Anonymous wrote:I ran it by a second grade teacher. Her feeling is similar to mine: While the concept of understanding 'why' in mathematics, etc. is an admirable one, making it mandatory will be exhausting for most kids as even an adult can't maintain this deep level of thinking for 8 hours a day. And she feels we are seeing that now with the preliminary rollout.
I do believe that the teachers themselves could come up with the best ways to meet these standards without exhausting the children, and you see that in the responses from teachers here. They truly understand how kids' minds work because they are the ones in the trenches with them. But that's not what's happening.
And that's why education is best handled at the local level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the worksheet says "Common Core" on it, that's proof that this is something the Common Core standards require?
Nope.
Dont bother -- people are stupid.
COMMON CORE IS A SET OF STANDARDS -- NOT A CURRICULUM
+100 Common Core doesn't make "worksheets" - those are made by various companies trying to make materials aligning to the standard. If the Common Core standard doesn't specifically say it has to be done absolutely that way (which it doesn't) and if worksheet sucks, use somebody else's.
PROBLEM SOLVED. Sheesh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the worksheet says "Common Core" on it, that's proof that this is something the Common Core standards require?
Nope.
Dont bother -- people are stupid.
COMMON CORE IS A SET OF STANDARDS -- NOT A CURRICULUM
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So here is a worksheet from the Common Core workbook for first graders. I showed this to my husband, who can code in fractal mathematics, so he's no slouch. It took him about 10 minutes to figure out what the worksheet was asking and why. I asked my 12 year old son to look at it. He could not figure out what was being asked of him.
https://twitter.com/NYCdeb8tr/status/450416183372955648/photo/1
Dummy have you not been reading about the fact that New York has added stuff that is not common core?
Since when do we read stuff on Twitter and take that as gospel???
Now tell me how you get the answer and whether or not this is appropriate for a six year old, which is the real question at hand.
Anonymous wrote:If the worksheet says "Common Core" on it, that's proof that this is something the Common Core standards require?
Nope.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So here is a worksheet from the Common Core workbook for first graders. I showed this to my husband, who can code in fractal mathematics, so he's no slouch. It took him about 10 minutes to figure out what the worksheet was asking and why. I asked my 12 year old son to look at it. He could not figure out what was being asked of him.
https://twitter.com/NYCdeb8tr/status/450416183372955648/photo/1
Dummy have you not been reading about the fact that New York has added stuff that is not common core?
Since when do we read stuff on Twitter and take that as gospel???
Now tell me how you get the answer and whether or not this is appropriate for a six year old, which is the real question at hand.
That was crazy- what the hell?! Obama should be forced to complete all of these worksheets/tests before it gets passed on to the general population! See how smart he really is. Or maybe he'll actually get how stupid this Common Core is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So here is a worksheet from the Common Core workbook for first graders. I showed this to my husband, who can code in fractal mathematics, so he's no slouch. It took him about 10 minutes to figure out what the worksheet was asking and why. I asked my 12 year old son to look at it. He could not figure out what was being asked of him.
https://twitter.com/NYCdeb8tr/status/450416183372955648/photo/1
Dummy have you not been reading about the fact that New York has added stuff that is not common core?
Since when do we read stuff on Twitter and take that as gospel???
Now tell me how you get the answer and whether or not this is appropriate for a six year old, which is the real question at hand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So here is a worksheet from the Common Core workbook for first graders. I showed this to my husband, who can code in fractal mathematics, so he's no slouch. It took him about 10 minutes to figure out what the worksheet was asking and why. I asked my 12 year old son to look at it. He could not figure out what was being asked of him.
https://twitter.com/NYCdeb8tr/status/450416183372955648/photo/1
Dummy have you not been reading about the fact that New York has added stuff that is not common core?
Since when do we read stuff on Twitter and take that as gospel???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So here is a worksheet from the Common Core workbook for first graders. I showed this to my husband, who can code in fractal mathematics, so he's no slouch. It took him about 10 minutes to figure out what the worksheet was asking and why. I asked my 12 year old son to look at it. He could not figure out what was being asked of him.
https://twitter.com/NYCdeb8tr/status/450416183372955648/photo/1
Dummy have you not been reading about the fact that New York has added stuff that is not common core?
Since when do we read stuff on Twitter and take that as gospel???
Anonymous wrote:So here is a worksheet from the Common Core workbook for first graders. I showed this to my husband, who can code in fractal mathematics, so he's no slouch. It took him about 10 minutes to figure out what the worksheet was asking and why. I asked my 12 year old son to look at it. He could not figure out what was being asked of him.
https://twitter.com/NYCdeb8tr/status/450416183372955648/photo/1