even Massachusetts, the state with the highest academic performance in the nation, replaced its excellent standards with CCSS and won a federal grant for doing so.
Some states adopted Common Core before it was publicly released. The state chief in Texas, Robert Scott, refused to adopt the CCSS sight unseen, but he was a rarity.
Without Gates’ money, there would be no Common Core.
Opposition came from Tea Party groups, then from independent teacher groups like the BadAss Teachers Association.
The promise of the Common Core was that it would lift student test scores across the board and at the same time, would close achievement gaps.
The Common Core was rolled out in 2010 and adopted widely in 2011 and 2012.
Districts and states spent billions of dollars on new textbooks, new tests, new software and hardware, new professional development, all aligned to the CCSS.
This was money that the districts and states did not spend to reduce class sizes or to raise teachers’ salaries.
Test scores on NAEP and on international tests have been stagnant since the rollout of the Common Core.
Teacher morale down. New entries into teaching down. Test scores flat. Achievement gaps larger.
Edu-entrepreneurs enriched. Testing industry happy. Tech industry satisfied.
Disruption achieved.
If you want to read more about the origins of the Common Core, read Mercedes Schneider’s Common Core Dilemma: Who Owns Our Schools? and Nicholas Tampio’s https://www.amazon.com/Common-Core-Nicholas-Tampio-ebook/dp/B079S2627M/ref=sr_1_fkmr0_1?keywords=nicholas+campion+common+core&qid=1575909356&s=books&sr=1-1-fkmr0Common Core: National Education Standards and the Threat to Our Democracy.
Bottom line: What the Gates’ billions spent on Common Core proved was that the basic problem in American education is not the lack of common standards and common tests, but the growing numbers of children who live in poverty, who come to school (or miss school) ill-nourished and lacking regular medical care and a decent standard of living.
He spent more than $4 billion on failed experiments in education over the past 20 years. Wouldn’t it be great if he invested in children, families, and communities and improved their standard of living?

Gates doesn’t know squat about educating anyone.
And … Gates’ products suck. Gates’ father is a lawyer who told his son, Bill, to “sew up the market” and let the users debug his products.
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The CC would have gone NOWhERE without the “cooperation” of Arne Duncan and US Department of Education, with whom Gates Foundation worked hand in glove.
The fact that it took so little time was directly related to Race to the Top, without which it would probably never have happened, at least not on such a broad scale.
It’s not a stretch to speculate that Gates had some assurances about the plan from Duncan ahead of time before he agreed to go ahead with the funding.
The way CC happened was waaay too coordinated to believe that all the pieces came together by accident. And Bill Gates leaves nothing to chance.
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Perhaps some day, some whistleblower who worked at GF during the time in question will come clean about CC.
Hopefully, they copied all the emails.
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“And Bill Gates leaves nothing to chance.”
Except his software.
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Ha ha ha.
Good point.
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Of course Duncan shoved CC down the throats of most states, despite the explicit prohibition in federal law against the ED Dept interfering in either curriculum
Or instruction.
Race to the Top violates that law.
States signed on to CC, in many cases, without ever reading it so they could be eligible for a share of $5 billion.
No discussion. Only two signatures needed. The state chief and the governor. Both the Council of Chief State School Officers abd the National Governors Association got millions from Gates to support CC.
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If Common Core or something similar to it was adopted back in the early 2000s when you were in favor of national curriculum, would you accept it back then despite it violating the existing law?
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If I had, I would have been proven wrong as I was proven wrong about charter schools. I thought they were a swell idea until I saw the failures and thefts.
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Here’s the thing about Diane Ravitch: She follows where the facts lead. More scholars like her, please!
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The same McKinsey consultants that employed Mayor Pete. Another thread in the web named “Why I can’t vote for Mayor Pete in the Primary.”
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Because the Democratic Party under Obama pushed RTTT and CCCS, and because both teacher union leaders still in power took Gates’s money back then to support CCCS and are powerful insiders with seats at the Dem Party table, the many Dem candidates for Pres. now have been mostly avoiding education, with only Sanders and Warren finally weighing in on testing, charters, inequality, etc. This is also why education was off the table in the 2016 Pres. campaign. At last night’s debate in LA, education was again missing as an issue so it will take a sustained uproar from progressive school advocates and a militant revolt by the rank and file of the teacher unions against their own leaders to put education on the table for real and for keeps.
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“Progressive school advocates” have already damaged American education enough for American schoolchildren to be two, three, even four years behind other countries just because “age-inappropriate programs” or “phonics is fake science”.
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You have no clue about K-12 education. None.
Why don’t you stick to what you know?
Or move to Estonia or China?
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If “age-inappropriate programs” are indeed “fake science”, I’d say we have been set back by much more than just four years.
Hell, we should be teaching calculus in kindergarten instead of waiting until 12th grade.
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Age Appropriate teaching is bunk
Derivatives for 5 year olds
And integrals — and lots!
The calculus, I have been told’s
Appropriate for tots
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SomeDAM: https://bobshepherdonline.wordpress.com/2014/02/23/aiden-reading-on-the-way-to-preschool/
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“Bottom line: What the Gates’ billions spent on Common Core proved was that the basic problem in American education is not the lack of common standards and common tests, but the growing numbers of children who live in poverty, who come to school (or miss school) ill-nourished and lacking regular medical care and a decent standard of living.”
Obvious to those of us who have taught, and are deeply aware of, and concerned about, the increasing inequality in the U.S. since the late 1970’s with the dominance of the neoliberal political-economic ideology which has infected BOTH corporate parties.
How do we change a corporate capitalist system which maintains that corporations have the same (or more) rights as people, and that puts corporate profits and power way above concern for human lives?
DESPERATELY NEEDED:
Medicare for all;
the end of homelessness and poverty in the richest nation in history;
a living (NOT “minimum”) wage adjusted for both regional differences and inflation;
a Green New Deal to mitigate the effects of the rapidly accelerating Climate Catastrophe and also provide jobs;
and the end of the wasteful, bi-partisan spending on endless, unnecessary (except to war profiteers and their legally-bribed politicians) wars and weapons systems which do NOT work (the F-35 and the U.S.S.Gerald Ford aircraft carrier, for example);
and the end of wasteful spending on a global empire of more than 800 military bases in more than 70 foreign countries, nuclear-armed fleets on and under every ocean, ‘modernizing’ a nuclear weapons arsenal which ALREADY contains more than 6,000 warheads (when the detonation of only about 100 would create a Nuclear Winter which would end most life on earth), a provocative but unnecessary U.S. Space Force to dominate even outer space, plus deployments of Special Forces in more than 130 countries.
Until U.S. spending priorities change from greed, profits, destruction, and spreading misery to bettering the lives of people, “luxuries” such as smaller class sizes and higher teacher wages will remain fantasies.
“A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual doom.” – Martin Luther King, Jr., 1967
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Well stated, Ed!
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Bien dicho.
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Well said, Ed! It’s time.
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Yes.
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The CCSS and the tests are a product of the collusion government, elitists and a self interested billionaire. They are a top down product that were created in a vacuum by those that do not teach in public education or understand child development. With ever moving cut scores, the tests became a political football designed to undermine public education. Unfortunately, their influence remains across many states that use the test results as a vehicle of privatization.
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What this article establishes is that Common Core was not Gates’s idea and he had to be persuaded. Also, because the U.S. has no centralized organization to force curricula onto the states, he had to create his own network of businessmen, bureaucrats and lobbyists, this is how things are done given the economic and political system, nothing special. Overall, this article says nothing that makes Gates or CC evil. The article says nothing about the origins of actual content of CC, I don’t believe that Coleman and Wilhoit wrote them all by themselves in a matter of months. Clearly, they recycled someone’s stuff, so saying that CC was not trialled is a misnomer, the parts of it were tried before I am sure, it is another question whether the trials of those bits and pieces were successful.
