Sunday, July 6, 2014

White hoodwinks La. citizens | The News Star | thenewsstar.com

White hoodwinks La. citizens | The News Star | thenewsstar.com:



White hoodwinks La. citizens



While Gov. Bobby Jindal has not used his executive authority to reverse the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education's 2010 adoption of Common Core Standards, he has issued an executive order that effectively halts the purchase of a test that promises to be aligned with Common Core because of an alleged illegal procurement process.

In response, parents and educators opposed to Common Core again recommend that BESE engage in a revision of our own highly rated Louisiana Content Standards that would enlist Louisiana teachers, curriculum specialists, university teacher education experts and qualified national consultants in a process heretofore used by states nationwide that would offer sufficient opportunity for public scrutiny and input before final adoption.

Superintendent John White's primary opposition is based on his empty claim that a revision would cost the taxpayers millions of dollars and would take years to complete. The release of documents through a public records request of the Louisiana Department of Education proves those claims false.

Former Superintendent Paul Pastorek directed a revision in 2009 of our Louisiana ELA, math, social studies and science standards to comply with the proposed rigor and college-workforce readiness provisions of Common Core. While there were certainly additional costs associated with release time for Louisiana classroom teachers who produced the revisions, the largest expense was a contract to WestEd in the amount of under $1.2 million to facilitate.

Halfway through those revisions, Pastorek got "word" that he would be provided with complete ELA and math Common Core Standards in spring of 2010. According to documents provided by LDE, our Louisiana social studies standards were completely revised but production was halted on ELA and math.

In 2010, before revision, our standards were rated B+ in a review by The Thomas B. Fordham Institute which stated "Louisiana Standards are strong in both content and rigor." In 2013, EdWeek's Quality White hoodwinks La. citizens | The News Star | thenewsstar.com: