Latest News and Comment from Education

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Malloy proposes plan to punish your neighbors if you opt your child out of the Common Core SBAC testing fiasco - Wait What?

Malloy proposes plan to punish your neighbors if you opt your child out of the Common Core SBAC testing fiasco - Wait What?:

Malloy proposes plan to punish your neighbors if you opt your child out of the Common Core SBAC testing fiasco



 It should be impossible to believe that any Connecticut public official would propose a plan to punish your neighbors if you opt your child out of the unfair, inappropriate and discriminatory Common Core SBAC testing scheme, but when it comes to “My Way or No Way” Governor Dannel Malloy, the level of arrogance and vindictiveness is unmatched.

Tomorrow – February 24, 2016 – the Connecticut General Assembly’s Education Committee will be holding a public hearing on legislation that Governor Malloy and Lt. Governor Wyman submitted as part of their destructive proposed state budget, a spending plan that that coddles the rich while making massive cuts to vital health, human service and education programs.
When it comes to their new proposed education agenda, it is bad enough that Malloy and Wyman plan to give more money to the privately owned but publicly funded charter school industry while making the deepest cuts in state history to Connecticut’s public schools, but in a little understood piece of proposed legislation, the Malloy administration is trying to sneak through legislation that would give his Commissioner of Education and the political appointees on his State Board of Education a new mechanism they would use to punish taxpayers in certain communities where more than 5 percent of parents opt their children out of the wasteful and destructive Common Core SBAC testing program.
Until now, the Malloy administration’s primary mechanism to try and force parents to have their children participate in the SBAC/NEW SAT testing was to mislead and lie to parents about their rights, while at the same time, threatening that the state would withhold Title 1 federal funding that is supposed to be used to help poor children if a school district’s opt out rate was greater than 5 percent.
But now Malloy and his team are going a step further.  Their newest proposal is hidden Malloy proposes plan to punish your neighbors if you opt your child out of the Common Core SBAC testing fiasco - Wait What?:

Unions concerned with Pearson investments. | Fred Klonsky

Unions concerned with Pearson investments. | Fred Klonsky:

Unions concerned with Pearson investments. 

ChartBuilder
 The impact of opt out and the movement against high-stakes testing has been impressive when it comes to Pearson’s bottom line.

The British publication Professional Pensions reports that Pearson, a UK-based company that controls much of the U.S. school testing business, has lost 42% of is share value in the last year.
Chicago Teachers Pension Fund, Trade Union Fund Managers and 130 individual shareholders joined Unison in the resolution that will be heard at Pearson’s annual general meeting this April.
The resolution said the company was over-reliant on the education testing programme in the US, which had been affected by a recent change in the law and was also becoming increasingly unpopular. It comes as the company revealed last month it was axing 4,000 jobs – 10% of the company’s workforce.
The resolution is being issued jointly by Unison and the coalition of unions. It says that Pearson is over-reliant on the education testing in the US. It comes as the company revealed last month it was axing 4,000 jobs – 10% of the company’s workforce.
Unison Capital is a major investment firm, which owns 33,000 shares of Pearson.
The coalition of unions and public employee pension funds, including the Unions concerned with Pearson investments. | Fred Klonsky:

Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: We pahked the cah...

Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: We pahked the cah...:

We pahked the cah...

 We visited Hahvahd yesterday, only to find Chicago students tearing it up academically and politically, as expected.


First, we went over to the Law School where dozens of students have been occupying the Wasserstein Lounge,trying to create a learning environment more relevant and safe for students of color. Occupiers I talked with, including Chicagoan and Whitney Young alumKeaton Allen, want more focus on critical race theory and more African-American profs.

Yesterday's speaker at the protest was none other than Harvard law prof Lani Guinier. Who could be more relevant at a time when Republicans have sworn to stonewall any Scalia replacement chosen by President Obama? Prof. Guinier is the first woman of color ever appointed to a tenured professorship at that institution.

Keaton Allen & Amanda Klonsky
But in 1993, President Bill Clintonpulled back Guinier's nomination as attorney general in the face of a brutal and racist negative Republican-led media campaign, referring to Guinier as a "quota queen." One New York Times opinion piece falsely claimed that Guinier was in Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: We pahked the cah...:

Who won the education ‘award’ nobody wants to receive? - The Washington Post

Who won the education ‘award’ nobody wants to receive? - The Washington Post:

Who won the education ‘award’ nobody wants to receive?