“The standards are not a curriculum but skills that students should acquire at each grade. How they are taught and materials used are decisions left to states and school districts,” this was a grave mistake. They should have developed complete textbooks to accompany the standards. “Everyone who developed standards in the past has had a theory that standards will raise achievement, and that’s not happened,” Loveless said. Of course it did not happen because the standards were not matched with textbooks and with meticulously defined (should I say scripted?) classroom activities and pedagogy. And this is why CC is silently failing too.
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Gates funded CC in its entirety. He funded rightwing organizations like the Thomas B. Fordham Institute. He funded left wing groups. He funded professional organizations. He funded both national teachers’ unions.
The CCSS were never given a trial run in any classroom in the nation.
I met with Obama’s top education advisors and urged field trials. They said the CC had to be in place by 2012. There was no time to give them a trial.
I was there. Where were you?
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Teachers do not want trials. They want stuff that looks like what they already are using. Open Court textbooks were continually improved and trialled and and cross-tested against other programs during thirty years, yet in their best times they had no more than 5% of the market in non-adoption states, and barely 2% in California. This was a clear signal that trialling does not matter whatsoever. As for who funded whom, I really am not interested in that, this is how things are done in the U.S. absent the federal control over curricula. Gates’ mistake was not lack of trialling, but lack of commitment for continuous improvement right after the adoption. He should have treated CC like he treated Windows or Excel, rolling out updates and bugfixes (and even with this attention Windows botched it from time to time, like Windows 8). Being copyrighted, CC cannot be easily changed by anyone else but Coleman/Gates, so it slides into irrelevance.
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Common Core Trial”
Teachers don’t want trial
Only execution
Hanging for awhile
That is the solution!
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Thank you for your comment about the Common Gore, Diane.
Gates is a real “piece of work.” He’s another spoiled child with money.
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I’ve been away from your fabulous blog for a while due to the overwhelming news of the day since November 2016 coming from so many different directions outside ed.
But I stepped back in recently and see so many threads continuing as if no time has gone by.
Why? Because we have yet to enter an era of real change in public education. I hold my own union, NYSUT, in part, responsible for that lack of the-change-we-need leadership. (for another thread…)
CCSS and Race to the Top were and still are complete disasters, even if you may not feel them anymore where you teach. Every day in my elementary classroom in a suburb of NYC I have to put up my human firewall to protect my students from the dictates that still exist. Maybe they were meant to be “suggestions” but that’s a euphemism for “dictate” where I teach. And even if the CCSS have been modified and repackaged as “Next Generation” standards here in NYS, the standards are mostly the same and more importantly, the thinking model behind the original intent of imposing CCSS is still very much alive and in use.
The model is: Tell teachers what to teach, how to teach, and when to teach. Gather as many data points, as often as you can to determine if those teachers are doing what they’re told. And then add more top-down, admin-directed dictates to correct the weaknesses gleaned from the data they collected. And every new “program” that’s adopted has some kind of data-collecting component to be sure more data can be collected more frequently.
OY!
Enough.
True change will come when someone/some group (NYSUT???) stands up and says “the change we need must come from the teachers.” Listen to the teachers. The only adults in the room where education policy meets its intended target – the student.
Please.
I’ve said it before, I’ll say it again: Read “Intelligent Disobedience” by Ira Chaleff. It will give you insight on the importance of finding your inner voice to stand up and say what needs to be said. This is at the fundamental core of how change will come, if it is to come. And how we can save not just public education, but our entire democracy.
Stand up and be heard.
Silence is the voice of complicity.
And thanks for reading. (I switched to Twitter since November 2016 and I am loving not having character limits constrain my writing in this blog response… 🙂
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“The standards are not a curriculum.”
The fact is that every educational materials developer in the country, these days, starts the planning of every project in ELA or Math with a spreadsheet that has the ludicrous Common [sic] Core [sic] in the first column and spaces for where those are covered in the other columns. The Common [sic] Core [sic] has become the de facto curriculum map. And, as E.D. Hirsch, Jr., pointed out on this very blog about a year ago, the Common [sic] Core [sic] for Math is, in fact, a curriculum outline, just like the NCTM standards that its authors ripped off and devolved. Teachers are quitting across the country because of these stupid standards, but what’s less well known is that a lot of wise, experienced K-12 textbook writers and editors are doing so, too, because they are sick to death of the extent to which the CC$$ have debased US curricula and led to the creation of ELA courseware, print and online,
that is totally incoherent-a string of random exercises on random CC$$ skills;
that is a Swiss cheese of lacunae;
that is typically trivial, received, pedestrian, mediocre, and hackneyed;
that ignores most descriptive knowledge related to the discipline of English (It’s not in the standards!);
that treats procedural knowledge in this field so vaguely that the lessons are useless (contain no news students can use); and
hat embodies lots and lots of discredited folk superstitions about how people acquire skill in reading, writing, grammar, interpreting literature, etc.
But, ofc, ripping off the NCTM standards and lousy existing ELA standards from various states didn’t keep these guys from asserting copyright in their ridiculous, new “standards,” which itself gives some insight into their desire to set themselves up as the sole arbiter for the country, the deciders for all the rest of us.
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But who am I to argue? I’m a mere textbook writer and teacher. After all, His Royal Highness Mr. Gates appointed Lord Coleman, by divine right, Sheriff of English Language Arts and Math instruction in the United States, and surely, as Hobbes argued in the Leviathan, monarchy is best. Surely, in Hobbes’s words, we all need to live under “a common power to keep [us] all in awe,” for as Queen Elizabeth I wrote in 1601, “The Royal Prerogative [is] not to be canvassed, nor disputed, nor examined, and [does] not even admit of any limitation.”
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Bob, I presume you realize that the quote you are responding to is taken verbatim from “the most important article written about Common Core” by Lyndsey Layton. So, maybe you want to address her with your concerns.
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My point is that these puerile “standards” have, indeed, been treated like a de facto curriculum. Whether they should be (they certainly shouldn’t) is moot. The damage is still done every time a curriculum developer slavishly creates products stringing together exercises on these “standards” and every time some simple-minded administrator walks into a classroom and demands, “What standard are you teaching now?”
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Sorry about my tone, QuelleProf. I’m quite angry about these “standards,” for they have just about trashed the profession to which I have devoted my life. What an abomination! Yes, they are no worse than the state standards that preceded them, but those weren’t taken as the curriculum map because they varied considerably. These have been, and the consequences of that have been devastating for ELA curricula.
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Layton’s point seemed to be in line with your thoughts, too, Bob. The rest of that statement was, …”but skills that students should acquire at each grade.” How and what was taught was supposed to be left to the states. Unfortunately Common Core so warped the normal process that content was subordinated to skills. I am not saying anything that you haven’t said before and, as far as I can tell, is still in line with what you are saying now.
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The Common [sic] Core [sic] is an amateurish SKILLS LIST hacked together from previous state “standards” that were equally substanceless, wrapped in a call for a great return to substantive texts that has largely been ignored because of the perceived need to create curricula to prepare kids to pass the invalid and contentless tests on the skills list. The list itself is for the most part vacuous vagaries, but that list has become the de facto curriculum in ELA in the United States, pushing out all coherence and substance in ELA curricula and pedagogy. Where curriculum developers used to sit down and write a coherent unit to teach students how poems work or how to write a narrative or what the Puritans or the Transcendentalists thought, they now string together exercises on random CC$$ skills, employing snippets of random text, in imitation of state tests that cannot validly tests “standards” this broad and general and vague because “standards” so framed cannot be validly operationaized due to that vagueness, that lack of specificity, that lack of substance. On a diet of the CC$$ in ELA, an entire generation of US kids has now subsisted on airy nothings, on so much wind. And people wonder why the test scores haven’t budged. Well, the noneducators who make up the Deform and Disruption Movement wonder such things because they imagine the Gates/Coleman list to be “higher” and “standards” because they’ve been told that they are. All this would be laughable if it weren’t so tragic. Real English teachers grok all this as those philistines, those dabblers who have set themselves up as overlords, never will. Enough.
