(One curriculum, two or more curricula. I apologize for not being able to stop myself from posting this.) |
It is the one being used by my child's school, so I am commenting on what I know. |
PARCC is a Common-Core and NCLB compliant test, which Pearson developed. Smarter Balanced is a different Common Core and NCLB compliant test, developed separately. And then there are a variety of other NCLB compliant tests which were developed within states, some of which are Common Core compliant, some of which aren't. Meanwhile, Pearson is also a company that publishes textbooks, some of which are Common Core compliant. But many other companies, like Houghton-Mifflin Harcort (which includes Holt Rinehart and Winston and others), McGraw Hill (which includes Glencoe, Random House and others) and others also publish a wide range of textbooks and materials, to include Common Core compliant ones. Also on the scene are myriad other offerings, many of which have offerings aligned to Common Core, to include Khan Academy - and, there is also a lot of free, open source content showing up, which also brings up the fact that the whole textbook industry is being disrupted by the electronic content available for tablets and online delivery. |
I'd be pretty stunned to see that a school *only* uses Pearson textbooks and materials. My kid's school certainly doesn't - they pick and choose materials and texts by subject and grade level, based on their research and experiences with them. |
And in the end analysis, the problem isn't Pearson. Pearson is a capitalist corporation doing what capitalist corporations are supposed to do -- make money.
The problem is an education system where we contract out core functions like curriculum and assessment, because there's a prevailing belief that the market is better and more efficient at doing this work. |
Great post! |
How can I join the right? |
I mean the fight. the good fight. the right fight. |
There's nothing that special about Pearson textbooks and materials. Many of them are not even all that good. There's nothing stopping teachers from collaborating on course materials and texts, there's a ton of great technology out there for doing that on the internet. Write your own material and open source it! What better way to free yourself from folks like Pearson? |
What if posting the question is required to explain how ridiculous a question is? See thread on the PARCC practice tests and the ridiculous test questions, which were posted here to illustrate how ludicrous they were. |
All Americans have freedom of speech. Period. |
All Americans have freedom of speech, within limits, and the limits depend on the circumstances. Period. |
Doesn't matter. Minors are not legally able to enter into a contract. They can sign anything they want but it's not legally valid or binding. |
And if NCLB was created to increase teacher accountability, it has done the opposite. Whenever I have a concern about the curriculum or tests, I get, "yeah, I know, there's nothing we can do about it because the county wrote the blah blah blah and standards blah blah blah and we are frustrated too..." Teachers are not engaged in the content half the time because they didn't choose it, and don't even know what questions are on the test from what I hear. It is ridiculous. It is not authentic education. And then there's Pearson, making up concepts and asking children to develop mastery in BSing their way through a test. |
Perhaps they do - though I know that it is often less expensive for schools to choose one publisher/curriculum and order in bulk, so I'd be guessing that you have a very wealthy school if they can afford to pick and choose textbooks, workbooks and other materials grade by grade or class by class. |