There are education awards and then there are education awards.
In the first category — those that people in education don’t generally mind winning — we could put the $1 million Global Teacher Prize, given by the Varkey Foundation, the philanthropic arm of GEMS Education, which is the K-12 education company that owns and operates its own GEMS schools in a handful of countries, including Egypt, Abu Dhabi and Uganda.
The foundation, whose honorary chair is former president Bill Clinton, promotes the prize as “the Nobel” of teaching — as there is no actual Nobel prize in education — in an effort to show the importance of teaching in societies around the world. Its first awardee, in 2015, was Nancie Atwell, renowned founder of the Center for Teaching and Learning, an award-winning nonprofit independent K-8 demonstration school in Edgecomb, Maine, where she teaches seventh- and eighth-grade writing, reading and history. The second annual award will be given soon.
But nobody in education genuinely likes winning the Bunkum Award.  Presented annually by the National Education Policy Center at the University of Colorado at Boulder, it is given for what presenters say is “shoddy” educational research based on weak data, questionable analysis and overblown recommendations.
The award gets its name from Buncombe County, N.C., where, in 1820, Rep. Felix Walker delivered “a speech for Buncombe” on whether Missouri should be admitted to the United States as a free or slave state, and he rambled on so much that his colleagues yelled at him to stop. From then on, “bunkum” came to mean long-winded nonsense.
The 2015 winner was just announced, and it was the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools. It was announced by David Berliner, the regents’ professor emeritus and former dean of the College of Education at Arizona State University, and you can watch the “presentation” in the video below. Berliner is a member of the National Academy of Education and the International Academy of Education, a fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, a past president of the American Educational Research Association, and a widely recognized scholar of educational psychology and policy.
Here’s the award announcement:
This year’s winner is the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, for Separating Fact from Fiction: What You Need to Know about Charter Schools. The National Alliance (NAPCS) describes itself as “the leading national nonprofit organization committed to advancing the charter school movement.”Separating Fact from Fiction is a fetching, sleek publication adorned with 15 charming photos of smiling children keeping watch over 21 easy-to-digest, alleged “myths” followed by responses that the report generously describes as “facts.” YetSeparating Fact from Fiction might more honestly be titled:
Playing 21 with a Stacked Deck
or
Blackjacked! 21 Attempts to Club Sound Policy.
Before turning to a small sampling of the report’s problems, however, we’ll offer a compliment: To the credit of the report’s authors, the 21 so-called myths do a good job covering many of the important issues raised by the rapid growth of the charter school sector. Alas, this comprehensive coverage is wasted. The 
Who won the education ‘award’ nobody wants to receive? - The Washington Post:


Why the Roots of Police Violence Lead Back to Segregated Schools - Yahoo News

Why the Roots of Police Violence Lead Back to Segregated Schools - Yahoo News:

Why the Roots of Police Violence Lead Back to Segregated Schools

Why the Roots of Police Violence Lead Back to Segregated Schools


 Integrated public schools have long been touted as a key to boosting the achievement of disadvantaged students. Yet at a time when experts and analysts confirm the nation’s public schools are becoming more segregated, a new report suggests that integration should top the education reform agenda—and that the benefits go far beyond academics.

