Comments - ACTION ITEMS ON COMMON CORE - First Coast Tea Party2024-03-28T21:16:03Zhttp://firstcoastteaparty.ning.com/profiles/comment/feed?attachedTo=4150782%3ABlogPost%3A217995&xn_auth=noHere is the trickery Governor…tag:firstcoastteaparty.ning.com,2013-10-21:4150782:Comment:2181282013-10-21T01:09:12.559ZLeanne Kinghttp://firstcoastteaparty.ning.com/profile/LeanneKing
<p>Here is the trickery Governors (especially those up for election in 2014) are trying to pull and the reason I say we cannot agree to compromise. We must demand that Common Core and all its ugly tentacles be repealed. Doesn't anyone find it strange that all of sudden many of the Governor's are having a come to Jesus moment about Common Core? But has 1 Governor actually repealed Common Core? No they have not. They are playing games and sadly a lot of citizens are falling for the new shade of…</p>
<p>Here is the trickery Governors (especially those up for election in 2014) are trying to pull and the reason I say we cannot agree to compromise. We must demand that Common Core and all its ugly tentacles be repealed. Doesn't anyone find it strange that all of sudden many of the Governor's are having a come to Jesus moment about Common Core? But has 1 Governor actually repealed Common Core? No they have not. They are playing games and sadly a lot of citizens are falling for the new shade of lipstick they are painting on the same dirty pig.</p>
<p>NO COMPROMISE</p>
<p>Analysis - What Governor Scott's Documents Do and Do Not Accomplish<br/> September 26, 2013<br/> While the Florida Stop Common Core Coalition is very grateful for Governor Scott's willingness to hear the concerns of Florida parents and citizens about the many problems with the Common Core system of national standards, tests, and data collection, it is important to understand their implications. After careful analysis, here is a list of what these documents do and do not accomplish:</p>
<p>What Governor Scott's executive order and letters DO accomplish-<br/> Acknowledge concerns about federal overreach<br/> Acknowledge concerns about teaching, testing and data collection of psychological attitudes and beliefs<br/> Withdraw Florida as fiscal agent for PARCC<br/> Orders an open process for selecting a new test<br/> Seek to gather public input about the standards via 3 hearings and public comments<br/> Show some willingness to change the standards to make them Florida's standards<br/> Rejects the official CCSS text examples<br/> What Governor Scott's executive order and letters DO NOT accomplish -</p>
<p> Stop the implementation of the Common Core standards<br/> Prevent changes to the standards from being only superficial within the allowed 15% that Florida previously declined<br/> Withdraw Florida from the PARCC consortium as stated by Commissioner Stewart<br/> Prevent PARCC from being still considered as Florida's test as stated by Commissioner Stewart<br/> Prevent Florida's test from being based on national Common Core standards<br/> Stop or prohibit the teaching, testing and data collection of psychological attitudes & attributes<br/> Limit the scope of data collection on students, families, and teachers</p> For great information to "arm…tag:firstcoastteaparty.ning.com,2013-10-21:4150782:Comment:2179992013-10-21T01:08:13.450ZLeanne Kinghttp://firstcoastteaparty.ning.com/profile/LeanneKing
<p>For great information to "arm" yourself with, download or view our policy analysis of the Common Core Standards at our website at <a href="http://www.flstopcccoalition.org/research-papers/" target="_blank">http://www.flstopcccoalition.org/research-papers/</a></p>
<p>For great information to "arm" yourself with, download or view our policy analysis of the Common Core Standards at our website at <a href="http://www.flstopcccoalition.org/research-papers/" target="_blank">http://www.flstopcccoalition.org/research-papers/</a></p> Beck previewed the other nigh…tag:firstcoastteaparty.ning.com,2013-10-21:4150782:Comment:2181272013-10-21T01:07:05.550ZLeanne Kinghttp://firstcoastteaparty.ning.com/profile/LeanneKing
<p>Beck previewed the other night on his streaming TV show, telling about teachers being required to sign an 8-page non-disclosure regarding this "curriculum" and showed a graphic from one of the lessons, which depicted a figure climbing a stairway up, from free-market capitalism at the bottom to socialism in the middle to communism at the top!</p>
<p>"Give me four years to teach the children and the seed I have sown will never be uprooted. Give us the child for 8 years and it will be a…</p>
