The Common Core standards are an attempt by liberals to impose an atheistic, leftist, and sub-standard education curriculum on elementary and high schools nationwide, in interference with the traditionally local control over education. But even liberal Massachusetts recognized by late 2015 that Common Core is a colossal mistake, and it has dropped the program.[1]
It is a plan by the National Governor's Association and the federal government's United States Department of Education to nationalize the curriculum standards in public schools. Bill Gates is one of its primary liberal supporters, and he uses his tremendous amount of wealth to keep this curriculum in place. This policy has come under intense criticism, mainly because of how poorly the content is taught. A math problem, for instance, is performed in multiple, confusing steps, rather than doing the problem simplistically.
The idea of Common Core was to make the educational system national. This means that if one moved from, say, Mississippi to, say, New Jersey, then they'd be learning the same content for their grade, rather than something different. Currently, for a grade such as ninth grade, one state might teach biology, while another might teach physics. Common Core's goal is to prevent this from happening and make sure all of the ninth graders learn biology.
Six states have repealed Common Core, which takes away the national idea. These include Alaska, Nebraska, Texas and Virginia.
According to The Washington Post, Singapore’s standards were used to develop the Common Core. A ridiculous Common Core test for first graders The Washington Post - October 31, 2013 In Singapore, students begin Grade 1 at age 7 after two years of kindergarten. This is not an argument for starting school at a later age. Canadian students also begin first-grade at age 6. But we must recognize, especially given that:
There are numerous objections to Common Core from across the political spectrum. Criticisms include:
While common core makes fairly detailed recommendations for mathematics teaching in grades K-8, it does not attempt to set curricula for high school, grades 9-12. Instead, it lists general "categories": Number/quantity, Algebra, Functions, Geometry, Modeling, and Probability/statistics. The document on the subject, here lists the sorts of things that could be expected to be covered in those categories: conics, vectors, matrices, functions in general, exponentials and logarithms, complex numbers, polynomials, and trig functions. These are the usual things that comprise pre-calculus.
The mathematics part of Common Core pays particular attention to the use of proofs in the teaching of geometry, and the need for a uniform presentation of proof concepts between junior-high level and high-school level teaching. See here for an excruciatingly detailed analysis of some proofs about parallelograms and triangles in sections G.CO.10 and G.CO.11 of the Common Core.
Also, see here: "The geometry standards in the CCSS deviate from the usual geometry standards in at least two respects, one big and one small. The small one is that, for the first time, special attention is paid to the need of a proof for the area formula for rectangles when the side lengths are fractions."
Common Core deprives parents and families and local government authorities of their control over education, and instead transfers control to unaccountable organizations and bureaucrats at the national level ignoring parental rights and states' rights
In spring 2013, grassroots and Tea Party opposition has arisen in many locations nationwide to Common Core.
There is a push by the National Education Association (biggest labor union in the USA), the deficit spending Nanny state federal big government and governors to spread Common Core. They don't have the best of intentions.
In an age when people will post just about anything to the internet and social media, it is not surprising that horror stories get posted about what children are being taught in school. It is important to remember that the Common Core only recommends topics to be covered, and in some cases provides recommended reading lists. It does not write textbooks, worksheets, or homework assignments, or tell teachers what to assign or what to say in the classroom.
Some of these "horror stories" are listed below. Since 46 states have adopted the standards, Common Core gets blamed for a great many of them. We have attempted to track down the accuracy of the claims that Common Core is to blame for these. The investigation is ongoing.
"Educate and inform the whole mass of the people... They are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty." -- Thomas Jefferson
Categories: [Education] [Liberalism]