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Tuesday, November 12, 2013

THE WHOLE CHILD BLOG 11-12-13 Common Core: An Educator's Perspective

Common Core: An Educator's Perspective — Whole Child Education:

Steven Weber

Common Core: An Educator’s Perspective

If the state of North Carolina decides to pull the plug on the Common Core State Standards, it will be a slap in the face to the teachers and administrators who have spent countless hours (most on their own time without reimbursement) preparing to implement the Common Core State Standards and to maximize learning for 1.5 million students.
On June 2, 2010, the North Carolina State Board of Education adopted the Common Core State Standards(CCSS) which were implemented during the 2012–13 school year. The CCSS represent K–12 learning expectations in English language arts and mathematics. They reflect the knowledge and skills students need to be college and career ready by the end of high school. Over the past few months, elected officials across the United States are beginning to question the CCSS. On June 4, 2013, North Carolina Lieutenant Governor Dan Forest posted a YouTube video outlining his concerns.
While standing in the car rider line at an elementary school, I was approached by a classroom teacher. She asked, "Are we going to align our curriculum, instruction, and assessments to the Common Core State Standards next year?" I replied, "yes." Then I said, "The Common Core is not going away." The teacher replied, "The Lieutenant Governor is discussing eliminating the Common Core." I replied, "Which Lieutenant Governor?" The teacher said, "The North Carolina Lieutenant Governor, Dan Forest."
Prior to becoming an elementary principal, I was the director of secondary instruction for Orange County Schools in North Carolina. Our school district held a Common Core Summer Institute for teachers and administrators during the summer of 2011 and summer of 2012. At the summer institutes, teacher teams planned a one-year professional development plan for their schools. Hosting the summer institutes cost the


Common Core: Let’s Seize the Opportunity Together
Post written by Lora M. Hodges for Northeast Foundation for Children/Responsive Classroom, a whole child partner organization. Crafting powerful solutions for educating all children is an evolutionary and continuous improvement process. Educators and all those responsible for education must always be focused on innovating and pushing boundaries, digging deep, and searching wide for ideas to adva
Sharing Blue Ribbon Strategies for Success
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Aiming High: Working Through the Common Core Shifts
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ED Pulse Poll Results: Which Type of Parental Support for the Common Core Would Be Most Useful?
ASCD continually seeks to provide solutions to the challenges that face educators of all levels. Recently, the ASCD SmartBrief ED Pulse poll sought to develop a short list of useful tasks for parents to implement in their daily routine to enhance what is being taught in the classroom. In response to the Common Core State Standards (CCSS), many different groups have created documents for parent
Maintaining Resilience in Education
Resilience in education is best developed in the early grades when students' interests are keen and easiest to develop. This is often the time when a teacher can best motivate a child to believe she can do anything if she tries and puts forth her best efforts. Resilience is the ongoing process of building a child's motivation and drive to excel when met with difficult or challenging circumstances
11-8-13 THE WHOLE CHILD BLOG: Throughout November: Supporting Student Success and the Common Core — Whole Child Education
Throughout November: Supporting Student Success and the Common Core — Whole Child Education: THE WHOLE CHILD BLOGThroughout November: Supporting Student Success and the Common CoreNovember 4, 2013 by Klea Scharberg"Educators need to prepare kids to be career and college ready, but they also need to prepare them for their present world. The Common Core State Standards set out to do that. They'