Posted By CotoBlogzz
Rancho Santa Margarita, CA - According to a new poll by two
groups, Phi Delta Kappa International and Gallup, Americans are clueless about
what is going on with public education.
The survey shows that a majority
of Americans have never heard of the Common Core State Standards (CCSS)
The Common Core State Standards Initiative is a U.S.
education initiative that seeks to bring diverse state curricula into alignment
with each other by following the principles of standards-based education
reform. The initiative is sponsored by the National Governors Association (NGA)
and the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO).
Critics of CCSS such as Dr. Bill Evers, former
Research Fellow at Hoover Institution
stated “Just as defenders of socialism
used to conjure up ideal socialist societies in order to defend socialism,
defenders of Common Core curriculum standards like to defend utopian Common
Core. We critics of Common Core are
correct in attacking really-existing Common Core, “referring
to typical CCSS implementation.
When North Carolina
Lt. Governor Dan Forest, who continues to stand up for educational freedom in
his state by questioning the stakes connected to the implementation of the
Common Core national education standards, asked the North Carolina Department of Public
Instruction (DPI) to respond to 67
unanswered questions about the Common Core in North Carolina, to be delivered before the State Board of
Education meeting later this month, the
DPI requested that Forest provide 10,000 pieces of blank paper. Forest obliged and sent it the requested reams of paper, according to Foundry’s
Elizabeth Henry.
The poll indicates that just like with ObamaCare, the more
the public knows about CCSS, the more dissatisfied it is with standardized
tests.
The key findings were:
- 62 percent of those surveyed had never
heard of the standards. Even among those with children in public schools
- Only 45
percent had heard of the Common Core.
- Only 22 percent said testing helped the
performance of their local school, down from 28 percent in 2007.
- 36 percent said that testing was hurting
school performance.
Americans
are also growing wary of using students’ standardized tests to evaluate
teachers. In just one year, the percentage of respondents who oppose using
tests for teacher evaluations grew from 47 percent to 58 percent
Tonight,
at 4pm ET, the two groups that conducted the survey --Phi Delta Kappa
International and Gallup-- are holding a free webinar on the survey's top 5 key
findings. You can
register here. You will be able to email the
survey's creators with comments and questions, and download their entire report
for free.
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