Friday, September 27, 2013

SCHOOL BOARD SUPPORTS COMMON CORE - WHAT DO YOU THINK?


The Limestone resolution states that the board “supports the Alabama College and Career Ready Standards and believes they are important to the education of its students. Due to the importance of these standards, the board requests (to the state board) that they remain in force.”

The county’s resolution said the “standards are designed to make sure that all students graduate high school with the knowledge and skills necessary for success in college” and during their careers after high school or college.

It also said the state standards “establish what students need to learn, but do not tell teachers how to teach,” while improving outcomes because students, parents and teachers “are on the same page, working toward the same goal.”

Limestone board members Earl Glaze, James Shannon, Darin Russell, Bret McGill, Anthony Hilliard and Charles Shoulders voted yes, while Marty Adams voted against the measure.

Adams, who said people should conduct independent research into CCRS, explained he could not cast a yes vote “because I don’t think it’s a proven system.”

“It’s not totally state-driven, and Alabama didn’t come up with Common Core. The federal government came up with it, more and less,” Adams said. “I just want to wait a little longer and see how things pan out with Common Core (elsewhere) ... There are some good points about Common Core but there are a lot of bad points, too.”

A coalition of state governors helped form the framework for the national Common Core Standards, which have been adopted by more than 40 states. State school boards are able to choose which standards they implement at the state level, regardless of whether they have adopted Common Core.

 Athens News Courier link for complete article

Other Opinions: 
No everyone is for this - do your own research; make your own decision

.. the federal government is on the brink of dictating the content taught in every school. Their concerns are echoed by a wide array of groups and citizens, including academics, members of state boards of education, residents of local school districts, and analysts at public-policy foundations.

Concerns of the governors who have opposed Common Core national standards from the beginning. “I don’t want to have a federal bureaucracy monitoring whether or not we are having the right programs in our schools,” said Virginia governor Bob McDonnell recently. “The bottom line is, we don’t need the federal government with the Common Core telling us how to run our schools in Virginia. We’ll use our own system, which is very good. It’s empirically tested.”

Texas governor Rick Perry, never one to mince words, said, “The academic standards of Texas are not for sale.”

A bill introduced by the chair of the Senate Education Committee in Alabama to reverse the state’s Common Core adoption failed by just one vote in committee last month. Common Core opponents have vowed to keep fighting. Colorado recently held hearings taking a second look at Common Core adoption. “It’s a discussion that had never occurred but needed to occur,” said Bob Schaffer, former chairman 

Complete article: National Review Link

... Once Common Core was created, USED “persuaded” the states to adopt it by tying adoption to the opportunity to obtain Race to the Top (RTTT) funding. No Common Core, no RTTT money. (Since then, USED has also attempted to lure states into the Common Core by dangling No Child Left Behind waivers as a reward for adopting the national Standards and national tests.

Website: Stop Common Core Link

... One of the most troubling aspects of this federal program is that government bureaucrats are currently mining sensitive and highly personal information on children through Common Core’s tracking system.  The data will then reportedly be sold by the government to outside sources for profit.

he Limestone resolution states that the board “supports the Alabama College and Career Ready Standards and believes they are important to the education of its students. Due to the importance of these standards, the board requests (to the state board) that they remain in force.”

The county’s resolution said the “standards are designed to make sure that all students graduate high school with the knowledge and skills necessary for success in college” and during their careers after high school or college.

It also said the state standards “establish what students need to learn, but do not tell teachers how to teach,” while improving outcomes because students, parents and teachers “are on the same page, working toward the same goal.”

Limestone board members Earl Glaze, James Shannon, Darin Russell, Bret McGill, Anthony Hilliard and Charles Shoulders voted yes, while Marty Adams voted against the measure.

Adams, who said people should conduct independent research into CCRS, explained he could not cast a yes vote “because I don’t think it’s a proven system.”

“It’s not totally state-driven, and Alabama didn’t come up with Common Core. The federal government came up with it, more and less,” Adams said. “I just want to wait a little longer and see how things pan out with Common Core (elsewhere) ... There are some good points about Common Core but there are a lot of bad points, too.”

A coalition of state governors helped form the framework for the national Common Core Standards, which have been adopted by more than 40 states. State school boards are able to choose which standards they implement at the state level, regardless of whether they have adopted Common Core.

- See more at: http://enewscourier.com/local/x703124271/Local-boards-pass-College-and-Career-Ready-Standards-resolutions#sthash.zMbQvQtT.dpuf

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