According to How Racially Diverse Schools and Classrooms Can Benefit All Students, a reportreleased this month by The Century Foundation, whites and minorities learning together in classrooms could help solve problems ranging from the black-white achievement gap to policeusing excessive force against African Americans.
“The advocates of racially integrated schools understand that much of the recent racial tension and unrest in this nation—from Ferguson to Baltimore to Staten Island—may well have been avoided if more children had attended schools that taught them to address implicit biases related to racial, ethnic, and cultural differences,” wrote the report’s authors.
Having students of different racial and economic backgrounds attend the same school helps them learn and socialize with people who aren’t like them, according to the report. Day-to-day interactions with a variety of peers, it adds, can challenge students’ biases or fears about other racial groups, boost intergroup understanding, and help eliminate prejudice.
“What if that police officer had gone to a more racially diverse school...[and learned] to understand the history of race and different cultural perspectives? How might some of those incidents [have] played out differently?” Amy Stuart Wells, a professor at Teachers College of Columbia University and the report’s coauthor, said to The Huffington Post. “These police officers, many of them are in their 20s and 30s and grew up in an era where schools have been resegregating.”
In the report, Wells and her colleagues wrote that “interracial respect, understanding, and empathy is what we should all strive for in our increasingly diverse society. There is no institution better suited to touch the lives of millions of members of the next generation than our public schools.”
Along with healing racial divisions, integrating schools could be central to America’s continued global prosperity. The report cites several amicus briefs submitted in the most recent legal battle over affirmative action, the United States Supreme Court case Fisher v. University of Texas. The briefs show the majority of top companies are looking for employees from diverse backgrounds who can work well with a wide range of people. “Without qualified people from different racial and cultural backgrounds, and, even more importantly, ‘cross-cultural competence’ among employees and management, U.S. corporations will be ill-equipped to compete in an increasingly diverse world,” wrote the authors.
Diverse public schools, with access to better resources and teachers, can produce a better-educated workforce too. Black and Latino students perform better in integrated schools, substantially reducing the black-white achievement gap many districts have struggled to close with no drop-off in the performance of white students. But while the benefits of integrated schools seem clear, reversing racial polarization is easier said than done.
“We have made tremendous progress in race relations in this country, [but] it’s still the big, big elephant in the room that we’re not addressing,” Tyrone Howard, associate dean of equity, diversity, and inclusion at the University of California, Los Angeles’ Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, told TakePart.
“We still have white families opting to send their kids to schools that are predominantly white,” Howard said. “That says something. It doesn’t go the other way around.”  
The problem is twofold, Howard argues: Whites have negative stereotypes about minorities in general, and they have the perception that majority-black or Latino schools typically get the short Why the Roots of Police Violence Lead Back to Segregated Schools - Yahoo News:

L.A. Charters Miss Enrollment Targets by 14,600. So What? - On California - Education Week

L.A. Charters Miss Enrollment Targets by 14,600. So What? - On California - Education Week:

L.A. Charters Miss Enrollment Targets by 14,600. So What?

Existing.jpg


 In the midst of another skirmish in the L.A. Charter School War, new data obtained from the Los Angeles Unified School District show charter school enrollment is 14,620 lower than the charter operators projected in their petitions to operate those schools. 