<p>Beck previewed the other night on his streaming TV show, telling about teachers being required to sign an 8-page non-disclosure regarding this "curriculum" and showed a graphic from one of the lessons, which depicted a figure climbing a stairway up, from free-market capitalism at the bottom to socialism in the middle to communism at the top!</p>
<p>"Give me four years to teach the children and the seed I have sown will never be uprooted. Give us the child for 8 years and it will be a Bolshevik forever." - Lenin</p>
<p>This story deals with Texas. (Indeed if this is happening there, consider how much worse it must be elsewhere. Consider too if this is one element of the Progressive/Democrats' announced plan to flip Texas from "red" to "blue" within the next few election cycles).</p>
<p>Without a doubt the Progressive teacher colleges and education bureaucracy are (and have been) indoctrinating youth across the country -- toward secularism, environmentalism / "sustainability" as a quasi-religion, "global" perspective coupled with diminishing the concept of nationhood (much less American exceptionalism) -- oh, and making sure that while suitably indoctrinated, they are of limited literacy, even more limited critical thinking skills and so unlikely to ever be economically self-sufficient or productive members of society.</p>
<p>In other words, public "schools" are being (if not already have been) transformed into factories producing low-information voters a/k/a Democrat voters.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/03/07/cscope-exposing-the-nations-most-controversial-public-school-curriculum-system/" target="_blank">http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/03/07/cscope-exposing-the-nations-most-controversial-public-school-curriculum-system/</a></p> http://www.kappanmagazine.org…tag:firstcoastteaparty.ning.com,2013-10-21:4150782:Comment:2181262013-10-21T01:04:54.522ZLeanne Kinghttp://firstcoastteaparty.ning.com/profile/LeanneKing
<p><a href="http://www.kappanmagazine.org/content/94/6/42.full" target="_blank">http://www.kappanmagazine.org/content/94/6/42.full</a></p>
<p>Abstract</p>
<p>The author, a longtime teacher and principal, levels harsh criticisms against the English/language arts standards of the Common Core State Standards.</p>
<p>Some standards call on young children to behave like high school seniors, making fine distinctions between words or literary devices, carrying on multiple processes simultaneously, and…</p>
<p><a href="http://www.kappanmagazine.org/content/94/6/42.full" target="_blank">http://www.kappanmagazine.org/content/94/6/42.full</a></p>
<p>Abstract</p>
<p>The author, a longtime teacher and principal, levels harsh criticisms against the English/language arts standards of the Common Core State Standards.</p>
<p>Some standards call on young children to behave like high school seniors, making fine distinctions between words or literary devices, carrying on multiple processes simultaneously, and expressing their understandings in precise academic language, she says. While others expect them to have a strong literary background after only two or three years of schooling.</p>
<p>The language arts standards of the Common Core in too many places are simply too difficult and/or irrelevant for elementary grade students.</p>
<p>When I first read the Common Core English/language arts standards for grades K-5, my visceral reaction was that they represented an unrealistic view of what young children should know and be able to do. As an elementary teacher and principal for most of my life, I could not imagine children between the ages of 5 and 11 responding meaningfully to the standards' expectations. But clearly I was in the minority. Forty-five states have adopted the standards without a murmur of complaint; writers and publishers are racing to produce materials for teaching them, and the teachers quoted in news articles or advertisements speak of the standards as if they are the silver bullet they have been waiting for.</p>
<p>Since then, I have read the English/language arts (ELA) standards many times; each time, they are more troubling. Some standards call on young children to behave like high school seniors, making fine distinctions between words or literary devices, carrying on multiple processes simultaneously, and expressing their understandings in precise academic language. Others expect them to have a strong literary background after only two or three years of schooling…And, sadly, a few standards serve only to massage the egos of education elitists, but are of no use in college courses, careers, or everyday life.</p>
<p>To give you just an inkling of the problems in applying the ELA standards to young children, I offer a scenario of what might happen in a 1st-grade classroom when the following language standard is approached: (L.1.1) Use the most frequently occurring inflections and affixes (e.g., -ed, -s, re-, un-, pre-, -ful, -less) as a clue to the meaning of an unknown word.</p>
<p>While reading aloud from a 1st-grade book, Zach stumbled over the word“recheck” and, although he eventually pronounced it correctly, his teacher felt that he did not fully grasp its meaning in the sentence. It seemed like a good time to make the class aware of the prefix “re” and how it works. So, she stopped the lesson and wrote these words on the white board: remake, rewrite, and retell. Then she asked the children to explain what each word meant. Several students raised their hands and answered correctly.</p>
<p>“What does the ‘re’ part of each word tell us?” she then asked. The fi rst student called on said “re” means to do something again. Nodding in approval, the teacher wrote “recheck” on the board leaving a space between “re” and “check.” Then she asked, “So, what does ‘recheck’ mean?”</p>
<p>“To check something again,” answered the class in chorus.</p>
<p>Since things were going well, the teacher decided to continue by asking students to name other words that worked the same way. Various class members confidently suggested, re-eat, re-dance, re-sleep, re-win, and others were waving their hands when she stopped them.</p>
<p>“Those aren't real words,” she said. “We don't say, ‘I'm going to resleep tonight.’ Let's try to think of real words or look for them in our books.” After giving the class a few minutes, she asked again for examples.</p>
<p>This time, the words were real enough: repeat, renew, reason, remove, return, read, and reveal, but none of them fi t the principle being taught. Since it seemed futile to explain all that to 1st graders, the teacher did the best thing she could think of: “You reminded (uh-oh) me of ‘recess,’ ” she said. “So, let's go out right now.”</p>
<p>As they left the room, the children chatted happily among themselves:“We're going to ‘cess’ again!” “We'll ‘re-see’ our friends.” “I want to‘re-play’ dodge ball.”</p>
<p>“Next time,” thought the teacher, “I'd better try a different prefix.”But then “un-smart” and “un-listen” popped into her head, and she decided to leave that particular standard for later in the year.</p>
<p>Although I could write scenarios for several other standards, they would make this paper much longer and not be as amusing as this one. Instead, I will present just a few standards that I find inappropriate for K-5 students along with brief explanations of their problems.</p>
<p>A Reading/Literature standard for 4th grade calls on students to: (RL.4. 4) Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including those that allude to significant characters found in mythology (e.g., Herculean).</p>
<p>I can't help wondering how 9- and 10-year-olds are supposed to do their “determining.” Competent, engaged readers of any age do not stop to puzzle out unknown words in a text. Mostly, they rely on the surrounding context to explain them. But, if that doesn't work, they skip them, figuring that somewhere down the page they will be made clear.</p>
<p>Should students regularly consult a dictionary or thesaurus while reading? I don't think so. That's a surefire way to destroy the continuity of meaning. Nor would I expect them to recall an explanatory reference from the field of classic literature at this early stage of their education. Moreover, for each “Herculean” word that matches a literary character, there would be several like “cupidity” and “pander”that have strayed far from their original meanings.</p>
<p>In the Reading/Information category, I quickly found a standard with expectations far beyond the knowledge backgrounds of the children for whom it is intended: (RI.2.3) Describe the connection between a series of historical events, scientific ideas or concepts, or steps in technical procedures in a text.</p>
<p>Just assuming that 2nd graders are familiar with “a series” of historical events, etc., is simply unrealistic. But expecting them to“describe the connection between (sic) them” is delusional. Is there only one simple connection among a series of “scientific ideas”? How would you, as an adult, describe the connections among the steps in building a robot or even baking a pie?</p>
<p>In most of the Reading/Information standards, the same expectations for describing complex relationships among multiple items appear: (RI.5.5) Compare and contrast the overall structure (e.g., chronology, comparison, cause/effect, problem/solution) of events, ideas, concepts, or information in two or more texts.</p>
