Progressives increasingly are understanding Common Core standards will not reform education in a positive manner. Many so-called conservatives haven't realized (or will admit) that it is unwise to unleash:
A recently released Brookings Institute Study called “The 2012 Brown Center
Report on American Education:
HOW WELL ARE AMERICAN STUDENTS LEARNING?” tells us “Don’t let the
ferocity of the oncoming debate fool you. The empirical evidence
suggests that the Common Core will have little effect on American
students’ achievement. The nation will have to look elsewhere for ways
to improve its school”
The Professional Educators of Tennessee’s blog site has a
primer on the CCSS which quotes several expert views:
“The Obama administration has pressed hard for the
speedy acceptance of the so-called common core standards, arguing that
the establishment of centralized norms replacing those in 50 states will
raise the achievement of students who most need help. The opponents say
that a system created in Washington will become captive to the
education establishment, and that the standards, as currently written,
will promote mediocrity across the board. …
“Critic Alfie Kohn, the author of a dozen books on education and
human behavior, states ‘uniformity isn’t the same thing as excellence;
high standards don’t require common standards. And neither does
uniformity promote equity’….
“Sandra Stotsky a professor of education reform at the University
of Arkansas takes a different approach, but reaches a similar
conclusion: ‘The Common Core standards may accomplish the goal of
equalizing education but not in a way the supporters initially hoped:
they may lead to more uniformly mediocre student achievement than we now
have.…’
“Bruce Fuller, a professor of education and public policy at the
University of California, Berkeley, suggested: ‘standards threaten to
further routinize pedagogy, filling students with bits of reified
knowledge — leaving behind the essence, the humanistic genius of liberal
learning.’ Then Fuller points out: ‘The strange thing in all this is
that the political left is now preaching the virtues of systems,
uniformity and sacred knowledge. Lost are the virtues of liberal
learning, going back to the Enlightenment when progressives first nudged
educators to nurture in children a sense of curiosity and how to
question dominant doctrine persuasively.’”
Jim Arnold Pelham City, Ga., school chief writes:
“Common Core is a standardized national curriculum. Why
is this problematic? From an historical context, a centralized school
curriculum serves the goals of totalitarian states. Jefferson warned us
about that.
“There are additional issues: 1) there are few interdisciplinary
connections between subjects. Research for many years has shown the
positive effects of interdisciplinary connections on student learning
and achievement; 2) citizenship, personal development and the promotion
of democratic values is ignored.
“It is rather troubling to note the number of educational ‘reforms’
that ignore educational research, as if invoking the magic word
‘reform’ is enough to allow any imposition however implausible.
“With adoption of the Common Core standards, you can rest assured
that Common Core standardized testing is not far behind. How can we
expect a single, nationwide standardized ‘pick-a-bubble’ machine scored
test to effectively measure what is taught in practically every school
system in the United States? The documented testing issues we already
see with state assessments will increase exponentially.”
Lynn Stoddard
a retired educator from Utah and the author of four books on the need
for authentic reform of public education wrote this month in the Deseret
News, “One big problem with the Common Core Curriculum, recently
adopted by Utah and 46 other states, is this feature. It specifies what
all students should know and be able to do at grade-level check points.
It pressures teachers, with excessive testing; to make students fit the
curriculum. The testing draws forth low level teaching by trying to
measure student growth in likenesses. Never mind that it's impossible to
standardize students; the Common Core is exactly what it says it is,
‘common.’ It tries to make students "common" in knowledge and skills.
It's a generic, narrow curriculum designed by subject matter specialists
who have never even met the students it is designed to serve.”
There are several valid reasons why so many voices across the nation
are speaking out against the CCSS. (1) They are untested, so no one
knows whether they will work or not. (2) They are based on a bad theory
of pedagogy. It is a theory of pedagogy that encourages direct
instruction and the development of fact knowledge and the accountability
portion will narrow curriculum. What is tested is what is taught in a
high stakes environment. It is the behavioral theory of education that
was promoted by Edgar Thorndike and BF Skinner. (3) Professionals in the
classroom have had no authentic input into the standards development
which means the standards are not likely to be appropriate for various
aged students. They are being written by university professors, noble
laureates and businessmen none of whom have a reputation for knowing how
to teach even at the college level and are especially clueless about
how to teach third graders. (4) Who has control over the standards is a
big concern. Are the standards being perverted for various business or
religious or political purposes?
In his recent book
Teaching Minds, Roger Schank -
the founder of the renowned Institute for Learning Sciences at
Northwestern University, where he is John P. Evans Professor Emeritus in
Computer Science, Education and Psychology – makes several important
points about good pedagogy. He point out, “There is no evidence
whatsoever that accumulation of facts and background knowledge are the
same thing. In fact, there is plenty of evidence to the contrary. Facts
learned out of context, and apart from actual real-world experience that
is repeated over and over, are not retained.”
In another section of the book, Dr. Schank quotes many politicians
and describes their lack of understanding about how people learn and why
they support accountability. He states:
“Accountability must play well in Peoria because every politician is for it.
“Accountability must mean to voters, I assume, that teacher will be
measured by how well they teach their students. Political candidates,
always willing to hop on an uncontroversial point of view, are all quite
certain that the voters know what they are talking about. No matter how
stupid NCLB is, no matter how mean spirited, no matter how awful for
both teachers and students, its very horror rests on the premise that no
one seems to be disputing that the federal government has the right to
tell the schools what to teach and to see whether they are indeed
teaching it.”
In his book Dr. Schank excoriates the quality of teaching at
universities. He attributes the poor quality of teaching to what he
calls the star system in higher education. Universities that want high
ratings look for Nobel Prize winners and other internationally famous
professors. They do not look for good teachers. Dr. Schank himself came
to Northwestern via the star system when Northwestern made him a better
offer than Yale was willing to match. The point is that quality of
teaching is not a consideration, yet these same professors who gained
fame through the star system and not their understanding of pedagogy are
writing the CCSS.
Dr. Schank shares and interesting anecdote to bolster this point:
“At MIT, where students are different than they are at
Northwestern by quite a bit, there are a number of superstars that I
know quite well. Two of them, whom I will not name but are about as
famous as a professor can be, are people I have heard lecture many
times. I have never understood what they were talking about in any of
those lectures. Now, bear in mind that I know their fields very well so I
should have been able to understand them. Also, bear in mind that I was
a terrible student, which means my attention fades fast when I am bored
or irritated.”
The CCSS are purported to be the result of a group of states
voluntarily agreeing to a set of curricular standards. The reality is
the Gates foundation paid to develop the standards, paid to evaluate the
standards, and is underwriting Pearson’s program to create online
courses and resources for the standards, which will be sold by Pearson,
for a profit, to schools across the nation. We are told, “The Common
Core
State Standards Initiative
is an effort led by the National Governors Association Center for Best
Practices and the Council of Chief State School Officers.” However, the
reality is different. An example of the real process is the present Next
Generation Science Standards (NGSS) which are in progress. Officially
the NGSS development is “a joint effort between the National Research
Council, the National Science Teachers Association, the American
Association for the Advancement of Science, and Achieve.” When queried
about the NGSS the National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) and
Achieve are the only sites that give current information. The
information at
NSTA is illuminating:
“In a process managed by Achieve, 26 states are leading
the development of the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS). The
science education community got a first glimpse of the NGSS draft when
it was released during the first public comment period from May 11
through June 1. According to Achieve, the writers are now working to
review all of the comments and develop a second draft to be released for
public comment in the fall 2012. Achieve has removed the first draft
from the web while it undergoes revision."
Achieve is the lead partner writing the science standards, but
achieve is a private non-profit that is only accountable to its founders
and donors. The
Achieve web site lists their contributors:
"The Battelle Foundation; Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation; The Boeing Company; Brookhill Foundation; Carnegie
Corporation of New York; The Cisco Foundation; The GE Foundation; IBM
Corporation; Intel Foundation; JP Morgan Chase Foundation; The Joyce
Foundation; Lumina; MetLife Foundation; Nationwide; Noyce Foundation;
The Prudential Foundation; Sandler Foundation; State Farm Insurance
Companies; and The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation."
So it is really these corporations and foundations who are writing the
NGSS. The people of this country and professional educators have already
lost control of these standards. They are in the control of these
corporations which is exactly what is to be feared, an unaccountable
group gaining sway over national education standards.
The state of New York recently published some sample English language and mathematics Common Core questions for
third graders.
Jeff Nichols a parent of a 3rd grader responded, “Well, I looked at the
sample 3rd grade ELA questions. Utterly bizarre (sic). I would never
put this material in front of my 8-year-olds (avid, enthusiastic,
proficient readers both). The Tolstoy translation is stilted and boring,
and full of inappropriate vocabulary (hoarfrost? caftan?
threshing-floor?) It's as though the selection were made to project this
to the kids: "reading is excruciatingly dull and confusing; maybe you
thought you could do it, but I'm here to tell you 8-year-olds are stupid
and teachers (and test designers) are smart. You're going to have to
work like a dog and suffer a lot if you want to pass this test."
Honestly, I thought the practice tests that came home all year as
homework were bad, but they were just meaty, unreadable trivial passages
followed by absurd and confusing questions. This CC sample is worse:
it's perverse, overtly hostile to young children. A former 3rd grade
teacher commented, “I just looked at the 3rd grade math assessment and
they are asking the children to understand algebra.” They are asking
third graders to understand algebra because it is in the CCSS math
standards for third grade. These standards and tests are not ready for
prime time. They are being rushed through without regard for the
possible damage.
Stephen Krashen is professor emeritus at the University of Southern California Rossier School of Education. He recently wrote:
“The mediocre performance of American students on
international tests seems to show that our schools are doing poorly. But
students from middle-class homes who attend well-funded schools rank
among the best in world on these tests, which means that teaching is not
the problem. The problem is poverty. Our overall scores are
unspectacular because so many American children live in poverty (23
percent, ranking us 34th out of 35 “economically advanced countries”).
“Poverty means inadequate nutrition and health care, and little
access to books, all associated with lower school achievement.
Addressing those needs will increase achievement and better the lives of
millions of children.
“How can we pay for this? Reduce testing. The common core demands
an astonishing increase in testing, far more than needed and far more
than the already excessive amount required by No Child Left Behind.
….
“The cost will be enormous. New York City plans to spend over half a
billion dollars on technology in schools, primarily so that students
can take the electronically delivered national tests. Research shows
that increasing testing does not increase achievement. A better
investment is protecting children from the effects of poverty, in
feeding the animal, not just weighing it.”
We are in a period in which states across the country are slashing
education budgets but the CCSS which will cost billions up front for:
text books; infrastructure such as high speed networks, new software and
more computers; training; consultants; tests; and much more is being
pushed through as if it were going to stop the end of civilization. This
push to spend money we don’t have on standards that are not fully
developed and are based on questionable pedagogical theory is
unreasonable. The only thing certain about the CCSS is that a lot of
private businesses will make a lot of money. A likely outcome of CCSS is
less money will reach the classroom and another likely outcome is that
education in America will be harmed!
STUDENTSFIRST
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