College and Career-Ready Standards for School Leaders
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College and Career-Ready Standards for School Leaders
Supporting school leaders in helping all students become college and career-ready and to succeed in post-secondary education and training
Curated by Mel Riddile
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Study: State Test Scores Lag at High School Level - Curriculum Matters - Education Week

Study: State Test Scores Lag at High School Level - Curriculum Matters - Education Week | College and Career-Ready Standards for School Leaders | Scoop.it

there is "reason for concern about the achievement of high school students."

 

A new analysis of state test scores finds that while states made gains in math and English/language arts between 2002 and 2009, such gains were less common at the high school level than they were in 4th and 8th grades.

 

The study, released today by the Center on Education Policy here in Washington, shows that while 32 states reported gains by 4th graders and 8th graders on reading or English/language arts tests between 2002 and 2009, only 25 reported likewise at the high school level. Thirty-six states reported gains in math for 4th and 8th graders, compared with 27 for high school students.

 

The CEP finds that states also saw larger increases at the two lower grade levels than they did in high school. Ten states reported increases of 2 percentage points or more in the proportions of students scoring "proficient" in math, and 11 states did so in literacy, compared with 19 states in each subject at the 4th grade level, 21 in literacy in 8th grade, and 24 in math at that level.

 

Additionally, the gaps between students scoring at the "advanced" and proficient levels widened in high school: One-third of the states reported declines in the proportions of students at the top of the scoring heap.

Anna Mancao's curator insight, January 15, 2014 1:03 PM

First reading this article, I didnt quite understand what it meant. It seemed a bit scattered. By the end however, I understand that it is talking about how they see students tryin gharder in younger grades then when they reach highschool. I think the reason for this is because in elementary school and middle school, students are more willingtin to learn and then when reaching the high school level students become more lazy which has to do with their age and willining to listent to adults talk all day.

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#Commoncore standards: "a reasonable and politically savvy approach" - Bill Nolte - The Mountaineer

#Commoncore standards: "a reasonable and politically savvy approach" - Bill Nolte - The Mountaineer | College and Career-Ready Standards for School Leaders | Scoop.it

Common Core Standards seem to be a reasonable and politically savvy approach to improve education

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Interview: Rick Hess and Math Scholar Hung-Hsi Wu on #commoncore- Rick Hess Straight Up

Interview: Rick Hess and Math Scholar Hung-Hsi Wu on #commoncore- Rick Hess Straight Up | College and Career-Ready Standards for School Leaders | Scoop.it

The following were exerpted from Rick Hess' Interview with Hung-Hsi Wu. The full interview can be viewed by clicking on the title of this post.

 

Background: Hung-Hsi Wu is professor emeritus in mathematics from UC-Berkeley, who has just penned the cover story on this topic for AFT's magazine American Educator. Dr. Wu, who started teaching at Berkeley in 1973, has been actively involved in math education for the past two decades, helping write California's 1999 Mathematics Framework and California's Standards Tests. He was also a member of NAEP's Mathematics Steering Committee, 2000-2001, that contributed to the revision of the NAEP Framework.

 

CCSS math: What are they? Why do we need them?

 

The Common Core math standards place great emphasis on mathematical integrity, [in other words] the statements of the standards are mathematically correct and the progression from topic to topic is logical. In this regard, it is at least comparable to the best state standards, such as those of California and Massachusetts.

 

The Common Core math standards, however, ask that students "understand solving equations as a process of reasoning" and say explicitly what needs to be taught about this process (see Standard A-REI 1 in High School Algebra).

 

When state standards ask that the concept of congruence be taught in middle school, they do not realize that what students will end up getting is that congruence means same size and same shape. As a mathematical definition, the latter is completely unacceptable. By contrast, the Common Core standards explain that congruence means what one gets by a sequence of rotations, reflections, and translations (grade 8, Standard 8.G 2). Such sensitivity to the existing defects is absolutely essential to any meaningful improvement in our math education; in this regard, the Common Core standards leave all rivals far behind.

 

Integrated vs. Traditional Math

 

The 9-12 standards of the Common Core are what they are because the Common Core made a conscientious decision to stay neutral in this debate by describing only the mathematical content of the various strands in high school and allow[ing] each state to make its own decision. This flexibility makes it possible to formulate a high school program that conforms to neither the traditional nor the integrated format.

 

Algebra I in 8th Grade

 

"There is no intrinsic merit in finishing Algebra I by grade 8. When it comes to school algebra, it is not how early you teach it but, rather, how well you teach it. The standards of those states in the U.S. that mandate the completion of Algebra I in grade 8 manage to do so only by stinting on the necessary background material that students need in order to learn linear equations and their graphs. Furthermore, the math standards of both China and Japan postpone the teaching of quadratic equations and functions to grade 9, and these are two of the highest-achieving nations in the world in math education.

 

Spread Concepts Across Grade Levels

 

Common Core math standards' design to optimize mathematics learning by giving students enough time, whenever feasible, to absorb the material as well as time for teachers to teach the material. For children, the addition of fractions is so conceptually complicated that they need the time to internalize the whole process. This particular treatment of fraction addition (teaching of fraction addition over three grades: grades 3 to 5) is one of the outstanding features of the Common Core standards.