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As if English teachers needed Lord Coleman to tell them that kids should read substantive texts, something that of course they never had kids do before this radical genius (in his own mind) deigned to enlighten them. Ridiculous. This is a man who understood so little about the English language arts that he actually thought that narrative was relatively unimportant and that literary works didn’t present arguments. https://bobshepherdonline.wordpress.com/2018/11/30/what-makes-humans-human/
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David Coleman came from McKinsey.
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He clearly knew very little about English language arts instruction in the United States. Allow me to share one example. For over half a century, almost all high-schools in the US did an American lit survey course in grade 11, which corresponding to the American history course the 11th graders were simultaneously taking. In many schools, these were team taught by English and social studies teachers. Then, in grade 12, in almost all schools, kids did a British literature survey course. And, of course, the literature offerings from the major basal publisher reflected this. American Lit, Grade 11. Brit Lit, Grade 12. But in his near total ignorance of what U.S. English teachers were actually doing, he made study of “foundational texts in American literature” the focus in BOTH Grades 11 and 12 (this was one of the very few of items on his bullet list that actually referred to any content). So, now the 12th-grade books do a snippet from Wordsworth, a snippet from the US Constitution, a snippet about invasive species, etc., all tied to Coleman’s puerile “standards” bullet list of vague, abstract skills. Bye, bye, curricular coherence. One more: Coleman was also clueless that there was astonishing de facto uniformity across the country in the novels, plays, histories, and other full-length works teachers were having kids read at various grade levels. Romeo and Juliet in Grade 9. Julius Caesar in Grade 10. The Crucible and Our Town in Grade 11. Macbeth in Grade 12. Rare was the kid who would graduate from high school without having been assigned Night, To Kill a Mockingbird, A Separate Peace, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, selections from the Odyssey. Tom Sawyer. The House on Mango Street. Great Expectations. In fact, so widely were these and other classics being read, that every lit publisher also had an ancillary line of these novels and plays and so on, and the lines, from each publisher, were virtually identical. But Coleman was OBLIVIOUS of all this. He had no clue what actual materials were being used in English classrooms, and he didn’t bother to find out. He and his fat cat buddies were convinced that we weren’t being tough enough, that they had to tell teachers to assign complex, substantive texts, which he did, though this made NO DIFFERENCE because his stupid standards were themselves mostly content free, and those became what mattered because those were what was being tested. So, the CC$$ had precisely the opposite effect. They led to ELA curricula that consisted of strings of random, inane exercises on random, inane skills from the bullet list, based on random snippets of text. Despite having dabbled in education as an edupreneur, Coleman was almost completely clueless about what was actually going on in U.S. English classes, and he went stomping across the garden in his big, dumb boots.
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The Scarlet Letter. That was another that was taught in almost every Grade 11 English classroom in the country. But Coleman was convinced, based on no evidence whatsoever, that English teachers weren’t assigning texts that were complex enough. But as any English teacher knows, The Scarlet Letter is quite challenging. It has a Lexile Level of 1280 and deals with a LOT of concepts with which the typical high-school kid is utterly unfamiliar (election, predestination, indulgences, Original Sin, local governance, the covenant of grace versus the covernant of works, absolute sovereignty, justification through faith, penance, transubstantiation, baptism, communion, the sacraments, separatism, Puritanism, and so on. And it takes a literary form, that of allegory, that is no longer common and requires exegesis. But to listen to Lord Coleman the Clueless talk, you would think that no one had ever imagined teaching a challenging text to kids.
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McKinsey. Ofc.
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Thanks, Speduktr!
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David Coleman came from McKinsey.”
I thought he came from Uranus
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Not Uranus. Probably out of a Trump-like “U” reign-anus
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McKinsey conjures the scatological for a great many of us.
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You are so polite when you talk s***. 🙂
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The most important writing ever about CCSS was written before CCSS was a trinkle in the eyes of Gates and Coleman found at https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/viewFile/577/700:
Brief outline of Wilson’s “Educational Standards and the Problem of Error” and some comments of mine. (updated 6/24/13 per Wilson email)
A description of a quality can only be partially quantified. Quantity is almost always a very small aspect of quality. It is illogical to judge/assess a whole category only by a part of the whole. The assessment is, by definition, lacking in the sense that “assessments are always of multidimensional qualities. To quantify them as unidimensional quantities (numbers or grades) is to perpetuate a fundamental logical error” (per Wilson). The teaching and learning process falls in the logical realm of aesthetics/qualities of human interactions. In attempting to quantify educational standards and standardized testing the descriptive information about said interactions is inadequate, insufficient and inferior to the point of invalidity and unacceptability.
A major epistemological mistake is that we attach, with great importance, the “score” of the student, not only onto the student but also, by extension, the teacher, school and district. Any description of a testing event is only a description of an interaction, that of the student and the testing device at a given time and place. The only correct logical thing that we can attempt to do is to describe that interaction (how accurately or not is a whole other story). That description cannot, by logical thought, be “assigned/attached” to the student as it cannot be a description of the student but the interaction. And this error is probably one of the most egregious “errors” that occur with standardized testing (and even the “grading” of students by a teacher).
Wilson identifies four “frames of reference” each with distinct assumptions (epistemological basis) about the assessment process from which the “assessor” views the interactions of the teaching and learning process: the Judge (think college professor who “knows” the students capabilities and grades them accordingly), the General Frame-think standardized testing that claims to have a “scientific” basis, the Specific Frame-think of learning by objective like computer based learning, getting a correct answer before moving on to the next screen, and the Responsive Frame-think of an apprenticeship in a trade or a medical residency program where the learner interacts with the “teacher” with constant feedback. Each category has its own sources of error and more error in the process is caused when the assessor confuses and conflates the categories.
Wilson elucidates the notion of “error”: “Error is predicated on a notion of perfection; to allocate error is to imply what is without error; to know error it is necessary to determine what is true. And what is true is determined by what we define as true, theoretically by the assumptions of our epistemology, practically by the events and non-events, the discourses and silences, the world of surfaces and their interactions and interpretations; in short, the practices that permeate the field. . . Error is the uncertainty dimension of the statement; error is the band within which chaos reigns, in which anything can happen. Error comprises all of those eventful circumstances which make the assessment statement less than perfectly precise, the measure less than perfectly accurate, the rank order less than perfectly stable, the standard and its measurement less than absolute, and the communication of its truth less than impeccable.”
In other words all the logical errors involved in the process render any conclusions invalid.
The test makers/psychometricians, through all sorts of mathematical machinations attempt to “prove” that these tests (based on standards) are valid-errorless or supposedly at least with minimal error [they aren’t]. Wilson turns the concept of validity on its head and focuses on just how invalid the machinations and the test and results are. He is an advocate for the test taker not the test maker. In doing so he identifies thirteen sources of “error”, any one of which renders the test making/giving/disseminating of results invalid. And a basic logical premise is that once something is shown to be invalid it is just that, invalid, and no amount of “fudging” by the psychometricians/test makers can alleviate that invalidity.
Having shown the invalidity, and therefore the unreliability, of the whole process Wilson concludes, rightly so, that any result/information gleaned from the process is “vain and illusory”. In other words start with an invalidity, end with an invalidity (except by sheer chance every once in a while, like a blind and anosmic squirrel who finds the occasional acorn, a result may be “true”) or to put in more mundane terms crap in-crap out.
