Yes, a REAL example please - and don't just give us some supposed "Common Core worksheet" from some viral chain email (because those are full of falsehoods) - cite an ACTUAL and SPECIFIC standard from here: http://www.corestandards.org/read-the-standards/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You oppose the Common Core standards because they're not a change, and because publishing companies make money by publishing educational materials related (or supposedly related) to the Common Core standards?
Well, ok.
#6. Many CC standards are taking time away from real instruction in the classroom. Teachers and students are "boxed in" to certain procedures that are unnecessary in many cases.
Please provide an example of a Common Core standard that precludes real instruction and requires the teaching of unnecessary procedures.
Anonymous wrote:
"Fed up with standardized testing?" Florida is only having its first full assessment for the first time THIS year, so how can they already be fed up with standardized testing? Unless they are referring to prior years of non-Common Core standardized testing... Again, another bogus article.
You obviously don't understand just how much time the teachers are expected to spend in testing. Even K teachers. More time testing, less time teaching.
Anonymous wrote:Common Core standards are bad because one size does not fit all. The states are dropping them like flies.
Anonymous wrote:Common Core standards are bad because one size does not fit all. The states are dropping them like flies.
Anonymous wrote:
"Fed up with standardized testing?" Florida is only having its first full assessment for the first time THIS year, so how can they already be fed up with standardized testing? Unless they are referring to prior years of non-Common Core standardized testing... Again, another bogus article.
You obviously don't understand just how much time the teachers are expected to spend in testing. Even K teachers. More time testing, less time teaching.
Anonymous wrote:In fact, Algebra 1 in 8th grade is the grade-level course in the MCPS curriculum aligned to the Common Core standards. So it obviously is possible to do so.
Sadly, some kids do not benefit from taking algebra before high school. Some kids are not developmentally ready.
Anonymous wrote:In fact, Algebra 1 in 8th grade is the grade-level course in the MCPS curriculum aligned to the Common Core standards. So it obviously is possible to do so.
Sadly, some kids do not benefit from taking algebra before high school. Some kids are not developmentally ready.
In fact, Algebra 1 in 8th grade is the grade-level course in the MCPS curriculum aligned to the Common Core standards. So it obviously is possible to do so.
"Fed up with standardized testing?" Florida is only having its first full assessment for the first time THIS year, so how can they already be fed up with standardized testing? Unless they are referring to prior years of non-Common Core standardized testing... Again, another bogus article.
Anonymous wrote:http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/curriculum/2014/12/new_test_shows_deeper_academic.html
Most Alabama Students Fall Short on Common-Core Test
By Catherine Gewertz on December 12, 2014 11:27 AM
The drumbeat has been getting louder as PARCC and Smarter Balanced tests get closer: Many students are expected to fall short of proficiency marks on those new, presumably tougher exams. But those kinds of sobering results are showing up on other common-core tests, as well.
The ACT's Aspire, designed to reflect the common core, has produced its first round of statewide results. In nearly every grade and both subjects, more than half of Alabama's students fall below the cut points that connote being on track for success in college, according to local news media reports. The tests in reading and ...
Anonymous wrote:Osceola Co. teachers resign en masse over Common Core demands
http://www.wftv.com/news/news/local/osceola-co-teachers-resigning-en-masse-over-common/njPXY/
SCEOLA COUNTY, Fla. —
More than 20 teachers have resigned or decided to retire from the Osceola County School District in just the past month -- and the district already had a shortage with more than 50 vacant teaching jobs.
The teachers’ union told Channel 9’s Deneige Broom that some of them quit because they're fed up with standardized testing.
At Kissimmee Elementary, they need to fill two spots. At the nearby middle school, three spots are open.
The union president believes many of the now vacant spots are because of testing.
Anonymous wrote:
BUUUULLSHIIIT!!!
First of all, Common Core is a minimum standard. Schools are perfectly free to go above and beyond Common Core. As for geometry, there IS an expectation of Geometry content in Common Core in Middle School grades. http://www.corestandards.org/Math/Content/G/ Also, there is still Pre-Algebra, it's in the 7th and 8th grade standards. Schools are free to move students ahead, provided they've mastered the content, so to say Algebra couldn't be started in 8th grade is not actually valid.