 

Strengths of Common Core math standards:

 

1. provide guidance to the teaching [of] fractions in a way that is pedagogically sensible and mathematically correct. Since the fear of fractions has almost become a national pastime, these standards---if properly implemented--- will bring relief to many parents and students.

 

2. The same can be said about these standards on negative numbers.

 

3. the teaching of geometry in middle and high schools is so defective at present that it cries out for a new approach; essentially nothing can make things worse in most cases - provide a seamless transition from middle school geometry to algebra and high school geometry.

 

Teacher Capacity and Preparation

 

We need better teacher preparation and improved professional development in order to stay educationally afloat no matter what the standards may be. If we cannot get better teacher preparation or improved professional development, then we would be better off with a set of standards that is at least mathematically sound.

 

Help for Teachers: Resources

 

1. A set of Progressions documents that highlight the main ideas of each major strand in the standards.

 

2. The Illustrative Mathematics Project that will provide problems to illustrate the standards

 

Concern - Status Quo Not Good Enough

 

What I find most worrisome is the fact that many educators and administrators believe that the status quo (of doing nothing) is plenty good enough. It is not. We need effective professional development, period.

 

Math Assessments

 

I want to make sure that students will not be in any way over-assessed, and that the mathematical quality of the test items be above reproach.

 

CCSS: Good or Bad

 

Nobody can pass judgment on the success or failure within a year of the kind of profound change promulgated by the Common Core math Standards unless the standards are an immediate disaster (which I hope they are not).

 

I think a more reasonable date to make such a judgment is 2017. If things go well, teacher preparation will begin to concentrate on the most urgent need of the moment: better content knowledge. Math instruction in classrooms will be long on reasoning and short on giving out orders, and textbooks will at least be free of ghastly errors.

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Common Core State Standards - App

Common Core State Standards - App | College and Career-Ready Standards for School Leaders | Scoop.it


View the Common Core State Standards in one convenient FREE app!

 

A great reference for students, parents, and teachers to easily read and understand the core standards.

 

Quickly find standards by subject, grade, and subject category (domain/cluster).

 

This app includes Math standards K-12 and Language Arts standards K-12. Math standards include both traditional and integrated pathways (as outlined in Appendix A of the common core) and synthesizes Language Arts standards with the Corresponding College and Career Readiness Standards (CCR's).

 

 

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Better Data Urged to Link K-12 and Postsecondary - Education Week

Better Data Urged to Link K-12 and Postsecondary - Education Week | College and Career-Ready Standards for School Leaders | Scoop.it

If high schools are going to better prepare students for college and careers, experts say they need to track graduates enrolling in higher education, whether they take remedial courses to get up to speed, and whether they earn a degree.

 

“Our educators and students will not make sufficient college-ready gains unless they have information on how their students are actually doing in college,” said J.B. Schramm, the founder and chief executive officer of the Washington-based College Summit, who, along with co-author E. Kinney Zalesne, today released a paper, “Seizing the Measurement Moment.”

 

Schramm suggested four steps to move forward:

1. Improve the ability to measure students’ postsecondary success;

2. make those data available statewide;

3. provide technical assistance to translate data into action; and

4. reward districts whose students’ college enrollment and performance improves.

 

In 2005, 12 states were reporting the capacity to link K-12 and higher education systems, and by 2010, the number had leaped to 44.

 

U.S. Sen. Michael F. Bennet, D-Colo., a former school superintendent in Denver, said there is a big systems problem in the delivery model of K-12 education. “You can’t do this systems work unless you have data and unless you are rigorous about it and unless you actually measure what you are trying to do.”

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New (standards-based) report cards disturb parents - Alamogordo Daily News

New (standards-based) report cards disturb parents - Alamogordo Daily News | College and Career-Ready Standards for School Leaders | Scoop.it
No longer do elementary-age children bring home report cards with A to F grades based on basic averages of performance in the classroom.

 

As part of a nationwide push to bring elementary school students onto a level playing field, Alamogordo Public Schools have moved to a report card system wholly different than any other.

APS has adopted common core standards as they currently are being determined for the state by the New Mexico Public Education Department.

"How do we make standards-based report cards?" APS Superintendent Dr. George Straface asked Monday during an informational meeting held at Yucca Elementary School. "It's common sense."

Straface said the report card needs to define what they want the children to do in school; see if it was done; define what will be done if the goals are not reached; and help the teachers find ways to get the work done.

 

 

Heights/High Rolls principal Jerry Wheeler talked about the beginnings of the new system.

Previously, he said, schools relied on a traditional A through F system. Then, in 2001, No Child Left Behind legislation had states and school systems looking at accountability and the system moved to being based on standards and benchmarks as determined by individual states. Now those standards and benchmarks are being adapted into common core standards as accepted across the United States.

 

The new system, Wheeler said, looks for patterns, not averages, to determine an individual child's progress.

 

He explained that...

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NY launches web site to support #commoncore implementation

NY launches web site to support #commoncore implementation | College and Career-Ready Standards for School Leaders | Scoop.it
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CPS seeks funding for Common Core curriculum

CPS seeks funding for Common Core curriculum | College and Career-Ready Standards for School Leaders | Scoop.it
Chicago Public Schools is hoping to secure $600,000 in private funding to launch a more rigorous Common Core curriculum at 60 schools this year.
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