And so what does this all mean? I’ll let Wilson have the second to last word: “So what does a test measure in our world? It measures what the person with the power to pay for the test says it measures. And the person who sets the test will name the test what the person who pays for the test wants the test to be named.”
In other words it attempts to measure “’something’ and we can specify some of the ‘errors’ in that ‘something’ but still don’t know [precisely] what the ‘something’ is.” The whole process harms many students as the social rewards for some are not available to others who “don’t make the grade (sic)” Should American public education have the function of sorting and separating students so that some may receive greater benefits than others, especially considering that the sorting and separating devices, educational standards and standardized testing, are so flawed not only in concept but in execution?
My answer is NO!!!!!
One final note with Wilson channeling Foucault and his concept of subjectivization:
“So the mark [grade/test score] becomes part of the story about yourself and with sufficient repetitions becomes true: true because those who know, those in authority, say it is true; true because the society in which you live legitimates this authority; true because your cultural habitus makes it difficult for you to perceive, conceive and integrate those aspects of your experience that contradict the story; true because in acting out your story, which now includes the mark and its meaning, the social truth that created it is confirmed; true because if your mark is high you are consistently rewarded, so that your voice becomes a voice of authority in the power-knowledge discourses that reproduce the structure that helped to produce you; true because if your mark is low your voice becomes muted and confirms your lower position in the social hierarchy; true finally because that success or failure confirms that mark that implicitly predicted the now self-evident consequences. And so the circle is complete.”
In other words students “internalize” what those “marks” (grades/test scores) mean, and since the vast majority of the students have not developed the mental skills to counteract what the “authorities” say, they accept as “natural and normal” that “story/description” of them. Although paradoxical in a sense, the “I’m an “A” student” is almost as harmful as “I’m an ‘F’ student” in hindering students becoming independent, critical and free thinkers. And having independent, critical and free thinkers is a threat to the current socio-economic structure of society.
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The National Governor’s Association appointed a Common Core Board that consisted of over 60 members – with mostly test makers and only one k-12 teacher. Nuff said.
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The NGA had no role in the drafting of the standards.
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Who is this QuelleProf who doesn’t identify himself? Interesting name. It means “What prof?” if one uses the meaning of the French meaning of “quelle” and “The prof who puts something down forcibly” if one uses the meaning of the English word “quell.” LOL.
I guess the push is on to reinvigorate commitment to the backward Gates/Coleman skills bullet list. Did wire transfers just go out from the Gates Foundation for the Privatization and Computerization of U.S. Education? Inquiring minds want to know.
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QuelleProf
“KellaProf”
Is “what (a) prof”
And what a prof is he
Have a laugh
At Kella gaffe
In every comment tree
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Billionaires like Bill Gates that deliberately interfered (SUBVERTED) in the operation of “OUR” constitutional republic (not his) must be stripped of all their wealth and power and forced to live on the streets, homeless.
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I think these people should be moved to an island which is slowly getting covered with water due to the climate change they caused directly or indirectly.
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I wonder if there is an island in or close to Northeast Austria, Queensland, where the rising sea levels are threatening to swamp it.
I want to send them there.
https://www.divethereef.com/Guides/AboutCrocs.asp
Attacks by saltwater crocodiles often occur in Southeast Asia, Australia, New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands. Reviews indicate that at least half of all attacks by the Nile and saltwater crocodiles are fatal (in Australia, however, only about 25% of saltwater crocodile attacks are fatal).
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This may be the most important story, but there are some missing points and history. The “origin story” for Common Core State standards begins with the workhorse Achieve, created by CEOs and business leaders who attended more than one summit with governors of states and some of their guests–all calling for higher standards for the sake of the economy.
1996: Achieve is founded at the National Education Summit by leading governors and business leaders. See more at https://www.achieve.org/files/1996NationalEducationSummit.pdf
1998: Achieve begins its Academic Standards and Assessments Benchmarking Pilot Project.
1999: Achieve is now a sponsor of a National Education Summit.
2001: Achieve sponsors another National Education Summit; Achieve joins the Education Trust, Thomas B. Fordham Institute and National Alliance of Business to launch the American Diploma Project (ADP) to identify the “must-have” knowledge and skills most demanded by higher education and employers.
2004: The American Diploma Project releases “Ready or Not: Creating a High School Diploma That Counts.” This report identifies a COMMON CORE of English and mathematics academic knowledge and skills, or benchmarks, that American high school graduates need for success in college and the workforce. See 2006 where the meme “college and career” becomes attached to a common core in ELA and math.
2005: Achieve co-sponsors a “National Education Summit on High Schools,” with the National Governors Association (NGA). Achieve also launches the American Diploma Project Network with 13 inaugural states reworking on high school course requirements for graduation. The NGA facilitates Achieve’s ambitions to enlist every state in education based on common standards in ELA and math.
2006: Achieve releases its first annual report on the ADP college- and career-ready policy agenda: “Closing the Expectations Gap: An Annual 50-State Progress Report on the Alignment of High School Policies with the Demands of College and Work.”
2006 The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation sends $94,500 to The Education Trust “to develop regional American Diploma Projects in Sacramento /Silicon Valley/San Bernardino region” and $199,985 to the American Council on Education for a partnership with Achieve and higher education leaders in the American Diploma Project
2007: The ADP Assessment Consortium begins to develop a common Algebra II end-of-course assessment…the largest multi-state effort to develop assessments to date. This foreshadows Achieve’s work on PARCC tests for the Common Core.
2008 Gates sends a whopping $12,614,352 to support Achieve’s American Diploma Project. In 2008 Achieve also releases “Out of Many, One: Toward Rigorous Common Core Standards from the Ground Up,” a report that claimed state efforts to set college- and career-ready standards for high school graduates actually led to “a remarkable degree of consistency in English and mathematics requirements.” This is the origin story for the MYTH that the Common Core were State standards (CCSS).
The “research” leading to the CCSS was weird, truncated, and it is dated. Push interviews were conducted with a convenience sample of CEOs and human resource executives about skill they valued in workers. That exercise developed into sample “Workplace Tasks” for the following jobs: Machine Operator, Licensed Nurse, Actuary, Wafer Fabrication and Manufacturing Technician, Events Manager, Loan Officer, Production Manager & Industrial Engineer, Industrial Engineer & Statistician, Forester, and Construction Manager. I found no rationale for these examples.
There were also document reviews to identify Postsecondary Assignments and interviews with college faculty about standards that should be met in high school or earlier in order to succeed in these college courses: College Algebra and Calculus, Introductory Chemistry, Introductory Economics, Introductory Microeconomics, Introductory Philosophy, Introductory Physical Sciences, Introductory Engineering, Introductory English Survey Course, Introductory English – A, Introductory English – B https://web.archive.org/web/20101119092457/http://achieve.org/node/225
Achieve also organized “Alignment Institutes” to make sure that standards being revised in 13 ADP states focused on “common” features…aka the common core. This process of revieing, editing, and nudging states to create aligned and “common core standards” is aided by Gates funding, $437,807 to the University of California – Berkeley for helping with the Alignment Institute under the American Diploma Project. See more about this work here, beginning on page 10. https://www.achieve.org/files/OutofManyOne.pdf
2009: Achieve no claims that work has begun on the development of the Common Core State Standards. A number of Achieve staff and consultants serve on the writing and review teams. Achieve also partners with the National Governors Association and Council of Chief State School Officers to promote the Initiative.
2010: The final Common Core State Standards are released; Achieve begins serving as Project Management Partner for the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC).
2011: Achieve begins managing the “state-led” development of the K-12 Next Generation Science Standards.
