While the Sacramento Bee editorial board and several corporate education "reformers" castigate local teachers for opposing the imposed Core Waiver ( see below)..
The editorial board and the partisan advocates presenting themselves as leaders ignore the fact that Common Core is encountering more resistance around the country. It is not a local, personal agenda. Nor is it just a union campaign. There are substantive reasons why teachers oppose the imposed Core Waiver, and many oppose Common Core until weaknesses are remedied.
From Education Week.
The editorial board and the partisan advocates presenting themselves as leaders ignore the fact that Common Core is encountering more resistance around the country. It is not a local, personal agenda. Nor is it just a union campaign. There are substantive reasons why teachers oppose the imposed Core Waiver, and many oppose Common Core until weaknesses are remedied.
From Education Week.
Resistance to the
Common Core Mounts
Critics span the
political spectrum, from tea partyers to union leaders
After more than a year
of high-profile and contentious debate over the Common Core State Standards in
Indiana, Gov. Mike Pence signed legislation last month to formally reverse
the state's adoption of the standards. The legislation set the
state on course to replace those standards with ones "written by Hoosiers,
for Hoosiers," the Republican governor proclaimed.
The same month, the
Democratic-controlled New York Assembly approved a measure that would require a
two-year delay in using assessments aligned with the common core
for teacher and principal evaluations.
In some sense, the measures
in Indiana and New York represent two dominant poles of the growing—and
evolving—resistance to the standards. The common core has drawn criticism from
both the political left and right, though much of it seems aimed not so much at
what the standards say, but rather who drove their adoption or the tests and
accountability policies connected with them.
In some respects, the
environment bears similarities to what happened roughly 20 years ago, when a
national push to update standards with federal and corporate backing ran into
political opposition.
Lawmakers in roughly
15 states, wary of what they see as federal pressure to adopt the common core
and of other problems they associate with the standards, have introduced
legislation during their current sessions to repeal the standards or replace
them with other standards. Such measures have cleared at least one legislative
chamber in states such as Georgia and Tennessee. A bill to require Oklahoma to
adopt a new set of standards was approved by both chambers as of this writing,
although it wouldn't prohibit the state from incorporating at least portions of
the common core.
At the same time,
union leaders and other progressives in education in places like Maryland and
New York state have been decrying what they see as a lack of preparation and
resources for teachers as the standards are carried out. These critics say
states should delay the full impact of common-core standards and tests on
educators, students, and schools.
Still, the tangible
success of both sides has been questionable so far. Most of the bills have not
become law. Even in Indiana, the standards the state appears on track to adopt
bear some striking similarities to the common core.
Meanwhile, prominent
friends of the standards, from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to former Florida
Gov. Jeb Bush, a Republican, and Delaware Gov. Jack Markell, a Democrat, have
set up "mythbusting" sites and new public-relations campaigns to support
the common standards.
During one public
appearance to support the standards in March, Gov. Markell said he and others
would continue to push back against what he said was a false
"mythology" about the standards: "It's not about some malicious
thing coming from Washington, D.C."
But many common-core
foes appear to be animated in part by the idea that they are lined up against
powerful forces supporting the standards.
"We're really
seeing some momentum. But this is really a David-versus-Goliath kind of battle,"
said Shane Vander Hart, a conservative anti-common-core activist who writes a
blog for Christian conservatives.
Making it Work
Education Week. Read the entire article.
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