But the implications of the shortfall are far from clear.  The district tends to see weakness in the viability of charters.  Charter operators think they are being picked on when they seek new schools or renewals of old ones.  Jed Wallace, executive director of the California Charter Schools Association likened the current charter exam process to a "witch hunt."
Less Than 20 Percent of Projections
Back to the numbers:  In the most extreme cases enrollments are less than 20 percent of those projected raising questions among district regulators about the financial and educational viability of those schools.
At the Alliance College-Ready Middle Academy #21 in Sun Valley, the school reported 49 students in the fall of 2015 instead of the 300 it had projected in its charter application.
And at Apple Academy Charter School on Western Avenue, the school reported 326 students in 2015 compared with 1,420 in its charter petition, the largest numerical shortfall among the fiscally independent charters.  Granada Hills Charter High School enrolled 4,467 compared to its charter petition projection of 5,500.
There are 25 charters with fewer than half the students projected in their charter petitions, and the shortfalls are raising flags in the LAUSD Charter School Division.  (The spreadsheet is reproduced at the end of this post.) Jose Cole-Gutierrez, the division's head, said in an interview that the district's experience with 274 charters, the most of any school district in the country, drives it to ask different questions than it did a decade ago.  "Questions of school enrollment have always been important because of viability.  That's nothing new.  We have always asked schools to substantiate their plans.  But now, schools are telling us that there are a lot of factors that they are dealing with given increased competition."
No One Said 'Get Tough'
He vigorously denied allegations that the school board had sought a tough-on-charters approach, a declaration repeated at the school board's meeting.
Charter operators see the situation differently.  At Alliance #21, principal Jonathan Tiongco notes that the school has just opened, and is still scrambling for a facility.  They are building a permanent facility, but in the meantime they've been bouncing between temporary locations.  "Parents are a little cautious with the uncertainty," he said.  "For a while, I had nothing to sell but dirt."  But Tiongco, who brings an impressive background in education technology to his job, says that the school will be on track to meet its enrollment targets in a year or so.
Caprice Young, the president of Magnolia Charter Schools, doesn't see fiscal doom in the under-enrollment.  "That's always the case," she said.  "Enthusiastic school founders overestimate how fast they can start up.  They catch up after a few years."  Magnolia operates 11 charter schools, 8 within LAUSD.  The district's charter schools division raised questions about two proposals for new schools, and they were pulled from the school board agenda rather than face a negative vote.
Several Magnolia schools are among the severely under-enrolled list.  "But for good reason," she said.  Magnolia Science Academy #5, whose student count was 35% of the number projected, was moved 18 miles away from its original site and essentially restarted.  Magnolia Science Academy #6 is genuinely lagging behind expectations, she said, "and we've been able to manage the budget so that they are sustainable."
Charter Operators Cry Foul
Young and other charter school operators have cried foul, charging that the charter school division has changed rules midstream and is over-regulating the independently operated schools.  Twenty-one charter operators, whose schools enroll more than 50,000 students complained in a letter to the LAUSD board that charters were being denied more frequently.
I don't know whether the LAUSD is being fair or unfair to the charters.  Like all businesses, charters love government subsidies but not government regulation.  The relevant question is how the district should manage the growing charter enrollment, or, more to the point, how it should manage district schools facing competition from the charter sector?
I do know that what's happening now isn't working.  Every charter petition becomes an occasion for a mini-trial before the school board.  Supporters pack the school board meeting in what Los Angeles Times reporter Howard Blume called a "regular and lengthy ritual."
30,000 More Charter Students
Even if no more charter schools were allowed to start, already authorized charters would allow 30,000 students to leave district schools and enroll in charters.  In a time when there are fewer students overall in Los Angeles, a shift of this magnitude poses a significant threat to the district's finances, about $270-million by my back of the envelope approximation.
That's even before the fund-raising and school opening efforts of Great Public Schools Now kicks in.
That translates into a lot of adult jobs, so it's no big surprise that United Teachers Los Angeles and other employee unions are raising dues money to strongly oppose charter expansion.
It's also clear that there is increasing demand for charters, magnets, and other schools of choice.  Projections issued by the CCSA show 41,830 students on charter school waiting lists.  CCSA sent me the list along with their methodology that heavily discounts the numbers in areas where there are multiple charters in the same geographic area, thus attempting to correct the count for families that applied to multiple charters.
I do not have a unified count of waiting lists for magnet schools within the district, but approximations for the most popular schools put the waiting list at over 1,000.   And LAUSD runs acomplex application program with detailed instructions, weighted admissions, and even tutorials in how to apply.
Two New Realities about Choice Schools
The juxtaposition of low enrollments and high demand illustrates two realities about trying to oversee charters and other schools of choice in Los Angeles.
First, a charter is not really a contract, in the conventional sense.  Unlike a vendor who gets a contract from the district to provide special education services, copy paper, or corn dogs, charter operators are not actually responsible for producing schooling for a specified number of students. 
Charters are more like drilling rights to an oil field.  If a charter operator thinks it can advantageously educate additional children, it can within the limits of its charter, but it is under no apparent obligation to fill to projections.
Second, the public likes choice, but it also likes a good school in their neighborhood where their children have a guaranteed place.  Running both at the same time is a daunting problem for LAUSD.
Public schools have managed systems of neighborhood schools with attendance zones for more than a century, sometimes well, sometimes in ways that further race and class discrimination.  School systems have run small, selective school choice systems for a long time while maintaining a traditional attendance zone system.  Bronx High School of Science was founded nearly 80 years ago and many big city systems maintain selective schools.  Boston Latin, the nation's first high school, accepted its first student in 1635.
Some school systems, such as New Orleans, have learned how to manage an all-choice system, creating combined application and fair competition systems among competing schools.  The craft knowledge about running an all-choice system is worth understanding for those who think abouthow to apply the lessons of NOLA to L.A. 
Coexist?  But How?
But the LAUSD board and the charter schools division inside the district face a problem of a much larger magnitude: how to get neighborhood schools to prosper and grow academically as they co-exist and compete with the growing number of charters, magnets, and other schools of choice.
I've asked a lot people—academics, researchers, policy wonks, school leaders—whether they have a solution to this problem that does not treat the school district as the educator of last resort.  I've yet to hear a convincing answer.