2013: The final Next Generation Science Standards are released with 146 standards in grades K-8 and no less than 360 “science” standards dedicated to Common Core Standards for reading, writing, mathematics K-8.
https://www.achieve.org/history-achieve
The Common Core standards were NEVER State standards. They were forced into existence by a process that gave token attention to state standards and primarily for high school. The extensions to lower grades were really flawed. At every grade level, standards are written as if their mastery is a prerequisite for meeting standards in the next grade.
There are 1,620 CCSS. Of these 892 are in English Language Arts (ELA), with the largest number, 79, allocated to grade 3, with an emphasis on close reading of Informational texts over studies of literature, with writing in the service of developing skills that, if mastered, are supposed to guarantee that kids are on track to college and a career (beginning in Kindergarten).
One ELA standard calls for 9th-10th graders to write an essay comparing works in two media (e.g., words, pictures). The example to clarify this standard is swiped verbatim from a college assignment, previously developed for Achieve’s America Diploma Project. The example is a poem by Auden based on a painting by Bruegel. Sample college-level essays are all over the internet.
In some earlier post I reported on other standards developed or marketed in tandem with the Common Core. The last time I counted there were 3,558 standards in 17 subjects or “skill sets” on the books, all written since 2000, and that absurd number does not include high school, only K-8.
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The assignment to compare the painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, “Landscape with the Fall of Icarus,” to Auden’s poem “”Musée des Beaux Arts,” which mentions the Bruegel painting, appeared in a McDougal, Littell literature text that I worked on way back in the 1980s.
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I don’t recall whether I created the assignment, but it’s altogether possible.
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It’s no intellectual feat to decide to pair the two because mere explication of the Auden poem, which mentions the painting, requires it.
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Excellent opinion article about the failure of the reform movement.
https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/american-students-aren-t-getting-smarter-test-based-reform-initiatives-ncna1103366
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Perhaps a little history is in order here. The Common Core was the latest, most expensive attempt to “reform” public education in the U.S., but it’s part of a longer effort to “remake” schools to fit the corporate order.
‘A Nation at Risk’ was the product of the Reagan administration. It fit well with Reagan’s supply-side, laissez-faire approach to economic policy. Give big tax cuts to corporations and upper-income brackets –– make it a specific policy to, in the words of supply-side quack George Gilder, “proliferate the rich” –– and hope that it “trickles down.” But it didn’t. Big budget and trade deficits resulted; American exporters – John Deere, Caterpillar, for example – were hurt badly. Why not just point the finger of blame at the public schools?
The Sandia Report was commissioned specifically to look into the allegations made by ‘A Nation at Risk,’ and its conclusions debunked the “rising tide of mediocrity” myth.
The Sandia Report (Journal of Educational Research, May/June, 1993) concluded that:
“..on nearly every measure we found steady or slightly improving trends.”
“youth today [the 1980s] are choosing natural science and engineering degrees at a higher rate than their peers of the 1960s.”
“business leaders surveyed are generally satisfied with the skill levels of their employees, and the problems that do exist do not appear to point to the k-12 education system as a root cause.”
“The student performance data clearly indicate that today’s youth are achieving levels of education at least as high as any previous generation.”
The first Bush administration tried to suppress the report. But it came out nonetheless, and the Sandia Report exposed ‘the public education is in crisis’ fantasy for what it was. Nonsense.
Public education has long been a whipping boy for conservative critics and big business. It was true at its inception, it was true in the wake of Sputnik and after ‘A Nation at Risk,’ and it’s true now, more than a decade after the Great Recession. But it’s folly. The great education historian Lawrence Cremin described it this way in Popular Education and Its Discontents (1990):
“American economic competitiveness… is to a considerable degree a function of monetary, trade, and industrial policy, and of decisions made by the President and Congress, the Federal Reserve Board, and the Federal Departments of the Treasury, Commerce, and Labor. Therefore, to conclude that problems of international competitiveness can be solved by educational reform, especially educational reform defined solely as school reform, is not merely utopian and millennialist, it is at best a foolish and at worst a crass effort to direct attention away from those truly responsible for doing something about competitiveness and to lay the burden instead on the schools. It is a device that has been used repeatedly in the history of American education.”
There were those who claimed that the Common Core is based on sound research and “best practices.” That was the claim. But it’s untrue. The core standards specify the goals of teacher instruction and student learning. The essence of the standards is the assessment(s) that will accompany them. Lots of assessments. It should be no surprise that two testing companies – the ACT and the College Board – were instrumental in the development of the Common Core. that Moreover, the overarching PURPOSE of the Common Core – as specified on its website until it was removed, presumably because it’s factually false – was to make American more “economically competitive.”
Where did it come from? The Common Core was funded by Bill Gates, and it was largely the work of three main groups: Achieve Inc., the ACT, and College Board. All of these groups were tied tightly to corporate-style “reform.” Achieve, Inc.’s board included Louis Gertner, who’s bad-mouthed public education for decades. It included former Tennessee Republican governor Bill Haslam, a pro-life, anti-gay, corporate friendly politician. The board included Prudential executive and former big banker Mark Grier; Prudential has been fined multiple times for deceptive sales practices and improper trading. Also on Achieve’s board was Intel CEO Craig Barrett; who kept insisting there was a STEM (science, technology, engineering, math) “crisis.” Not so. All the research shows there’s a glut of STEM workers. Intel and IBM and AT & T and Northrop Grumman, to name but a few, have laid off thousands of workers. Intel, by the way, is both masterful and aggressive at avoiding tax payments and seeking subsidization, much like Boeing, and Microsoft, and GE, and IBM, and Chevron, and AT & T. These are some of the biggest tax cheaters in the country. There’s a reason that Achieve’s main publications never mention democratic citizenship as a mission of public education. Because its members don’t believe in it.
Who funds Achieve, Inc.? Boeing, Intel, GE, IBM, Chevron, JP Morgan Chase, Microsoft, Prudential (and State Farm, MetLife and other insurance companies), and the Gates Foundation. The Education Trust, in league with Achieve, gets its operating money from MetLife, State Farm, IBM, and by the Broad, Gates and Walton Foundations, among others. Broad and Walton and Gates are notorious for ignoring research and promoting charters and vouchers.
Some of the same big tax cheaters that supported Common Core also supported Teach for America, which in turn supported Common Core and charters. The big contributors to Teach for America have been croups like the Arnold Foundation (which wants to privatize public pensions), the arch-conservative Kern Foundation (which tries to inculcate ministers into the belief that unregulated “free enterprise” is a “moral system”), the Broad and Gates and Walton Foundations, Cisco, State Farm, and big banks –– Bank of America, Barclays, Credit Suisse, Wells Fargo, HSBC, JP Morgan Chase–– that have paid billions and billions in penalties and fines for fraud and market-rigging. Several years back, the FDIC filed suit against 16 major “global” banks – including Bank of America Corp, Barclays, Credit Suisse, HSBC, and JPMorgan Chase – for “manipulating the Libor interest rate.” The Libor rate is critical to determining interest rates on “$550 trillion in financial products, from home loans to derivatives.” Yeah, TRILLIONS.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/03/14/us-fdic-libor-idUSBREA2D1KR20140314
The US Chamber of Commerce adored Teach for America and the Common Core. It said this: “Common core academic standards among the states are essential to helping the United States remain competitive and enabling students to succeed in a global economy.”
Chamber president, Tom Donohue, said the Common Core was absolutely necessary for “businesses and country” to “ succeed.” The Business Roundtable even resurrected the big lie in ‘A Nation at Risk’ that “a rising tide of mediocrity” threatened American national security and economic competitiveness.
It’s simply not true. As I’ve noted, the U.S. IS internationally “competitive.” When it drops, as it did a few years back, the World Economic Forum blames 1) weak corporate auditing and reporting standards, (2) suspect corporate ethics, (3) big deficits (brought on by Wall Street’s financial implosion) and (4) unsustainable levels of debt.
Guess who supported ALL of the laizzez-faire policies that led to the mortgage and financial crises and the Great Recession? Yup. Tom Donohue and the Chamber. And the Roundtable. And the big banks, who perpetrated fraud on a massive scale. They are all working very hard and spending lots of money to get those policies back. They’ve been big supporters of the Trump administration and its trickle-down tax cuts, which have piled up deficits and debt, again.
Meanwhile, they’ve blamed the public schools for what they are responsible for (go back, and re-read the Cremin quote).
The College Board and the ACT and Bill Gates and the US Chamber and the Business Roundtable and the big banks and the corporate tax cheaters are all on the same side.
And it’s not the side of public education.
That’s the real story.
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“..on nearly every measure we found steady or slightly improving trends.” … “The student performance data clearly indicate that today’s youth are achieving levels of education at least as high as any previous generation.”
The above statements do not assess absolute level or quality of education, they only provide relative indicators. “At least as high” can be rephrased into “no worse than before”. Some say that the American education turned to farce as long ago as in 1920s when progressivists took over. Other say that it has never been great, because in the 19th century it taught only a small portion of the population, and very few continued to high schools and then to universities, therefore it was never designed to teach the masses well.
“Business leaders surveyed are generally satisfied with the skill levels of their employees, and the problems that do exist do not appear to point to the k-12 education system as a root cause.” combined with your latter admission that “American economic competitiveness… is to a considerable degree a function of monetary, trade, and industrial policy” and that “problems of international competitiveness” cannot be “solved by educational reform” means that the country simply does not need many well-educated people. It has enough to ensure the country’s leadership, like Intel or Microsoft or Boeing or Amazon have several hundred of really talented people, everyone else either works on a conveyor line or at a burger place or in an Amazon warehouse. These quotations are the most direct indication that the country DOES NOT NEED many educated people, and that any policy to improve education of the masses is counter to the needs of big businesses. After all, if Microsoft needs more programmers, it can import them from India, Russia or China.
Scandia report asserts that as good (or as bad) as the education system has been for decades, it is not instrumental in the country’s world leadership. Hence, purely from the business point of view, there is no reason messing with the secondary education system. It is inconsequential.
How’s that for the real story?
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Well, once again, here’s another post that is day-old and I’m finally getting around to typing something now.
I thought about this topic last night but I was just too worn out from ‘the Friday before vacation in the classroom’ (teachers out there need no further explanation.)
Suffice to say that the “Common Core” (along with VAM and APPR and blah, blah, blah.., you name the stupid acronym) -they all created a miserable chapter in my career. But far, far worse: all that crapola hurt many millions of children. I can retire but these kids will have to clean up the mess made by the so-called adults who have been running (ruining) this country in oh-so-many ways, not just in our schools. ($23 trillion in national debt sounds like a lot but who pays to save an entire planet?)
I think back to those years of the “Common Core” Some days, the only respite I got from that lunacy was on this blog -and from my own loved ones. And, let me be clear: there were teachers around me who had it much, much worse. MUCH. Like start going to therapy or taking prescription drugs or just plain bailing out of the profession worse. And, I would read stories on this blog about teachers across the country who kept soldiering on despite tragic situations in their classrooms and I’d think, damn!, I got it easy. I work in a good school with wonderful students in a strong union state.
And, you know, the crazy thing is, folks…. if the Common Core came back tomorrow, like if it was suddenly, fully reinstated and came roaring back in all its colossal stupidity, there are educators who would just start doing it again -exactly as told. They would go right down that same idiotic, harmful path again -despite all that we know now.
Because they’d ONLY BE FOLLOWING ORDERS.
And therein lies the real question Bill Gates, Arne Duncan, John B. King, you name the blowhard. They may be rich or powerful or well-connected jerks who have profoundly wrongheaded ideas that hurt children but they are NOT Nazis.
What would happen in the United States if a real, authoritarian, Machiavellian-type leader or group took total control of our government? Real Nazi types. Who would stand up then? If people don’t have the backbone and/or intelligence to resist now, what happens if things get worse….much worse? (I know, some people argue it IS worse right now. We’re already there.)
Of course, the groundwork for the Donald J. Trump era was laid down long before 2016. The ingredients were simmering and bubbling, waiting for a catalyst, a demagogue to step up to the microphone…to launch hundreds of tweetstorms.. And I’m convinced that the willingness to accept whatever crap was foisted on our public schools and our children in the many years before that election was one of the symptoms as well as an accelerant that helped lead us to this moment in time, this crisis. The so-called school “reformers” helped create the Trump regime. And it wasn’t only the Republican reformers.
But rather than just stew in bitterness about the past on this the darkest day of the year, I like to think about the people I know who did try to fight the Common Core and all the other school crap I’ve run into during my career. I know two administrators who signed the “Principals’ Letter” in New York State that opposed the APPR lunacy back at the start of this decade. (Thank you!) I remember one teacher I work with who just laughed in the face of a principal who was trying to make him fill out that APPR teacher evaluation B.S. paperwork (Good for you!) And, I’ll never forget an older teacher I knew who refused to affix his signature to a phony petition that was being circulated by a superintendent. It was way back when I had just started teaching. I hardly knew the guy. I remember him saying to me, “They’d have to hold a gun to one of my kid’s head to get me to sign it.” The petition was a lie and he would not participate. I followed his lead.
Carol Burris, Mercedes, Diane, people on here…and also all the parents out there who refused to have your children sit through mind-numbing, wasteful testing. Good for you, too. I’ve been lucky to have met some very intelligent, courageous people in my life.
And isn’t that history? Some brave people step up and they make the difference.
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Holy cow. All my thoughts and sentiments right here in your comments( down to the Friday-before-vacation reference…)
The issue you’ve raised about compliance is so critically important in the conversation about education and about the state of our union.
For greater insight, and possibly guidance on how to find our way through this mess, I highly recommend this book: “Intelligent Disobedience-Doing Right When What You’re Told to do is Wrong” by Ira Chaleff.
It’s all about when and why humans do the wrong thing in the face of their better instincts… Or, alternatively, do the right thing and stand up for their values.
We need to be talking about this all day every day. It’s our only way forward towards the light.
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You say things eerily similar to what pro-gun activists say. “What would happen in the United States if a real, authoritarian, Machiavellian-type leader or group took total control of our government? Real Nazi types.” Right. How many guns do you own?
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You say things eerily similar to a random word generator.
Ha ha ha!
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Eerily similar to a Deformish dialect random word generator. LMAO.
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Que? I wasn’t making a comment on guns, though I think I have a sense of where you are going with this reply.
I live in a rural area but I grew up in a suburb and lived in a city for a few years. So, I have A LOT I could write about guns (and gun culture).
(For eg. I remember the time when my daughter was a little girl and we were out for walk and came upon a terribly hobbled deer that had just been hit by a car. Our afternoon was changed in a moment. The story is a sort of parable for the world we live in…)
But my focus here this morning was school. Guns, Que, that’s a WHOLE other topic. Don’t get me going on that…..
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Best to ignore QuelleProf. He is a troll.
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Or mock QuelleProf.
He’s a clown
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One brave and persistent individual can make a difference.
Margaret Mead said it.
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NICE quote. And, with that I am going to venture out and take a long walk through the woods. We don’t have much sunlight left. Your quote will be on my mind, which is wonderful.
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Yes.
This is the truth we all need to repeat far and wide.
Every single day.
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I was thinking of all the wrongheaded things people will go along with last night and wondering if it is time for the paper media to make a comeback. Social media has played a huge roll in leading people down the garden path. I was listening to a report about a social media group that has been spreading Trump propaganda using made up people! it’s time for journalists to reclaim their role in print media. Can’t we convince people it is much harder to be lied to on a daily basis if the bulk of daily news is vetted by responsible news organizations who then put that news in print? My ideas on this are far from fully formed, but I think social media has gone a long way toward destroying the journalism profession. Facebook is a joke that isn’t very funny. (Sorry, John, for riffing off your comment. It deserves it own space.)
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My favorite Common Core story was from Tennessee.
Candace McQueen was simultaneously the State Ed. Commish, and also one of the leaders of a prestigious rich kids’ private school, Lipscomb Academy.
Therefore, she had to put on two faces:
FACE #1
McQUEEN: (to public school parents & her corpora ed. reform masters)
“Common Core will be the greatest educational miracle ever, and you Tennessee public school kids, parents and teachers are just going to have to accept it and like it, even if we have to shove it down all your throats.”
… while at the same time …
FACE #2
McQUEEN: (to rich parents at her private school who know all about and thus, detest Common Core)
“Don’t worry. The leaders of Lipscomb Academy won’t let that godawful Common Core sh#% get within a 100 miles of your kids. It’s only for other people’s kids. Ya know,
’cause Common Core is for Commoners, but not for your privileged offspring, of course. Public schools will be using it so we can use the (likely poor) future results as a justification for privatizing Tennessee public schools and busting Tennessee’s teacher unions.”
Okay, those aren’t actual quotes, but that’s the gist.
Here’s the story, with the actual quotes:
https://nashvillepublicmedia.org/blog/2014/02/10/lipscomb-academy-chief-advocates-for-common-core-but-not-at-her-school/
and
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Yes, that was a classic. Ah, those two faces….
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Also
The Two Faces of Gates
Arts and song for mine
Common Core for yourn
Yours ain’t worth a dime
Mine are golden born
Every child has equal worth (except mine)
Every child has equal worth
For billionaires like me
Mine are just exempt by birth
They’re different, you see
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Thank you for posting this. I printed out the article hen it first appeared and shared it for years. It is, indeed, the clearest description of the mass deception that is/was CC. (And sadly, the beloved former President was complicit.)
I lost track of the article during the insanity of the past few years and so I’m glad to have it in electronic form to share again.
Everyone who doesn’t have this yet, read it and share it everywhere and with everyone.
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MJacobs… one of the real eye opening conversations I had about the “Common Core” years ago was when I was talking to some elementary teachers. We had joined together to try to do something about the stress being inflicted on teachers and students in our school district. I still refer to comments made by the kindergarten teacher who was part of our informal group; She was telling me about the ridiculous pre-testing mandated by the state of New York for the kindergarteners….children who were just walking into a classroom for the first time. It was deeply disturbing: educational “shock and awe” wantonly foisted our youngest (I teach all the 12th graders.)
Your phrase “human firewall” (used further up above) is a haunting one and takes me back to those days..
Why must teachers in our country have to put up, to be “human firewalls”? Talk about insanity in the United States.
Thanks to you and all the other elementary teachers, assistants and aides who read this blog. I never get to say it enough but you have my respect.
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Every few weeks some troll drops in from Deformer LaLaLand to make comments on this blog about how we need a national curriculum thought police to keep these teachers in line and how, if we just “stay the course” with these “higher standards” (ha ha ha, hee hee, hooo, ho oh Lord make it stop haaaaaa ha ha) and tests to hold these terrible teachers accountable, we will soon realize those goals of narrowing those achievement gaps and racing to the top because. These folks are like frenzied phrenologists dropping in on discussions of cognitive psychology–they are indignant and clueless. However, that analogy breaks down, of course, the deformer quacks, those lunatics, are now running the asylum and have been for an entire generation now.
They are easy enough to spot. They speak of “rigor”–a term borrowed from descriptions of algorithmic proof in connection with the inane moonbeams of the Common Core State Standards, which are common only in the sense of mediocre and base, are not core, weren’t produced by the states, and hardly represent anything to aspire to. They always ludicrously blast constructivism (that Open Court program or whatever) as though this were the defining principle of the opposition to them (it isn’t) and call for teaching “real content”when their silly standards bullet list is itself an almost content-free skills list. And they always call for reading substantive texts for a change even though the texts we’ve been putting in K-12 literature anthologies have barely changed for a century and are for the most part straight from the canon–Poe and Twain and Wordsworth and Shelley. And they always decry the lack of phonics instruction though, in fact, all American elementary schools have had phonics programs for a long time now and none, to my knowledge, still do strictly whole language, that short-lived experiment. Basically, these are people from the business world or from the higher levels of school administration who arrived there via training at some place like the Broad Academy, who are basically clueless about what English teachers were actually doing and what ELA curricula actually looked like before they started mucking with it and devolved into CC$$ slurry. I wish that I could be so magnanimous as to say, “Lord forgive them, for they know not what they do,” but they’ve done a lot of damage to kids for a long time now and enough. Enough. Enough. It’s time to kick these jackass philistine morons out of our schools. They’ve done enough damage.
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Alas, forgive the typos in that. I shouldn’t type when I am this furious, but I am sick, sick to death of the Deformers and the damage they have done to teachers and kids.
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Deformer Cocktail: 2 parts Gates money, 1 part arrogance, and 1 part ignorance. It’s a toxic brew.
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Deformers: It’s the child poverty, stupid.
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Pareto. You’ve doubtless heard of him. It’s 80 percent the child poverty.
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We’ve now lived under the Deformer Occupation for so long that many young teachers don’t remember life before the CC$$. So, we’re going to have work to do to clean up the mess. Here’s a start: https://bobshepherdonline.wordpress.com/2019/04/09/what-should-be-taught-in-an-english-teacher-preparation-program/
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I think those deformers are good for something. They would make great targets at rifle ranges. All we have to do us chain them to the post that holds the paper target with a profile of a body on it but the deformers are behind the paper and the shooters can’t see them.
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I think it will be sufficient to point out that their arguments are full of holes.
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LOL … until Trump gets his Civil War that he keeps threatening the country with if he is impeached. Then shooting at real targets will be commonplace.
“For those of you keeping up at home, threatening a Civil War is an escalation from Trump’s go-to prediction regarding what will happen to the country if he loses power, which is typically a stock market collapse. Democrats, characteristically, condemned the retweet, but it inspired noteworthy pushback from one Republican corner as well: “I have visited nations ravaged by civil war,” Rep. Adam Kinzinger, a veteran, tweeted back. “I have never imagined such a quote to be repeated by a President. This is beyond repugnant.”
https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2019/09/donald-trump-civil-war-impeachment
Then members of TPOP (Trump’s Party of Puppets that was formerly the GOP) joined in threatening a Civil War: “Multiple Republicans have recently threatened the possibility of civil war in the United States when political outcomes have not gone their way, some even suggesting Donald Trump’s impeachment could spark a ‘civil war.’ Jonathan Capehart in for Joy Reid and his panel discuss.”
https://www.msnbc.com/am-joy/watch/gop-house-impeachment-will-lead-to-civil-war-72672837666
NOTE: If Trump loses in 2020, he will Tweet the Democrats cheated and if Trump wins, the Tweets will say, “the Democrats still cheated but not smart enough to beat this stable genius”.
When I searched “Trump threatens Civil War” there were about 13,700,000 results from Google
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“The pair also argued that a fragmented education system stifled innovation because textbook publishers and software developers were catering to a large number of small markets instead of exploring breakthrough products.”
So for these people, innovation by definition means something that takes over the world, and anything that doesn’t help that, stifles it. Local efforts are worthless.
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“He spent more than $4 billion on failed experiments in education over the past 20 years. Wouldn’t it be great if he invested in children, families, and communities and improved their standard of living?”
Hopefully, soon, Gates will be fined for at least ten times this $4 billion for screwing up the lives of tens of millions of kids.
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My entire adult life has been spent sometimes as a writer and editor in various textbook companies and sometimes as a high-school teacher of English, speech, theatre, and film. For much of my life, I ran a development company for textbook publishers or did independent, freelance writing of textbooks, mostly in ELA. So, I’ve been in a superb position to see the consequences of the CC$$ for ELA curricula. As a freelancer in the post CC$$ era, I saw the specifications for hundreds of online and print ELA projects from all the major and many of the minor educational publishers.
In the old days, producers of K-12 ELA courseware (print and online instructional materials) would sit down and plan a unit to teach, coherently, some set of descriptive and/or procedural knowledge. Perhaps it would be a unit on how short stories are constructed–what are their parts? How do these work together? How does a person plan and write one? Such a unit might start, for example, with the idea that every story is about the working out of a struggle, or conflict. You place a character in a situation, a circumstance, in which he or she is challenged. That idea leads naturally to teaching about setting and about character development and character types. And the fact that characters change in response to their conflicts leads to lessons learned, to discussion of theme. And along the way, one would present stories, drawn from the canons of American, British, and world literature to illustrate the concepts. Here’s a story with an external conflict. Here’s a story with an internal one. Here’s a story with one dynamic character and a bunch of static ones. And so on.
But after the CC$$, all that changed. Curricular coherence was out the window. The CC$$ consisted of a long, long list of random, typically poorly articulated and vague skills. The bullet list became supremely important because it was what the kids would be tested on, and their teachers and administrators and schools would be evaluated based on those test scores. That’s was the BIG DEFORMER PLAN.
So, a typical standard would say something like, the student will be able to make inferences from text. Then, in the standardized test, there would be one, or perhaps two, multiple-choice questions in which the student was given a snippet of text and asked which of the answers was an inference one could draw from that. Never mind that there are many types of inference and whole science devoted to making proper inferences of various kinds. Obviously, one such multiple-choice question doesn’t allow one to make a VALID inference about a child’s ability to read texts and make inferences from them IN GENERAL. But somehow, all this invalidity was supposed to add up to valid tests. It didn’t.
And because the invalid tests were ALL IMPORTANT, and because the “standards” were now national, makers of courseware for ELA decided that every lesson or unit had to “cover” a bunch of the standards. So, instead of planning lessons or units to teach concepts in a coherent manner, they started issuing specifications for their projects that consisted of lists of standards from the Gates/Coleman bullet list to be “covered”–the more the merrier. I worked on, literally, hundreds of projects during this period, from all the big educational publishers. Every one the same. Educational materials in ELA became these collections of random exercises on random snippets of text to “teach” and/or “test” random items from the CC$$. All curricular coherence was out the window. ELA curricula became a kind of Common [sic] Core [sic] slurry. The educational publishers even started creating database of instructional items keyed to the Gates/Coleman bullet list to be recycled in product after product. Across the country, many great writers and editors for these companies quit in disgust. They had reason to be disgusted.
So, the CC$$ has led to a dramatic trivialization and devolution of ELA curricula in the U.S. We are now seeing a great many products from the courseware providers that are nothing but random databases of CC$$ items–terrible depersonalized education software.
But because the Deformers and the oligarchs whom they serve as Vichy collaboraters with the Deform Occupation typically occupy much loftier positions than mere classroom teachers and textbook editors do, they see NONE OF THIS. They keep telling themselves that these are “higher standards” (They aren’t) are driving real learning and accountability for a change. They don’t see that Gates, Coleman, et al., simply put on their big boots (the Core [sic], the tests, the VAM, the third-grade retention, the Cored version of the SAT, etc., and went stomping through the garden of ELA curricula. They are completely OBLIVIOUS TO the actual effects of their magic elixirs.
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ELA tests reflect a lifetime of language interactions and acquisition.
Until they become more content specific (literary devices, grammar, syntax. etc.) they will remain utterly useless.
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Precisely. Beautifully, concisely said! But as you know, we already have content-specific ones–the ones made by teachers to cover what they taught.
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★ The Most Important Article Written about Common Core on Diane Ravitch’s blog 12/20/19
“Bottom line: What the Gates’ billions spent on Common Core proved was that the basic problem in American education is not the lack of common standards and common tests, but the growing numbers of children who live in poverty, who come to school (or miss school) ill-nourished and lacking regular medical care and a decent standard of living.”
You are so right! We had our standards which were tried, tested and adjusted. NY State Learning Standards were superior in all ways. However, the basic problem in American education is not poverty; it is the lack of parental support. We must not under estimate the power of parents – rich and poor- in improving educational needs.
“Children’s first grade reading achievement depends most of all on how much they know about reading before they get to school… The differences in reading potential are shown not to be strongly related to poverty, handedness, dialect, gender, IQ, mental age, or any other such difficult-to-alter circumstances. They are due instead to learning and experience – and specifically to learning and experience with print and print concepts.” Adams, Beginning to Read: Thinking and Learning about Print, 494pp
“The single most important activity for building the knowledge required for eventual success in reading is reading aloud to children.” Commission on Reading in a Nation of Readers.
The words of Dr. Carmelita Williams ring in my ear- ( former president of the NRA)-“You do not have to read every night – just on the nights you eat.” Reading is a family affair; children need to be read to every night for at least 20 minutes.
How well I remember an ESL student in my class. The Hispanic Psychologist began to wonder if he was mentally handicapped. One day, after sitting in my class for about two weeks, he uttered a word! I knew he understood! We went sailing. I asked for an interpreter and for his father to meet with me. I recommended that the father have his son follow along with “read along tapes.” With each story I sent home, I asked that his son listen to the taped story five times and then return it for a new story. As his reading level increased I would send home a book set that was commensurate with his instructional level. By the end of the school year, that student was reading at the beginning of third grade level.
There is a big learning gap among the children when they enter school and it will only get wider through the years unless all parents are educated in how to help their children. Birth to 3 years of age children learn very rapidly when parents support their development: emotional, physical, social and conceptual.
The “learning gap” will always be present because no two children are alike. Through the parents, rich or poor, we can help each child reach his/her potential. Goals 2000: Educate America Act aim was to strength families in order to have strong schools. It called on schools to promote partnerships that would increase parental involvement.
When I taught, our faculty took this admonition to heart and developed workshops for parents. Workshops were offered at different times to accommodate the parents’ working hours. Transportation for the parents to the school was provided when needed. Whatever the problem, we met the need. Besides the school’s Take-Home-Reading Program, I had over 144 thematic back packs that were exchanged once a week. If a recorder was needed, I supplied it.
Children also need many experiences to support the learning of reading. Frank Smith maintained that readers must bring meaning to print rather than expecting to receive meaning from it. As we become fluent readers we learn to rely more on what we already know, on what is behind the eyeballs and less on the print on the page in front of us.
Another crucial aspect of learning to read is being instructed at one’s instructional level. No way can success be achieved if we try and have students read on a frustration level which CCSS advocate. CCSS didn’t use the term frustration level. If a student
reads on a frustration level that student will form a defeatist attitude and regress.
Articles have been written about helping the disadvantage:
★ Supporting the Literacy Development of Children Living in Homeless Shelters
★ “Walk in Their Shoes”: A Pre-service Teacher’s Reflection on Working with Homeless Families
On my web site I have a page concentrating on “The Reading Gap; Are We Asking the Right Question”
http://maryidefalco.com/reading%20site%20reconnected/3._Achievement_Gap.html
or just type into Google: Achievement Gap-Are We Asking the Right Questions by Mary DeFalco
The poor and needy we will always have with us. It is the community that needs reach out to those in need. Einstein said that only a life lived for others is a life worth while.
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Wow! Thanks for the HONEST report….
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