<p>For 5th graders, this standard would be even more difficult to meet than the previous one because it asks them to carry out two different operations on two or more texts that almost certainly differ in content, style, and organization.</p>
<p>In the Writing and Speaking/Listening categories, there are fewer standards altogether. Yet, some of these standards also make unrealistic demands. One asks 1st graders to: (W.1.7) Participate in shared research and writing projects (e.g., explore a number of “how-to” books on a given topic and use them to write a sequence of instructions).</p>
<p>Since this standard does not mention “adult guidance and support,” as many others do, I assume that a group of 1st graders is expected to work on its own to digest the content of several books, prune it to the essentials, and then devise a well-ordered list of instructions. This would be a complicated assignment even for students much older, requiring not only analysis and synthesis, but also self-regulation and compromise. I cannot see 1st graders carrying it out without a teacher guiding them every step of the way.</p>
<p>Of all the ELA standards, the ones in the Language (i.e., grammar) category are the most unrealistic. I could cite almost all of them as unreasonable for the grades designated and a few as pointless for any grade. Here is part of a kindergarten standard that fits both descriptions: (L.K.1). (When speaking) Produce and expand complete sentences in shared language activities.</p>
<p>Most of the kindergartners I know have no idea what the term “complete sentence” means. Children and adults commonly speak short phrases and single words to each other. I can't imagine any kindergarten teacher insisting during a group language activity that children speak in“complete sentences” or that they “expand” their sentences. Those directions would in all likelihood end the activity quickly as most children fell silent.</p>
<p>…I cannot leave this critique of the ELA Standards without taking one more swipe at the Language category. Standard (L.4.1) asks 4th graders to: Use relative pronouns (who, whose, whom, which, that) and correctly use frequently confused words (e.g., to, too, two; there, their) in speech and writing.</p>
<p>Several of these words are ones that many educated adults use incorrectly all the time. In fact “who” is so often used in place of“whom” that it is widely recognized as correct. Why not hold adults accountable for meeting this standard before expecting 4th graders to do so?</p>
<p>In finding fault with so many of the K-5 ELA standards, my familiarity with children's abilities and educational needs have guided me. Standards advocates may well argue that I have offered no evidence and scant research to support my views. In rebuttal, I would argue that they are in the same position and that much of what they propose for children flies in the face of established learning theory and brain development research.</p>
<p>The reality is that the standards' creators have laid out a set of expectations for America's children that are grounded only in an antiquated conception of education and their personal preferences. And their followers, bedazzled by the standards length and breadth, illusion of depth, and elitist aura, have fallen into line as if lured by the Pied Piper of Hamelin.</p> http://www.flstopcccoalitio…tag:firstcoastteaparty.ning.com,2013-10-21:4150782:Comment:2179972013-10-21T01:02:38.786ZLeanne Kinghttp://firstcoastteaparty.ning.com/profile/LeanneKing
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<p class="MsoNormal"><a href="http://www.flstopcccoalition.org/files/EAE4EA1E-7BEA-4B4D-8542-C6E46F841BB2--D8FA73FF-C0D2-49E3-B697-8AFB974E3C51/florida-s-common-core-standards-policy-analysis-4.pdf">http://www.flstopcccoalition.org/files/EAE4EA1E-7BEA-4B4D-8542-C6E46F841BB2--D8FA73FF-C0D2-49E3-B697-8AFB974E3C51/florida-s-common-core-standards-policy-analysis-4.pdf</a></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">THE ABOVE IS A LONG DOCUMENT BUT i FOUND IT TO BE ONE OF THE BEST IN HELPING ME BEGIN…</p>
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<p class="MsoNormal"><a href="http://www.flstopcccoalition.org/files/EAE4EA1E-7BEA-4B4D-8542-C6E46F841BB2--D8FA73FF-C0D2-49E3-B697-8AFB974E3C51/florida-s-common-core-standards-policy-analysis-4.pdf">http://www.flstopcccoalition.org/files/EAE4EA1E-7BEA-4B4D-8542-C6E46F841BB2--D8FA73FF-C0D2-49E3-B697-8AFB974E3C51/florida-s-common-core-standards-policy-analysis-4.pdf</a></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">THE ABOVE IS A LONG DOCUMENT BUT i FOUND IT TO BE ONE OF THE BEST IN HELPING ME BEGIN TO UNDERSTAND COMMON CORE.</p>