Spreadsheet of Fiscally Independent Charter School Enrollment, Los Angeles Unified School District 

Report: State must adopt guidelines for parent engagement in schools | EdSource

Report: State must adopt guidelines for parent engagement in schools | EdSource:

Report: State must adopt guidelines for parent engagement in schools



California has established parent involvement as one of eight priority areas that local educators must focus on, but school districts have a long way to go to make that involvement “authentic” and “meaningful,” according to a new report.
The report, issued by Families in Schools, a statewide advocacy organization based in Los Angeles, is urging the state to adopt “consistent, high quality” standards to determine how effectively schools and districts are engaging parents.
It is based on interviews with 30 school district leaders from 14 school districts in California. The report did not identify the names of those interviewed or the districts, offering them anonymity “so that fear or politics would not prevent them from sharing their real opinions and experiences.”
The State Board of Education is currently still drawing up “rubrics” or guidelines for how to assess progress, or the lack of it, in each of the eight priority areas prescribed by the Local Control Funding Formula, or LCFF, the landmark school financing reforms championed  by Gov. Jerry Brown.
School districts are required to draw up a Local Control and Accountability Plan (LCAP) to describe how they will spend state funds to improve student academic outcomes.
Under the financing formula, districts get additional funds for every low-income student, English learner and foster child they serve. Parents must be involved in deciding how these funds are spent — to a greater extent than in any other state, according to State Board President Michael Kirst.  In addition, parents must be involved in decision making at school sites, and in programs for high-needs students.


The Families in Schools report offers a detailed rubric with numerous ways districts – and the state – can measure how well they are engaging parents and families. “These measures establish clear expectations of how schools should engage, reach out to, and partner with all parents, especially those whose students are low-income, English learners and foster youth,” the report states.
But Oscar Cruz, executive director of Families in Schools, said that too often schools have a “compliance-based” approach to parent involvement – such as simply getting parents to a meeting – without forging deeper relationships between parents and their child’s school.
“What is the use of having 60 percent of parents coming to an LCAP meeting, if when they go to their school and their principal doesn’t want to meet with them, and they feel pushed out?” he said.
“Moving from policy to implementation – that is where there is a huge gap,” Cruz said.
Cruz’s organization differentiates parent involvement, which it defines as actions parents take to support their child’s education at home and at school, from parent engagement, which refers to what actions schools take to involve parents in their child’s school and in decision-making there.
Based on its interviews, the report concludes that many districts, regardless of their size, “simply lack the resources and/or expertise to build robust parent engagement programs.”
In addition,  the report says, “school administrators are slow to give teachers and staff the tools and training they need to connect with parents.” Many Report: State must adopt guidelines for parent engagement in schools | EdSource:

Study says charter schools spend more than twice the amount that traditional public school on administration expenses - Tucson News Now

Study says charter schools spend more on administration expenses - Tucson News Now:

Study says charter schools spend more on administration expenses

PHOENIX (CBS5) -

A report set for release Tuesday concludes that charter schools in Arizona spend more than twice the amount that traditional public school districts spend on administrative expenses.
The report, authored by Arizonans for Charter School Accountability and the Grand Canyon Institute, states that public school districts average $628 per pupil for administrative services. Charter schools average $1,403 per pupil.
"We're spending an inordinate amount of money in some of our charter schools for administration, and that money could be used elsewhere in the education budget," said Jim Hall, one of the authors of the study.
The issue of high administrative expenses has become a favorite political topic of Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey and the Republican Legislature as they have fended off accusations that they are not funding public schools at an adequate level.
"We have all heard the debate about high administrative costs in public schools, but we never mention charter schools," Hall said.
CBS 5 Investigates received an advance copy of the report, which suggests that some of the state's large charter chains have the among the highest administrative expenses. But the study does not detail exactly what taxpayers and students get in return for those dollars.
"We have no idea how they're spending the money and no way of accessing how they spend the money," Hall said.
Charter schools are required to disclose financial data, but they are not required to list the same detail that traditional public schools do. Public school financial data is turned over to the Arizona Auditor General's Office every year, but charter data is not subject to the same scrutiny.
The Arizona Charter Schools Association released the following statement in response to our request for comment:
"It is disappointing the Grand Canyon Institute would grant legitimacy by allowing itself to be associated with this 'report,' which was authored by an individual and organization with a self-declared mission to tear down charter schools and the broader school choice movement in Arizona. The fact is, some charter schools have higher administrative costs than districts; some have lower. Without a clear explanation of how the data in this report was calculated, it is difficult to respond to the report's conclusions. This much we know, what matters most is not numbers on a spreadsheet. It's school performance. If a charter school isn't succeeding, parents stop sending their children. If a charter is failing, its doors will be closed. That's what real accountability looks like."
We will post the charter school report here on Tuesday when it is released.
Copyright 2016 KPHO (KPHO Broadcasting Corporation). All rights reserved.Study says charter schools spend more on administration expenses - Tucson News Now:

