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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "Common Core's epic fail: Special Education"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote] But I don't think you can expect any curriculum to meet the needs of *every* student. It's not possible. Yes, CC is about explaining your thought process, which is a critical skill. Are you saying that they should have a different set of standards for those with SN? If so, wouldn't this lead to those with SN being in a separate class by themselves, they way it used to be before integrated classrooms?[/quote] Unfortunately, not all people "think" the same way. CC assumes that they do. The kids have to learn the CC way. [/quote] What is the one single way that the Common Core standards assume that everybody thinks? Could you please explain?[/quote] It insists that they "describe" -- even when they don't have the language skills. [/quote] If the one single way that the Common Core standards assume people think is that people have language, then I really don't have a problem with that. I think it's a valid assumption. A child who does not have language should get accommodation in the classroom. Also I don't think that "describe" necessarily means "explain in words, using complete sentences".[/quote] You are so obtuse. It's not "one" single way....it's a drop in the bucket. Common Core also wrongly and stupidly assumes that children have abstract thought WAY before many of them do. It's killing education for children with autism. The parent message boards are lighting up over this. I know YOU don't care about children with disabilities, but many of us do. [/quote] Please don't assume that I don't care about children with disabilities. But the whole point is that the Common Core is standards. By definition, standards do not apply to everybody everywhere under every circumstance. For some children, the standards are way less than they could be doing. For other children, the standards are too difficult, or developmentally inappropriate, or inappropriate for their disability. If children with autism are having trouble with Common Core standards, the solution isn't to change the Common Core standards so that children with autism can achieve them without extra help. It's to provide extra help to children with autism.[/quote]
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