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Common core education has been a bigger failure than Microsoft Office Clippy
Next Big Future ^ | October 30, 2017 | Brian Wang

Posted on 11/18/2017 9:08:01 AM PST by Eddie01

Bill Gates and Gates Foundation were one of the main backers of the Common core education program. The US education system had been bad before Bill Gates, George HW Bush and Obama and No child left behind and Common Core. However, the last 17 years have been continued failure in improving education in the USA.

The Gates Foundation has spent $3.4 billion on public education in the United States. They spent a lot on the development and implementation of the highly controversial Common Core State Standards – Gates now says that 60 percent of his new investment will go to public schools and about 15 percent to the development of charter schools.

The Common Core standards were sold as a way to improve achievement and reduce the gaps between rich and poor, and black and white. But the promises haven’t come true. Even in states with strong common standards and tests, racial achievement gaps persist. The development of the Common Core was funded almost entirely by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. In 2001, George W. Bush administration had passed the No Child Left Behind act. This promoted standardized testing, school choice, competition and accountability (meaning punishment of teachers and schools) as the primary means of improving education.

In 2009 President Obama announced Race to the Top, a competition for $4.35 billion in federal grant money. To qualify, states had to adopt “college and career ready standards,” a requirement that was used to pressure them into adopting national standards. Almost every state applied, even before the specifics of the Common Core were released in June 2010.

Bill Gates observes –

OECD data that shows lagging performance of American students overall, the national averages mask a bigger story.

When disaggregated by race, we see two Americas. One where white students perform along the lines of the best in the world—with achievement comparable to countries like Finland and Korea. And another America, where Black and Latino students perform comparably to the students in the lowest performing OECD countries, such as Chile and Greece.

Clippy as in microsoft Office 97 as a digital assistant. Just seeing the image of it, you can see why it was a failure.

I have had children in school where they were taught Common Core for several years.

My observations are:

1. Common Core uses multiple methods to teach basic math and english. They reteach multiplication and division. They add an emphasis on the concept of grouping. I know basic math very well. I can understand what they are trying to do but find that it merely complicates and confuses the learning of basic math. Getting kids bogged down in what are garbage approaches means there is less time for moving on to more advanced topics.

I knew Common Core was garbage from the first times I had to look and help with my kids homework. It does not help the smart kids and helps very few of the kids who do not get an understanding via the first “regular” approaches to learning those subjects.

2. For more well off parents, getting to Finland and Korea level academic achievement is only possible by either supplementing public school with extra private programs like Russian Math or sending kids to better private schools. Either that or achievement is made in spite of poor public school.

Finland is cited as an education success story but not enough is done to copy what works in Finland’s education system.

Finland put more resources and focus on improving the capabilities of teachers. All Finish Teachers have masters degrees. Teachers are viewed as scientists and the classrooms are their laboratories. Every teacher has to have a masters degree, and it’s a content degree where they’re not just taking silly courses on education theory and history. They’re taking content courses that enable them to bring a higher level of intellectual preparation into the classroom.

1. John Dewey’s philosophy of education forms a foundation for academic, research-based teacher education in Finland and influenced also the work of the most influential Finnish scholar professor Matti Koskenniemi in the 1940s. All primary school teachers read and explore Dewey’s and Koskenniemi’s ideas as part of their courses leading to the master’s degree. Many Finnish schools have adopted Dewey’s view of education for democracy by enhancing students’ access to decision-making regarding their own lives and studying in school.

2. Cooperative Learning

Unlike in most other countries, cooperative learning has become a pedagogical approach that is widely practiced throughout Finnish education system.

3. Multiple Intelligences

The overall goal of schooling in Finland was to support child’s holistic development and growth by focusing on different aspects of talent and intelligence. After abolishing all streaming and tracking of students in the mid-1980s, both education policies and school practices adopted the principle that all children have different kinds of intelligences and that schools must find ways how to cultivate these different individual aspects in balanced ways. Howard Gardner’s Theory of Multiple Intelligences became a leading idea in transferring these policy principles to school practice. Again, the 1994 National Curriculum emphasizes that school education must provide all students with opportunities to develop all aspects of their minds. As a consequence, that curriculum framework required that all schools have a balanced program, blending academic subjects with art, music, crafts, and physical education. This framework moreover mandated that all schools provide students with sufficient time for their self-directive activities.

4. Alternative Classroom Assessments

Without frequent standardized and census-based testing, the Finnish education system relies on local monitoring and teacher-made student assessments.

5. Peer coaching—that is, a confidential process through which teachers work together to reflect on current practices, expand, improve, and learn new skills, exchange ideas, conduct classroom research and solve problems together in school—became normal practice in school improvement programs and professional development in Finland since the mid-1990s.


TOPICS: Education
KEYWORDS: arth; billgates; commoncore; education
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A couple questions:

Why is Bill Gates funding the destruction of the US Education system?

Where in the hell is Betsy DeVos? She seems to have a touch of the Jeff Sessions.

This was a big Trump campaign promise I naively thought would be a slam dunk.

1 posted on 11/18/2017 9:08:02 AM PST by Eddie01
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To: Eddie01

Article is a few weeks old, but topic still relevant.


2 posted on 11/18/2017 9:09:07 AM PST by Eddie01
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To: Eddie01

I read Bill Gates’s book in the 80’s. It was about future technology. I was nonplussed about it.

30 years later I recognize Bill Gates is only rich because of his Ruthless business practices. I.E stealing from others.

He’s not a genius and has never proven himself smart imho


3 posted on 11/18/2017 9:22:13 AM PST by Fhios (Down with your fascism, up with our fascism.)
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To: Eddie01

The Finnish system will never get started here until we get rid of the teacher’s union and the so called Education Degree. Requiring all public school teachers to have masters degrees in the subjects they teach and measuring the competence of teachers will never happen as long as the NEA and the other teachers unions are still running the education of our kids.


4 posted on 11/18/2017 9:23:30 AM PST by wmileo
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To: Eddie01

A quick Bill Gates education story.

Maybe 10 years ago the Gates Foundation decided to set aside scholarship money for high school students who were going to major in a science in college.

I saw the application packet. Not every such student was eligible. You had to be a member of one of the listed ethnic groups. And, boy, was that list long! Pacific Islander, Hispanic, Eskimo, Persian, Native American, Hmong, etc., etc.

Then I noticed something odd. One category was missing. European.


5 posted on 11/18/2017 9:26:26 AM PST by Leaning Right (I have already previewed or do not wish to preview this composition.)
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To: Eddie01
The Common Core standards were sold as a way to improve achievement and reduce the gaps between rich and poor, and black and white. But the promises haven’t come true.

Well, it's not entirely true that it's a failure.

It's narrowed the gap between rich and poor and black and white by bringing everyone down to the lowest common denominator.

6 posted on 11/18/2017 9:28:53 AM PST by metmom ( ...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith..)
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To: Eddie01; 2Jedismom; 6amgelsmama; AAABEST; aberaussie; AccountantMom; Aggie Mama; agrace; ...

ANOTHER REASON TO HOMESCHOOL

This ping list is for the other articles of interest to homeschoolers about education and public school. This can occasionally be a fairly high volume list. Articles pinged to the Another Reason to Homeschool List will be given the keyword of ARTH. (If I remember. If I forget, please feel free to add it yourself)

The main Homeschool Ping List handles the homeschool-specific articles. I hold both the Homeschool Ping List and the Another Reason to Homeschool Ping list. Please freepmail me to let me know if you would like to be added to or removed from either list, or both.

7 posted on 11/18/2017 9:29:47 AM PST by metmom ( ...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith..)
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To: Eddie01

The United States (Once upon a time) had a school system that worked.
Millions of students whose parent spoke only a foreign languagelearned, totally without technology but from a real live TEACHER. They learned all aspect of Math, the English language, American, then world history. 40 kids in a class learned and knew geography, writing, and the sciences of the day.
School systems such as New York City and other large cities went on to win World Wars, then build the greatest nation in history. The built the aviation industry and put man into space.
I’d keep the “Modern” subjects but return the Education to the standards and methods of 1925. THEN the students received an education.


8 posted on 11/18/2017 9:30:11 AM PST by CaptainAmiigaf (.)
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To: metmom

9 posted on 11/18/2017 9:33:13 AM PST by Eddie01
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To: Fhios

Spot on. The early MS years were technology that was lifted from others, later through acquisition. Gates did not leave MS in good hands either (Ballmer?). I think he’s a head’s down coder at heart, not a visionary, not a manager, not a leader.


10 posted on 11/18/2017 9:33:24 AM PST by HonkyTonkMan
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To: Eddie01

I thought diversity was good. Why should every district teach the same?


11 posted on 11/18/2017 9:34:42 AM PST by Lisbon1940 (No full-term Governors (at the time of election!)
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To: Eddie01

I dismiss every cross country comparison for one reason. Some countries, such as Japan, do not require every student to go to High School. Instead some students go to trade schools or apprenticeships.

The numbers for the non-traditional high school students are not included in any of the calculations for comparisons. Therefore, such comparisons are non-equivalent.

We had the best education system in the world at one point - why can’t we return to the methods we used then?


12 posted on 11/18/2017 9:45:44 AM PST by reed13k
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To: Eddie01

Pretty atrocious, isn’t it?


13 posted on 11/18/2017 9:46:38 AM PST by metmom ( ...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith..)
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To: Eddie01
LOL:


14 posted on 11/18/2017 10:06:43 AM PST by upchuck (You know why there's a second Amendment? In case the gvt fails to follow the first one. ~ Rush L.)
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To: Eddie01

wait...Clippy was great. Bob sucked.


15 posted on 11/18/2017 10:43:01 AM PST by stylin19a (Best.Election.Ever.)
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To: stylin19a

16 posted on 11/18/2017 10:45:16 AM PST by Pelham
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To: Eddie01

Well, I miss Clippy. And that little dog, too.


17 posted on 11/18/2017 10:54:30 AM PST by MayflowerMadam ( "Freedom is not free; Free men are not equal, and Equal men are not free". Richard Berkeley Cotten)
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To: upchuck

As a school teacher, did Mrs. Core only drink during the school year?

How many weeks out of the year was that?

And those weeks are shrinking, with spring break, winter break, turkey day break, ... Teacher “in service day”, snow days, ..., etc.

Really hard to get a 5-day school week any more.

And you left out if her wine was Mad Dog 20/20.


18 posted on 11/18/2017 10:59:10 AM PST by Scrambler Bob (Brought to you from Turtle Island, otherwise known as 'So-Called North America')
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To: upchuck

Hmm. Non-common core response:
“Mrs Core taught” implies she is retired from teaching. When did she retire? When did her career begin? Nowhere in the problem does it state specifically that Mrs Core drank all that wine “during her career” with no overlap so in reality the question cannot be answered based simply on the information given.

Wonder what the common core answer to this is? LOL


19 posted on 11/18/2017 11:02:51 AM PST by Zack Attack
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To: Eddie01

There is something to be said about the “Bell Curve”.

The distribution of intelligence among our population and the increasing desire by Progressives to force an equal outcome.

You/they can’t change a persons IQ. Progressives are attempting to treat intelligence as “relative”, just as they have done with Culture, Race, Morals and Gender.

This is becoming the next battle ground for the Neo-Marxist and their efforts to divide and conquer.


20 posted on 11/18/2017 11:30:37 AM PST by Zeneta
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