Research: Louisiana's School Voucher Program Harms Student Performance - US News

Research: Louisiana's School Voucher Program Harms Student Performance - US News:

Evidence Mounts Against Louisiana Voucher Program

More research shows the Bayou State's voucher program harms students' academic performance.

Louisiana's private school voucher program – the fifth-largest in the country – is having a negative impact on students who use the vouchers to enroll in private school, a mounting body of evidence shows.
"Most striking, we find strong and consistent evidence that students using a [voucher] performed significantly worse in math after using their scholarship to attend private schools," said Patrick Wolf, the lead author for a series of studies published Monday by the university's School Choice Demonstration Project and Tulane University's Education Research Alliance for New Orleans.
The findings bolster those from a working paper published two months ago by a separate team of researchers that found students who used a voucher to attend a private school experienced lowered math, reading, science and social studies scores. In particular, their likelihood of a failing score increased by 24 to 50 percent.
Taken altogether, the studies come as states across the country mull similar programs and the private school choice sector is hitting a stride: Since 2008-2009, the number of students using vouchers increased by 130 percent, according to advocates'figures.
"One of the central debates about school reform is whether or not school choice improves student outcomes," the reports' authors noted. "School choice reforms, which comprise a broad category of policies aimed at improving public education through the introduction of market forces that may stimulate customer choice and competition between schools, have grown particularly popular since the 1990s."
Louisiana's voucher system provides about 6,700 students with about $5,300 per student, which they can use to pay for tuition at a private school. Only students from families with incomes below 250 percent of the federal poverty line – meaning $60,625 for a family of four, for example – and those whose public school has been labeled by the state as low-performing qualify for the voucher.
More than half of the Bayou State's roughly 1,500 public schools are low-performing.
The vouchers are awarded through a lottery system, and private schools that participate in the voucher program must accept them as full tuition payment, even if the sticker price is higher than a voucher's amount.
Specifically, the new research found that students who were performing at roughly the 50th percentile in their public schools – meaning their performance was average – fell 24 percentile points in math and 8 percentile points in reading below their public school counterparts after one year in private school.
During their second year in private school, the downward trend continued in math, but rebounded some in reading.Research: Louisiana's School Voucher Program Harms Student Performance - US News:

ACT's College and Career Readiness Standards

ACT's College and Career Readiness Standards:

ACT's College and Career Readiness Standards




 On February 11, 2016, the Fordham Institute published its idea of a report on how well a number of assessments align with the Common Core State Standards (CCSS). Here is a bit of what Fordham Institute wrote about ACT:

ACT Aspire and MCAS both did well regarding the quality of their items and the depth of knowledge they assessed.
Still, panelists found that ACT Aspire and MCAS did not adequately assess--or may not assess at all--some of the priority content reflected in the Common Core standards in both ELA/Literacy and mathematics.
That same day, ACT responded with a statement to the effect that ACT aligns "with college and career readiness standards":
The finding that ACT Aspire assessments adequately assess many but not all of the priority content reflected in the Common Core standards is not surprising. Unlike other assessments included in the study, ACT Aspire is not and was never intended to measure all of the CCSS. Rather, ACT Aspire is designed to measure the skills and knowledge most important in preparing students for college and career readiness. This is a significant philosophical and design difference between ACT Aspire and other next generation assessments. ACT has made the choices we have to align with college and career readiness standards, rather than specifically to the Common Core, and we intend to keep it that way. [Emphasis added.]
According to the above, ACT states that "college and career readiness standards" are not one and the same as CCSS. In fact, based upon the statement above, ACT snubs both CCSS and those who consider CCSS the center of the standards universe by implying that to be aligned with CCSS is a narrow alternative to "college and career readiness."
So, what of these other "college and career readiness standards?"
They are scoring rubrics on ACT's website. ACT calls them ACT College and Career Readiness Standards:
The scoring rubrics used to be called the ACT College Readiness Standards, but in May 2013, ACT renamed them the ACT College and Career Readiness Standards.
And in May 2013- almost three years after CCSS was officially launched- ACT alsoACT's College and Career Readiness Standards: 

