Anonymous wrote:That's who "we" is? That's odd, because I think the Common Core standards are a big improvement, and I'm not relying on a publishing company to determine my kids' future.
Where do you think your school will get its materials and tests?
Anonymous wrote:All of the tests taken by all of the students in all of the classrooms in all of the 45 states participating in the Common Core standards will, in the future, be written by Pearson? I didn't know that.
It may not be a fact. However, it is a likelihood. NY, TX, and CA have already contracted with them, I think.
Anonymous wrote:Common Core now bringing Holocaust Denial to your local school, yaaay!
http://ktla.com/2014/05/05/rialto-assignment-asking-to-students-to-question-holocaust-to-be-revised/#axzz30sp8CKDK
The Rialto school district planned to revise an eighth-grade assignment that raised red flags by asking students to consider arguments about whether the Holocaust — the systematic killing by the Nazis of some 6 million Jews and millions of others — was not an “actual event” but instead a “propaganda tool that was used for political and monetary gain.”
...
The English/Language Arts assignment, first reported Sunday by the San Bernardino Sun and provided to KTLA by the newspaper, asked students to write an argumentative essay about the Holocaust describing “whether or not you believe this was an actual event in history, or merely a political scheme created to influence public emotion and gain wealth.”
rialto
The 18-page assignment instructions included three sources that students were told to use, including one that stated gassings in concentration camps were a “hoax” and that no evidence has shown Jews died in gas chambers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Common Core now bringing Holocaust Denial to your local school, yaaay!
http://ktla.com/2014/05/05/rialto-assignment-asking-to-students-to-question-holocaust-to-be-revised/#axzz30sp8CKDK
The Rialto school district planned to revise an eighth-grade assignment that raised red flags by asking students to consider arguments about whether the Holocaust — the systematic killing by the Nazis of some 6 million Jews and millions of others — was not an “actual event” but instead a “propaganda tool that was used for political and monetary gain.”
...
The English/Language Arts assignment, first reported Sunday by the San Bernardino Sun and provided to KTLA by the newspaper, asked students to write an argumentative essay about the Holocaust describing “whether or not you believe this was an actual event in history, or merely a political scheme created to influence public emotion and gain wealth.”
rialto
The 18-page assignment instructions included three sources that students were told to use, including one that stated gassings in concentration camps were a “hoax” and that no evidence has shown Jews died in gas chambers.
Please cite the specific Common Core standard according to which 8th graders are supposed to write an essay about whether or not the Holocaust happened. Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:All of the tests taken by all of the students in all of the classrooms in all of the 45 states participating in the Common Core standards will, in the future, be written by Pearson? I didn't know that.
It may not be a fact. However, it is a likelihood. NY, TX, and CA have already contracted with them, I think.
All of the tests taken by all of the students in all of the classrooms in all of the 45 states participating in the Common Core standards will, in the future, be written by Pearson? I didn't know that.
Anonymous wrote:Common Core now bringing Holocaust Denial to your local school, yaaay!
http://ktla.com/2014/05/05/rialto-assignment-asking-to-students-to-question-holocaust-to-be-revised/#axzz30sp8CKDK
The Rialto school district planned to revise an eighth-grade assignment that raised red flags by asking students to consider arguments about whether the Holocaust — the systematic killing by the Nazis of some 6 million Jews and millions of others — was not an “actual event” but instead a “propaganda tool that was used for political and monetary gain.”
...
The English/Language Arts assignment, first reported Sunday by the San Bernardino Sun and provided to KTLA by the newspaper, asked students to write an argumentative essay about the Holocaust describing “whether or not you believe this was an actual event in history, or merely a political scheme created to influence public emotion and gain wealth.”
rialto
The 18-page assignment instructions included three sources that students were told to use, including one that stated gassings in concentration camps were a “hoax” and that no evidence has shown Jews died in gas chambers.
Anonymous wrote:Where did schools used to get their materials and tests?
In the past, teachers made their own tests. There was not this HUGE requirement for standardized tests that there will be with 45 states participating. Just watch. All will fall under the Pearson umbrella. Then, just wait for the cheating.
The Rialto school district planned to revise an eighth-grade assignment that raised red flags by asking students to consider arguments about whether the Holocaust — the systematic killing by the Nazis of some 6 million Jews and millions of others — was not an “actual event” but instead a “propaganda tool that was used for political and monetary gain.”
...
The English/Language Arts assignment, first reported Sunday by the San Bernardino Sun and provided to KTLA by the newspaper, asked students to write an argumentative essay about the Holocaust describing “whether or not you believe this was an actual event in history, or merely a political scheme created to influence public emotion and gain wealth.”
rialto
The 18-page assignment instructions included three sources that students were told to use, including one that stated gassings in concentration camps were a “hoax” and that no evidence has shown Jews died in gas chambers.
Where did schools used to get their materials and tests?
Anonymous wrote:That's who "we" is? That's odd, because I think the Common Core standards are a big improvement, and I'm not relying on a publishing company to determine my kids' future.
Where do you think your school will get its materials and tests?
That's who "we" is? That's odd, because I think the Common Core standards are a big improvement, and I'm not relying on a publishing company to determine my kids' future.