EPATA
8-10-12 Meeting Summary
Following Edperspectives’ board meeting Executive director Sandra
Hammond allowed EPATA to bring forth its agenda (which are the numbered items).
Below each is the meeting content information.
1. Discussed
Common Core Standard’s impact in our schools.
We presented some current information on
Common Core Standards:
-In June 2010 the final version of Math
and English standards were released. Developed by the Council of Chief State
School Officers, National Governors Association in conjunction with corporate
leaders-not teachers.
-Funded by
the governors and state schools chiefs, with additional support from the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation, the Charles
Stewart Mott Foundation and other corporate
leaders.
-The national standards on which the
administration is planning to base a national curriculum are inadequate. Independent reviews have found its standards to
be below those in the highest-performing countries and below those in states
rated as having the best academic standards.
- There is no constitutional or statutory basis
for national standards, national assessments, or national curricula. The U.S.
Constitution seeks a healthy balance of power between states and the federal
government, and wisely leaves the question of academic standards, curriculum,
and instruction up to the states. In fact, action by the U.S. Department of
Education to create national standards and curricula is explicitly forbidden by federal law, reflecting the judgment of
Congress and the public on this issue.
-USDOE
will release states from NCLB sanctions if they are planning to implement
this initiative by basing at least 85% of their state curricula/testing on these
Standards (currently 46 states have said yes to use them) as well as other criteria like
tying their Core test scores to
individual teachers.
- Countries
with a set of common standards do no better or worse on international tests
than countries without them. France and Denmark have centralized national curricula and do not
show high average achievement on international tests or a diminishing gap
between high- and low-achieving students. Meanwhile, Canada and Australia, both
of which have many regional curricula, achieve better results than many
affluent single-curriculum nations.
-There is no evidence that those seventeen top
world economies with common standards are any more economically competitive
than those without. (Tienken, 2010) Commonality of standards within a country
does not necessarily propel learning or economic competitiveness between
countries.
- Population mobility
does not justify a national curriculum. Only inter-state mobility is
relevant to the value of a national curriculum, and inter-state mobility in
this country is low. The Census Bureau reports a total annual mobility rate of
12.5% in 2008-9, but only 1.6% of the total rate consists of inter-state moves
that a national curriculum may influence. Other data indicate that inter-state
mobility among school-age children is even lower, at 0.3%.
-Common core
standards will Increase testing in more subjects, more grades with pre and post
testing for tying student test scores to their teachers. The cost for new
tests and new texts and ancillary materials is staggering.
-There is no body of
evidence for a “best” design for curriculum sequences in any subject. . This means we should be encouraging—not
discouraging—multiple models of state standards (as there already is in the
world!). Having diversity in programs is a strength.. or do we all want to
drive the same a ‘common core’ car and wear the same ‘common core’ jeans ?
The internet was down when we tried to
show this video at the meeting, but you can look at it now and think
about these facts:
-The investors gathered in a tony private club
in Manhattan were eager
to hear about the next big thing, and education consultant Rob Lytle was happy to oblige. “Think about
the upcoming rollout of new national academic standards for public schools, he
urged the crowd. If they're as rigorous as advertised, a huge number of schools
will suddenly look really bad, their students testing way behind in reading and
math. They'll want help, quick. And private, for-profit vendors selling lesson
plans, educational software and student assessments will be right there to
provide it.”
- The K-12 market is tantalizingly huge:
The U.S. spends more than $500 billion a year to educate kids from ages five
through 18. The entire education sector, including college and mid-career
training, represents nearly 9 percent of U.S. gross domestic product, more than
the energy or technology sectors.
- Now investors are signaling optimism that
a golden moment has arrived. They're pouring private equity and venture
capital into scores of companies that aim to profit by taking over broad swaths
of public education.
-"This is a new frontier," Dianne
Ravitch said. "The private equity guys and the hedge fund guys are
circling public education. Vendors looking for a toehold in public schools
often donate generously to local politicians and spend big on marketing, so
even companies with dismal academic results can rack up contracts and rake in
tax dollars."
3. The National Resolution
on High-stakes Testing-
-How can we bring this to the attention
of local districts?
4. Brainstorm
student, parent, teacher, school, district issues that we should address for
2012-13 school year.
-Although we did not have
the time to develop a plan there was concern expressed by parents on the
need to understand the discrepancy between classroom grades and state test
scores. How does a parent find the truth about how their child is progressing?
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