Bill and Melinda Gates explain their charitable priorities for the coming year | The Economist

Bill and Melinda Gates explain their charitable priorities for the coming year | The Economist:

Bill and Melinda Gates explain their charitable priorities for the coming year

Up, up and away


SINCE 2009 Bill Gates has written an annual open letter setting out priorities for the charitable foundation he leads with his wife, Melinda. Some have highlighted specific causes: the first picked out reducing child mortality, improving agricultural productivity and raising the standard of education in America. Others have tackled big themes, such as how innovation could be fostered across the global economy. This year’s letter, signed jointly, strikes a down-to-earth tone. On a visit to schools in Kentucky the couple were videoed for a school project. The youngsters asked them: “If you had a superpower, what would it be?” Mr Gates answered “more energy”; his wife, “more time”. On the way home, they decided that the two things they wanted more of were what the world’s poor needed, too. In the run-up to the publication of this year’s letter on February 22nd, they talked to The Economist to explain why.
Much of the foundation’s work is with people, mostly in Africa and India, whose nights are lit by only kerosene lamps or candles. Their lives would be improved by even modest amounts of electricity—and transformed by reliable electricity from a grid, which would allow them to irrigate crops, start businesses and perhaps get jobs in factories. As for time, the value of poor women’s is often set at naught, meaning they must carry out back-breaking, low-productivity work such as fetching water and wood. Freed from these, women could care better for their children and homes, and, above all, seek paid work.
Mr Gates says his wish for more energy for the world encompasses three broad issues. The first is getting energy to people who do not have it. The second is limiting climate change—which will hit many of the same people hardest, since they are subsistence farmers in semi-arid regions, which will become drier and perhaps also more prone to extreme weather events. The third, since some climate change is now inevitable, is finding ways to mitigate its impact.
People in the rich world often think that tackling climate change is a matter of switching to somewhat more energy-efficient lighting, transport and so on, says Mr Gates. Such actions are valuable, but will add up to nothing like enough. The letter works through a simple equation: to keep climate change within bearable limits, total carbon emissions must fall to zero. That means either cutting energy use to zero, or finding a carbon-free way to get all the energy we need.
No one knows—yet—how that could be done. But he describes himself as optimistic that it can be. Will the breakthrough come from harnessing wind energy in the high atmosphere? From some novel type of nuclear fission or fusion? Solar energy twinned with geothermal? Some combination of all these, and more? What’s needed is “perhaps a dozen research efforts, going down each of ten paths,” he says. The investors who fund these efforts will need to be a bit more patient than those who invest in software or pharmaceuticals, two other fields where big bets into unproven technologies are routinely made. Governments, foundations and endowments will probably have to play a part. But considering the prize at stake, he says, what’s needed is not beyond imagining: “a matter of billions, not hundreds of billions”.
Without energy innovation, the world is on course for well above 2°C of warming: “it would be unfortunate to run that experiment.” As people get richer they will use more energy, and other poor countries, notably India, could be expected to follow China’s coal-driven development path. Even with snazzy new options they may, unless prices fall fast enough: poor people need cheap power. Rich countries would then need to change all the faster. And whatever happens next, the amount of carbon humanity has already emitted means that some climate change is already “baked in”. Poor farmers will need better farming techniques and new seeds to raise productivity, and more access to credit, to carry them through rough patches.
Time and energy are linked, says Mrs Gates: much of women’s unpaid labour is on tasks Bill and Melinda Gates explain their charitable priorities for the coming year | The Economist: