While on the subject of thanking folks, we would be completely remiss in not thanking some dedicated folks who have stood up for the truth in the face of massive opposing forces:
Dr. Sandra Stotsky, Dr. James Milgram, Dr. Bill Evers, Ze'ev Wurman in particular (we're leaving out many more, to be sure) have been fighting this disaster known as Common Core for going on 3-4 years or more now.
All it takes is a few minutes of listening to any of them speak or reading their work, and you can see nothing deceptive or politically motivated in what they say -- it is clear they have little, if anything, to personally gain from defeating Common Core.
They truly care about our kids, parents, teachers, schools and the success of education in our country.
They are experts. They are credible. They all speak out against Common Core.
In particular, you can see some examples of their exhaustive body of work on Dr. Stotsky's page here in the "Recent Professional Activities" section at the bottom:
http://www.uaedreform.org/sandra-stotsky/
Thank you all for the gifts you have given our nation. You are each a national treasure.
Thursday, January 16, 2014
Friday, January 10, 2014
Thank you, Diane Ravitch and Mercedes Schneider
As parents of school-aged children living in California, "Common Core" was virtually an unknown for us up until about six months ago. That alone speaks volumes. We had been very involved with our local school and our childrens' education. We are avid readers and follow issues closely. So, why did this sneak up on us? All of us? More background here.
As even more background, ourselves, we spent K through college in public schools/state colleges. My dad was an educator in public schools for ~30 years. Our kids are in public schools. We have, thus far, supported public education.
However, the more we had learned about Common Core and the more we dug into the background, the players, the process... the more it has troubled us. So much so, that we've started this little blog and site.
We have been very disappointed with the virtual silence, even from other Stop Common Core folks, about the situation in California. Silence too from those who we'd most expect to come out against Common Core, such as CA politicians, from along the political spectrum. It is a complete disservice to voters, taxpayers, parents, teachers... most of all, our kids.
Of all the states, California least needs Common Core. More on that here.
Of all the states, California's taxpayer dollars and time being spent (likely to balloon into billions) to advocate and implement Common Core must, by far, be the greatest.
Of all the states, California may very well be the most critical in keeping Common Core afloat. If California goes, the whole thing falls apart (in our view).
Of all the states, awareness of the facts surrounding Common Core, especially among parents (but also educators, school boards, administrators) seems to be one of the lowest.
That is why, we are grateful for the support from a few (but growing) and perhaps unlikely sources.
First, coming from Mercedes Schneider. Mercedes has done excellent research, especially into the data collection and money aspects of Common Core. She was supportive of our suggestion to add California to the list of states with some "unrest" about Common Core:
Is California “Common Core Unrest State #23″?
Then, just yesterday, we were thankful and surprised to see the kind words and post from Diane Ravitch on her blog regarding our Open School Standards (OSS) proposal for a more open model for standards, tests and materials:
A Brilliant Idea for Raising and Improving Standards: Open Source Them
California desperately needs more awareness of the downsides of Common Core. Thank you both for helping to shine some light on this issue and for the kind words.
More to come and we appreciate the support!
If you care about the future of public education in California, please learn all the facts about Common Core, especially related to California. Then hold your representatives, school boards and superintendents accountable to tell the whole truth and to work in collaboration with parents and teachers for what is best for California kids, and not for what may be politically convenient.
As even more background, ourselves, we spent K through college in public schools/state colleges. My dad was an educator in public schools for ~30 years. Our kids are in public schools. We have, thus far, supported public education.
However, the more we had learned about Common Core and the more we dug into the background, the players, the process... the more it has troubled us. So much so, that we've started this little blog and site.
We have been very disappointed with the virtual silence, even from other Stop Common Core folks, about the situation in California. Silence too from those who we'd most expect to come out against Common Core, such as CA politicians, from along the political spectrum. It is a complete disservice to voters, taxpayers, parents, teachers... most of all, our kids.
Of all the states, California least needs Common Core. More on that here.
Of all the states, California's taxpayer dollars and time being spent (likely to balloon into billions) to advocate and implement Common Core must, by far, be the greatest.
Of all the states, California may very well be the most critical in keeping Common Core afloat. If California goes, the whole thing falls apart (in our view).
Of all the states, awareness of the facts surrounding Common Core, especially among parents (but also educators, school boards, administrators) seems to be one of the lowest.
That is why, we are grateful for the support from a few (but growing) and perhaps unlikely sources.
First, coming from Mercedes Schneider. Mercedes has done excellent research, especially into the data collection and money aspects of Common Core. She was supportive of our suggestion to add California to the list of states with some "unrest" about Common Core:
Is California “Common Core Unrest State #23″?
Then, just yesterday, we were thankful and surprised to see the kind words and post from Diane Ravitch on her blog regarding our Open School Standards (OSS) proposal for a more open model for standards, tests and materials:
A Brilliant Idea for Raising and Improving Standards: Open Source Them
California desperately needs more awareness of the downsides of Common Core. Thank you both for helping to shine some light on this issue and for the kind words.
More to come and we appreciate the support!
If you care about the future of public education in California, please learn all the facts about Common Core, especially related to California. Then hold your representatives, school boards and superintendents accountable to tell the whole truth and to work in collaboration with parents and teachers for what is best for California kids, and not for what may be politically convenient.
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Open School Standards (OSS): An alternative to Common Core? [Archived]
Please visit the new, live page here:
http://uncommoncalifornia.blogspot.com/2014/01/Open-School-Standards.html
Open standards have been used successful across many industries and technologies. They give flexibility to customize and adapt, while providing a foundation of available standards and interoperability.
Open Tests:
http://uncommoncalifornia.blogspot.com/2014/01/Open-School-Standards.html
Open standards have been used successful across many industries and technologies. They give flexibility to customize and adapt, while providing a foundation of available standards and interoperability.
Perhaps this framework could be used by states and
individual schools as an alternative to Common Core?
Open Standards:
- Seed a growing and ever updating list of standards, drawn for the best from state standards, around the country and around the world. Encourage standards experts, to participate, evaluate, score them, encourage or discourage them. Provide an open forum for standards to be evaluated, questioned, commented upon, rated, etc. Include parents, teachers, education experts.
- Provide ways to classify, group and sort them, by subject, recommended grade(s), ratings. When standards are similar or identical, they could be combined to reduce redundancy. Groups can work to evaluate, combine, rate them to “narrow” the list down or put forward their “recommended” set of standards. States and schools should just not be monetarily incentivized or forced to use any particular set.
- For each standards, test and materials publishers (see below) could “claim” alignment for their tests and study tools. Users would be able to “rate” and/or question this alignment (or lack thereof).
- Even the Washington D.C. lobby groups that created Common Core could “donate” their copyrights to the Common Core standards by putting them into the public domain & OSS!
- States and local school districts would be able to pick and choose which standards they would adopt and in which grade level and even within grade levels. Schools could have 2-3 levels of standards, based on below proficient, proficient and advanced levels. To take it further, schools might have a different set, customized to the level of the child in each subject. Want a particular math standard in 5th grade instead of 6th grade? No problem, just drag and drop it into your set. Truly “plug and play” standards.
Open Tests:
- Any company or individuals should be able to create software and/or paper tests that reference and draw from referenced open standards. This site is a great example of how aspects of how “open source” tests could work: http://quizlet.com/
- With software, each school and/or state would have their own, customized test based on their selected set of standards. Again, could be customized down to grades, subjects, proficiency levels, and even each student.
- Like the standards, groups could advocate their software or tests, allowing each state and school to choose. Smarter Balanced and PARCC could even become options, so long as they create tests that are chosen by each state and/or school, customized to their standards and open parent and teacher feedback mechanisms were in place.
- Reliability of the providers, especially the tests, would need to be well-monitored, especially to prevent sharing of test answers, etc.
Open Materials:
- Publishers won’t like this. Instead of unwieldy, expensive books, workbooks and other materials, published and purchased by states and schools en masse every 5-7 years, “books” could be produced in the form of print on demand inserts which could be customized for each state or school, based upon their selected set of standards. Individual sheets could be inserted into ring bound books, using cost-effective printing and binding materials, such that annual costs should be comparable to current costs. However, each state, school or student would get their own tailored set of materials, exactly matching their respective standards and tests.
- Likewise, teachers would get their own customized teachers books, guides and could select from a wide range of available, rated and aligned lesson plans, teaching materials, etc. However, with standards customization available by state and/or school and down to the levels of grade, subject and proficiency groups, the materials could be a better match for the teacher’s classroom and student. There would also be much more flexibility to modify, upgrade or downgrade the standards for the school, based upon PILOT implementations and teacher classroom experience.
- Like the standards and tests, open public forums could provide ratings, reviews, recommendations. And any group (and even teachers) can certainly recommend or promote their wares. Parents and even students currently have no forum to rate materials, perhaps this is the feedback loop that is desperately needed.
Data opt-out provisions:
- Parents should be allowed to opt-out of any sharing of their child’s data. Like just about every other company, surveys and sampling can be used to normalize results if needed, without having to have data on EVERY SINGLE child.
- Perhaps teachers could voluntarily request or opt-out of having any results tied to any incentives.
- Schools, likewise, should not be punished if they choose to opt-out of any statewide databases. Again, even if shared, parents should have ability to opt out.
- “Reformers” who want a “common” set of measurements and longitudinal test may not like it—though it would seem schools can still measure on each standard and show annual progress. Data geeks will have to live with not having data on every kid… sorry, it’s not a price parents want to be forced to pay.
Politics and money will still be factors. Yes, publishers would likely outspend smaller
rivals to push their tests and materials.
However, parent and teacher feedback loops and open forums of
communication could be critical offsets.
Like most open systems, the best standards, tests and materials should
rise to the top.
Thoughts? Has this been
proposed or tried previously? Out with
“one-size doesn’t fit all” and in with “many sizes fit all”?
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Open School Standards OSS: An alternative to Common Core?
Open standards have been used successful across many industries and technologies. They give flexibility to customize and adapt, while providing a foundation of available standards and interoperability.
Perhaps this framework could be used by states and
individual schools as an alternative to Common Core?
Open Standards:
- Seed a growing and ever updating list of standards, drawn for the best from state standards, around the country and around the world. Encourage standards experts, to participate, evaluate, score them, encourage or discourage them. Provide an open forum for standards to be evaluated, questioned, commented upon, rated, etc. Include parents, teachers, education experts.
- Provide ways to classify, group and sort them, by subject, recommended grade(s), ratings. When standards are similar or identical, they could be combined to reduce redundancy. Groups can work to evaluate, combine, rate them to “narrow” the list down or put forward their “recommended” set of standards. States and schools should just not be monetarily incentivized or forced to use any particular set.
- For each standards, test and materials publishers (see below) could “claim” alignment for their tests and study tools. Users would be able to “rate” and/or question this alignment (or lack thereof).
- Even the Washington D.C. lobby groups that created Common Core could “donate” their copyrights to the Common Core standards by putting them into the public domain & OSS!
- States and local school districts would be able to pick and choose which standards they would adopt and in which grade level and even within grade levels. Schools could have 2-3 levels of standards, based on below proficient, proficient and advanced levels. To take it further, schools might have a different set, customized to the level of the child in each subject. Want a particular math standard in 5th grade instead of 6th grade? No problem, just drag and drop it into your set. Truly “plug and play” standards.
Open Tests:
- Any company or individuals should be able to create software and/or paper tests that reference and draw from referenced open standards. This site is a great example of how aspects of how “open source” tests could work: http://quizlet.com/
- With software, each school and/or state would have their own, customized test based on their selected set of standards. Again, could be customized down to grades, subjects, proficiency levels, and even each student.
- Like the standards, groups could advocate their software or tests, allowing each state and school to choose. Smarter Balanced and PARCC could even become options, so long as they create tests that are chosen by each state and/or school, customized to their standards and open parent and teacher feedback mechanisms were in place.
- Reliability of the providers, especially the tests, would need to be well-monitored, especially to prevent sharing of test answers, etc.
Open Materials:
- Publishers won’t like this. Instead of unwieldy, expensive books, workbooks and other materials, published and purchased by states and schools en masse every 5-7 years, “books” could be produced in the form of print on demand inserts which could be customized for each state or school, based upon their selected set of standards. Individual sheets could be inserted into ring bound books, using cost-effective printing and binding materials, such that annual costs should be comparable to current costs. However, each state, school or student would get their own tailored set of materials, exactly matching their respective standards and tests.
- Likewise, teachers would get their own customized teachers books, guides and could select from a wide range of available, rated and aligned lesson plans, teaching materials, etc. However, with standards customization available by state and/or school and down to the levels of grade, subject and proficiency groups, the materials could be a better match for the teacher’s classroom and student. There would also be much more flexibility to modify, upgrade or downgrade the standards for the school, based upon PILOT implementations and teacher classroom experience. Here's another current example of something like this in action: http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/
- Like the standards and tests, open public forums could provide ratings, reviews, recommendations. And any group (and even teachers) can certainly recommend or promote their wares. Parents and even students currently have no forum to rate materials, perhaps this is the feedback loop that is desperately needed. Only this close to this out there today is Great Schools, unfortunately they seem to be full steam ahead with Common Core (and got Gates money): http://www.greatschools.org/
Data opt-out provisions:
- Parents should be allowed to opt-out of any sharing of their child’s data. Like just about every other company, surveys and sampling can be used to normalize results if needed, without having to have data on EVERY child.
- Perhaps teachers could voluntarily request or opt-out of having any results tied to any incentives.
- Schools, likewise, should not be punished if they choose to opt-out of any statewide databases. Again, even if shared, parents should have ability to opt out.
- “Reformers” who want a “common” set of measurements and longitudinal test may not like it—though it would seem schools can still measure on each standard and show annual progress. Data geeks will have to live with not having data on every kid… sorry, it’s not a price parents (and teachers) want to be forced to pay. We have to drawn the line when it comes to data on children.
Politics and money will still be factors. Yes, publishers would likely outspend smaller
rivals to push their tests and materials.
However, parent and teacher feedback loops and open forums of
communication could be critical offsets.
Like most open systems, the best standards, tests and materials should
rise to the top.
Thoughts? Has this been
proposed or tried previously? Out with
“one-size doesn’t fit all” and in with “many sizes fit all”?
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