Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I took a sample PARCC test online for 4th grade math to see what all of the discussion was about.
I was surprised at the number of steps involved to get to the right answer for some of the questions.
An example is:
you have 4 teachers teaching a chess class. There are 18 chess boards. They order 3 more cases of 15. If each teacher has the same number of chess boards and the remainder are donated to the library, how many chess boards does each teacher get?
As adults, we can quickly see the answer is 15 but it will take a 4th grader a long time to get there.I
No, why?
18 + 3*15 = 63
63/4 = 15 R 3
Are 4th graders now taught how to do problems with multiple orders of operation?
The computation isn't complicated, and if the math curriculum is good, then the fourth-graders will have plenty of experience solving word problems like this.
Anonymous wrote:http://chronicle.northcoastnow.com/2015/02/10/onslaught-tests-burn-elyria-high-starr/
"I can’t do it anymore, not in this ‘drill ‘em and kill ‘em’ atmosphere,” she said. “I don’t think anyone understands that in this environment if your child cannot quickly grasp material, study like a robot and pass all of these tests, they will not survive.”
The standing-room-only audience at the Elyria Public Library’s West River Road North branch was shocked. Starr fought back tears as she explained her life as a teacher.
The tests are developmentally inappropriate for typical students and torture for those with special needs, she said. And, even an individual education plan is not enough to shield students from the rigors of state expectations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I took a sample PARCC test online for 4th grade math to see what all of the discussion was about.
I was surprised at the number of steps involved to get to the right answer for some of the questions.
An example is:
you have 4 teachers teaching a chess class. There are 18 chess boards. They order 3 more cases of 15. If each teacher has the same number of chess boards and the remainder are donated to the library, how many chess boards does each teacher get?
As adults, we can quickly see the answer is 15 but it will take a 4th grader a long time to get there.I
No, why?
18 + 3*15 = 63
63/4 = 15 R 3
The computation isn't complicated, and if the math curriculum is good, then the fourth-graders will have plenty of experience solving word problems like this.
Anonymous wrote:I took a sample PARCC test online for 4th grade math to see what all of the discussion was about.
I was surprised at the number of steps involved to get to the right answer for some of the questions.
An example is:
you have 4 teachers teaching a chess class. There are 18 chess boards. They order 3 more cases of 15. If each teacher has the same number of chess boards and the remainder are donated to the library, how many chess boards does each teacher get?
As adults, we can quickly see the answer is 15 but it will take a 4th grader a long time to get there.I
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The tests are developmentally inappropriate for typical students and torture for those with special needs, she said. And, even an individual education plan is not enough to shield students from the rigors of state expectations.
She's quitting before a single student has taken the PARCC test as a test.
Anonymous wrote:
The tests are developmentally inappropriate for typical students and torture for those with special needs, she said. And, even an individual education plan is not enough to shield students from the rigors of state expectations.
Anonymous wrote:This is my first year student teaching. My daughter is four, so I hadn't been exposed to the common core before this year. My kindergarten class is drowning in common core waters. It takes a truly remarkable teacher to get kids up to these levels. Some of it is easy and seems like common sense. Others, not so much. I'm really worried about the future of education. I've strongly considered quitting, but I'm too far in now. Everyone at the school keeps telling me that to just do my five years and try to get a job working with policy.
Anonymous wrote:This is my first year student teaching. My daughter is four, so I hadn't been exposed to the common core before this year. My kindergarten class is drowning in common core waters. It takes a truly remarkable teacher to get kids up to these levels. Some of it is easy and seems like common sense. Others, not so much. I'm really worried about the future of education. I've strongly considered quitting, but I'm too far in now. Everyone at the school keeps telling me that to just do my five years and try to get a job working with policy.
Can kids avoid Common Core curriculum by attending private schools instead of public?
Anonymous wrote:http://chronicle.northcoastnow.com/2015/02/10/onslaught-tests-burn-elyria-high-starr/
"I can’t do it anymore, not in this ‘drill ‘em and kill ‘em’ atmosphere,” she said. “I don’t think anyone understands that in this environment if your child cannot quickly grasp material, study like a robot and pass all of these tests, they will not survive.”
The standing-room-only audience at the Elyria Public Library’s West River Road North branch was shocked. Starr fought back tears as she explained her life as a teacher.
The tests are developmentally inappropriate for typical students and torture for those with special needs, she said. And, even an individual education plan is not enough to shield students from the rigors of state expectations.