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Thursday, March 26, 2015

FACT CHECK: Myths in the political roar over Common Core - Yahoo News

FACT CHECK: Myths in the political roar over Common Core - Yahoo News:

FACT CHECK: Myths in the political roar over Common Core








 ATLANTA (AP) — In the political uproar over Common Core, various myths are peddled as fact.

Do the learning standards really mean the federal government is serving as a "national school board," as Sen. Marco Rubio says? That's hard to square with the reality that the standards were developed by governors and state education leaders.
Should leaders "repeal every word of Common Core," as Sen. Ted Cruz demands? Actually there's no federal law — or even federal program — to repeal. Sen. Rand Paul slams "rotten to the core" propaganda forced on children by an initiative that has no curriculum at all.
Even so, the 2016 GOP presidential prospects who are criticizing Common Core have a point — if an overstated one — when they dispute the notion that it is strictly a voluntary initiative that bubbled up from communities and states. In complicated but unmistakable ways, the federal government does pressure states to live up to the standards.
Concerns about Common Core extend beyond the Republican politicians to many parents, some of them Democrats, who blame it for additional math homework headaches and extra time taking tests.
Here's a quick primer on Common Core, followed by a look at the facts behind the rhetoric of some Republican hopefuls:
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HOW IT WORKS
The effort was developed by governors and state school chiefs from both parties who were concerned that too many graduates were leaving high school unprepared for college or their first jobs.
The standards spell out what reading, math and critical thinking skills students should grasp, while leaving how those skills are mastered up to local school districts and states.
The hope: Higher standards shared across state lines would allow comparable student performance measures and smoother school-to-school transition for children who move, such as military kids. And that could save money, because it's cheaper for states to collaborate in developing standards and associated tests than for each to do its own.
President Barack Obama's administration backed the standards and developed incentives. Primarily, states had to adopt Common Core or similar standards if they wanted to get out of some of the onerous federal requirements of the No Child Left Behind law — which many do. That's the root for the exaggerated, but not baseless, claims about Washington shaping education policy.
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CRUZ: Washington "has no business sticking its nose in education. We need to repeal every word of Common Core."
THE FACTS: Common Core is a national initiative, but one that began with states working together. There is no federal law that a new president could ask Congress to repeal.
It was a Republican president, George W. Bush, who pushed a much more direct example of federal involvement with his No Child Left Behind law.
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PAUL: Common Core is "anti-American" and "revisionist history that ignores the faith of our founders."
THE FACTS: Common Core is an approach to teaching, not a mandate on what to teach, and it does not come with a required reading list.
For example, the standards specify that "texts need to be selected around topics or themes that generate knowledge and allow students to study these topics or themes in depth." That's the must-do approach and a rather obvious thing to do in classrooms.
That statement is accompanied by a list of classics and historical texts meant to illustrate the quality and complexity of what should be studied but are not required.
The founders and other heroes of U.S. history are on the list: John Adams, Patrick Henry, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln among them.
Among foreigners: Winston Churchill and George Orwell. No Karl Marx here.
Still, the Kentucky senator in fundraising letters and videos speaks of "pure, secular statist propaganda" from Common Core.
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RUBIO: Common Core "is increasingly being used by the Obama administration to turn the Department of Education into what is effectively a national school board. This effort to coerce states into adhering to national curriculum standards is not the best way to help our children. "
BOBBY JINDAL: Common Core has become "another tool for the federal government to try to dictate curriculum to local schools here in Louisiana."
CHRIS CHRISTIE: "I have grave concerns about the way this has been done, especially the way the Obama administration has tried to implement it through tying FACT CHECK: Myths in the political roar over Common Core - Yahoo News: