You (or somebody) said that the PARCC and Smarter Balanced tests will be the end of the Common Core states. Those other states have not used the PARCC and Smarter Balanced tests. For what it's worth, my school district (MCPS) participated in the field testing of the PARCC test last year. I did not hear any reports of students crying or throwing up in their seats. My child's teacher this year, who field-tested the PARCC test last year, told me that she found the test quite reasonable and did not expect it to cause problems. |
A PP has pointed out that the developers of CC expected testing. A standard is meant to be measured. For the record, Race to the Top also requires testing. Common Core is a failure. |
| There are at LEAST 42 standards in Language Arts and Reading for K alone. I didn't try to count the math ones. And, it is expected that they will all be tested. What fun! |
This is why K teachers are screaming. |
Oh, so there should never be any testing, we should do away with it, and since you have no way of gauging outcomes, it doesn't matter how kids are doing and it doesn't matter how schools compare? Since you care so tremendously little about outcomes, then why bother educating kids at all? |
| And, there were not any tests before NCLB? Who knew? |
The developers of Common Core standards expected testing because federal law requires testing. The developers of the Common Core standards also expected the sun to come up the next morning. (Which it has, so far.) |
Can you read? Write? And, I bet you learned to do those things before NCLB. And, you never took a test? |
It is expected, by whom? There is no NCLB testing in kindergarten. Kindergarten teachers should know that. |
In that case, I suggested that you concentrate your efforts on getting NCLB amended to remove the testing requirements. This will accomplish your goal more effectively than fighting the Common Core standards, since getting rid of the Common Core standards will have no effect whatsoever on the testing requirements of NCLB. |
Great. Nice wallpaper! |
Idiotic. Evidently you are unaware that the country is full of kids who have minimal reading abilities and who can't even do math well enough to make change or balance a checkbook. These are things that need to be quantified, understood and addressed. |
Oh, and the tests are going to solve that? Here's a clue: It is not going to help. |
Here's a clue: it is not a result of poor schools. It is a result of poor parenting. That is what needs to be addressed. |
NP. No, it's partly the school's responsibility. It's the school's responsibility to make sure kids are *not* graduating without being able to read at a HS level. That's not the parent's job. It's the school's responsibility to make sure the kids are passing math at a certain level. But, I agree, it is the parent's responsibility to make sure that kids can balance a checkbook and know how to budget. But, in that regard, I would say some parents of DCUMers have failed miserably since you see so many "I make six figures and still live in the red" posts. |