Two Moms Against Common Core

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Talking Common Core with Rod Arquette

Monday, February 25, 2013

Speaking Back to Common Core

I came across an excellent article tonight written by a Thomas Newkirk.   
A former teacher of at-risk high school students in Boston, Tom is Professor of English at the University of New Hampshire, the former director of its freshman English program, and the director and founder of its New Hampshire Literacy Institutes. He has studied literacy learning at a variety of educational levels—from preschool to college. Heinemann.com
The full text to the article can be found here: Speaking Back to Common Core 

You must read but in case you don't follow the link I'll post a few key phrases.
The Common Core initiative is a triumph of branding. The standards are portrayed as so consensual, so universally endorsed, so thoroughly researched and vetted, so self-evidently necessary to economic progress, so broadly representative of beliefs in the educational community—that they cease to be even debatable. They are held in common; they penetrate to the core of our educational aspirations, uniting even those who might usually disagree. We can be freed from noisy disagreement, and should get on with the work of reform.
     This deft rollout may account for the absence of vigorous debate about the Common Core State Standards. If they represent a common core—a center—critics are by definition on the fringe or margins, whiners and complainers obstructing progress. And given the fact that states have already adopted them—before they were completely formulated—what is the point in opposition? We should get on with the task of implementation, and, of course, alignment.
     But as the great rhetorician Kenneth Burke continually reminds us, all arguments are from a debatable perspective—there is no all-encompassing position, no argument from everywhere. The arguments that hide their controversial edges, their perspective, are the most suspect. “When in Rome act as the Greeks” (1931/1968, 119), he advises us. So in that spirit I would like to raise a series of concerns.
Professor Newkirk lays out 7 arguments against the standards focusing on the English Language Arts.

1. Conflict of interest.

It is a fundamental principle of governance that those who establish the guidelines do not benefit financially from those guidelines. We don’t, for example, let representatives of pharmaceutical companies set health guidelines, for fairly obvious reasons. But in the case of the CCSS, the two major college testing agencies, the College Board and ACT, were engaged to write the standards, when it was obvious that they would create products (or had created products) to test them. The College Board, for example, almost immediately claimed that “The SAT demonstrates strong agreement to the Common Core Writing Standards and there is very strong agreement between the skills required on the SAT essay and the Common Core State Standards” (Vasavada et al. 2011, 5). In fact, the College Board claims that there is also a strong alignment between other products, the PSAT/NMSQT and Redistep, which starts in eighth grade.  Clearly, there is a conflict of interest here.

2. Misdiagnosis of the problem.

A central premise of the CCSS is that students are not reading difficult enough texts and that we need to ramp up the complexity of the texts they encounter. I would argue that the more serious problem is that students cease to read voluntarily, generally around middle school—and fail to develop the stamina for difficult texts (Newkirk 2008).

3. Developmental inappropriateness.

It is clear now that the designers of the CCSS took a top-down approach, beginning with expectations for eleventh and twelfth graders and then working down to the earlier grades. The process, it seems to me, is one of downshifting; early college expectations (at least what I do in my college classes) are downshifted to eleventh or twelfth grade, and the process continues right into kindergarten.
Given the experience with the unrealism of the No Child Left Behind demand for 100 percent proficiency, it seems to me unwise to move to a new set of unrealistic expectations. 

4. A sterile view of reading.

So the model of reading seems to have two stages—first a close reading in which the reader withholds judgment or comparison with other texts, focusing solely on what is happening within “the four corners of the text.” And only then are prior knowledge, personal association, and appraisal allowed in.
This seems to me an inhuman, even impossible, and certainly unwise prescription.

5. Underplaying role of narrative.

The CCSS present us with a “map” of writing types that is fundamentally flawed—because it treats “narrative” as a type of discourse, distinguished from “informational” and “argumentative” writing. In doing so (and the CCSS are not alone in this), they fail to acknowledge the central role narrative plays in all writing, indeed in human understanding.

6. A reform that gives extraordinary power to standardized tests.

It all comes down to the parable of the drunk and his keys, an old joke that goes like this: A drunk is fumbling along under a streetlight when a policeman comes up and asks him what he doing. The drunk explains he is looking for his keys. “Do you think you lost them there?” the policeman asks.
“No. But the light is better here.”
We have here a parable of standardized assessment. There is the learning we hope to evaluate (the keys) and the instruments we have to assess that learning (the streetlight). The central question of assessment is whether our instruments help us see what we should be looking for—or are we like the drunk, simply looking where the light is better?

7. A bonanza for commercialism.

We are already seeing at work a process I call “mystification”—taking a practice that was once viewed as within the normal competence of a teacher and making it seem so technical and advanced that a new commercial product (or form of consultation) is necessary.
Blogger note:  You may be thinking so what?  This is Capitalizim at work.  Not true - see #1 Conflict of Interest.  There are many conflicts involving those that have a product to sell and were in on the development of the standards.  When businesses influence government without going through the proper channels, namely the voice of the people, that is not Capitalism.


8. Standards directing instruction.

The creators of the CCSS were clearly aware of the delicate political situation they were working in—specifically finessing the opposition to any form of national curriculum. That is why they are called “state” standards when they are clearly intended as national standards (another nice branding touch). They are replacing diverse state standards. Another way in which they walk a fine line is the claim that they are not dictating curriculum or teaching methods; promoters claim these decisions should be made at the local level, by teachers and curriculum directors. The mantra is that the standards indicate where students are going but not how they are to get there.
But can this line hold?
Can goals be so clearly distinguished from methods? It would seem that this line has already been breached by the writers of the standards, Coleman and Pimentel in particular, when they prescribe percentage of “text dependent” questions that should appear in basal readers. Or when they dictate the proper proportion of nonfiction to fiction texts that should be taught. Although the CCSS don’t dictate particular texts (though they suggest them), these “guidelines” are clearly curricular decisions, pedagogical decisions; they deal with means as well as the goals. As the standards become operational in standardized tests, this line will be even fuzzier; testing strategies will be transformed into classroom tasks. I realize that this may not bother some, who would argue that if the tests are innovative it will be useful to teach toward them. But the claims of pedagogical freedom obscure the invasive role the standards are already playing.
9. Drowning out other conversations.
In economic theory there is the concept of “opportunity cost”—in any choice, the consumer is foregoing other choices, other opportunities that cannot be pursued. In schools, if all of the discussion is about A, we pay an opportunity cost of not discussing B, C, D, and other topics. 
The principle of opportunity costs prompts us to ask: “What conversations won’t we be having?” Since the CCSS virtually ignore poetry, will we cease to speak about it? What about character education, service learning? What about fiction writing in the upper high school grades? What about the arts that are not amenable to standardized testing? What about collaborative learning, an obvious twenty-first-century skill? We lose opportunities when we cease to discuss these issues and allow the CCSS to completely set the agenda, when the only map is the one it creates. 
I don't pretend to be a scholar and my problem with the Standards has to do with the loss of local control and  the expansion of centralized government but I found this article to be very interesting and thought provoking.  Newkirk closes with the following:

But I’m left with the question: Who watches the watcher? Who assesses the assessor? That’s our job. We’ve come too far, learned too much, invented too much to diminish our practice by one iota to accommodate the Common Core. When and if we see it impeding our best work, it is not too late to speak up.
Take a minute and read the entire piece.  It's only 7 pages...
Speaking Back to Common Core




Thursday, February 21, 2013

Which statement encapsulates Wasatch County's values better?

TODAY


MEETING OF THE WASATCH SCHOOL DISTRICT BOARD OF EDUCATION

Wasatch Education Center, 101 East 200 North, Heber, Utah
Thursday, February 21, 2013, 6:30 p.m.


After my last post regarding Wasatch School District's strategic plan, I was sent a copy of Nebo school districts mission statement.


Mission Statement
Our mission is to provide each student with quality instruction, learning opportunities and educational environments which inspire classroom success, personal excellence, and responsible citizenship.
Belief Statements
We Believe That:
  • Each person is unique and has individual worth.
  • Each person is capable of learning and progressing.
  • Each person has rights with accompanying responsibilities and accountability.
  • The family is the foundation of our society.
  • Education is a shared responsibility of the individual, family, school, and community.
  • Optimal learning takes place in a climate of love, caring, respect, trust, and acceptance.
  • A safe environment is best achieved when school, home and community work together.
  • Learning is enhanced when education becomes meaningful.
  • Healthy self-esteem enhances the quality of life.
  • Performing meaningful work and service contributes to the quality of life.
  • Individual integrity, tolerance, and respect for others contribute to a better society.
  • A successful democracy is dependent upon an educated and responsible citizenry.
Strategic Parameters
  • After considering the needs of students and others involved, decisions will be made at the lowest appropriate level of accountability.
  • We will not tolerate behavior or programs which demean the dignity or compromise the safety and well-being of individuals.
  • We will continually evaluate and seek to improve.
Objectives
  • 100% of our students will graduate or successfully complete their Individual Educational Plans.
  • All students will be prepared with community values, appropriate education, and necessary skills to be responsible and contributing members of society as measured by the perception of students, parents, school staff and community.
  • Each year Nebo School District's average will exceed the national and state norms or standards on standarized and criterion referenced tests.
  • All students will attend school or approved alternatives 100% of the time.
  • All students will experience and contribute to a safe and secure learning environment as perceived by students, parents, school staff, and community.
 Now compare that mission statement to Wasatch County's plan:



In my opinion Nebo District's plan is much more in line with the values of our community.  If I could change just one statement it would be to assert that the United States of America is a Constitutional Republic and not a Democracy.

I can't help myself - If I could change two 

Please let your voice be heard.  

MEETING OF THE WASATCH SCHOOL DISTRICT BOARD OF EDUCATION
Wasatch Education Center, 101 East 200 North, Heber, Utah
Thursday, February 21, 2013, 6:30 p.m.

Here are the emails of all the principals in the valley, the policy director, the school board members, and the Superintendent:  

shawn.kelly@wasatch.edu, deanna.lloyd@wasatch.edu, RYAN BROWN <ryan.brown@wasatch.edu>, "Kraig Powell" <kraigpowell@le.utah.gov>,  blaik.baird@wasatch.edu, debbie.jones@wasatch.edu, ann.horner@wasatch.edu, shad.sorenson@wasatch.edu, mark.davis@wasatch.edu, terry.shoemaker@wasatch.edu, keith.johansen@wasatch.edu, james.judd@wasatch.edu, jacki.burnham@wasatch.edu, "Brian Thorne" <brian.thorne@wasatch.edu>, justin.kelly@wasatch.edu, adam.hagan@wasatch.edu, 




Enculturate the young into a social and political Democracy? What does that even mean?

(Make sure you read the quotes at the bottom)

Look - I don't have time to write a research paper.  Life is crazy busy!  But I feel continually compelled to let people know what I see, so that if they have a problem with it or maybe feel compelled to do something about it; they will.

Tomorrow is our local school board meeting.  Before last February I had NEVER, EVER been to one.  Have you?  I didn't really care.  I live in a very strong community with tremendous people and that was good enough for me.  But life doesn't always go as we imagined it would.  Life has a way of throwing us a curve ball.  I didn't go looking to be an activist, activism found me.

So what's my point?

You need to understand what our District's Strategic plan is and then decide if that represents the values of our community.

Why does it matter now when I've known about this for a year?  It matters because it is up for review at tomorrow's meeting.

Here's the Agenda and the Board packet.

Now back to the Strategic Plan -











What's the problem?




So what?  What does that even mean?

en·cul·tu·rate

 [en-kuhl-chuh-reyt]  
verb (used with object), en·cul·tu·rat·ed, en·cul·tu·rat·ing.
to change, modify, or adapt (behavior, ideas, etc.) by enculturation.

social democracy
n.A political theory advocating the use of democratic means to achieve a gradual transition from capitalism to socialism.

de·moc·ra·cy  (d-mkr-s)
n. pl. de·moc·ra·cies
1. Government by the people, exercised either directly or through elected representatives.
2. A political or social unit that has such a government.
3. The common people, considered as the primary source of political power.
4. Majority rule.
5. The principles of social equality and respect for the individual within a community.

I couldn't find an official definition for a political Democracy in my quick search but will update with an official definition if I can find one.

So what?  Isn't America a Democracy?

When Benjamin Franklin was asked this question his response was,

If you don't know the difference between a Republic and a Democracy watch this video:
It's okay - most of us don't.  I'm still learning too.


Where did this even come from?  


I thought the school was near perfect too, but now I question some of the employees.  If that makes you uncomfortable, as it did me, read this talk by Pres. Packer to BYU faculty, staff and administrators:  Snow White Birds. 

Like I said, I don't have time for a research paper right now as it is already 3 in the morning but here is the short answer. 

BYU partnered with an organization NNER:  http://education.byu.edu/news/2003/01/01/hosts-nner/
BYU’s School of Education was one of NNER’s 10 initial settings when it was launched in 1986. The NNER was founded by John I. Goodlad, Kenneth Sirotnick, and Roger Soder with emphasis on Goodlad’s Moral Dimensions theory. Goodlad’s four moral dimensions include enculturating youth in democratic living, providing access to knowledge, practicing a nurturing pedagogy, and ensuring responsible stewardship of schools. The NNER was established on the premise that good schools are not possible without good teacher education programs, and good teacher education programs should immerse students in good schools as a part of their induction into teaching.
They have since dropped this association after citizens in Alpine School District questioned the philosophies of John Goodlad and his organization.

 BYU has partially amended their vision statement, it's time Wasatch County followed suit.  Let your voice be heard.

Here are some philosophies John Goodlad holds:






Read about Alpine's fight here: