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COMMON CORE:Suspicions Confirmed: Testing Action Plan is Trojan Horse
http://emilytalmage.com/2015/10/25/suspicions-confirmed-testing-action-plan-is-trojan-horse/ ^ | 10-25-2015 | emilytalmage

Posted on 10/26/2015 6:18:19 AM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com

Four years ago, Tom Vander Ark (former executive at the Gates Foundation, current partner at Learn Capital) wrote in an email exchange with members of the Foundation for Excellence in Education and the Council for Chief State School Officers:

“New tests will hinder rather than help competency-based models…In short, I don’t want one big cheap end of year test used for more than it should be…I don’t want it to lock in the teacher-centric age cohort model for another decade. I don’t want simple assessments…I want a system that will incorporate all the performance feedback that students will be receiving a few years from now.”

Mr. Vander Ark, who is also a board member of a group called Global Education Futures, which recently put out this document that calls for turning “live education” into a “premium service” and advocates for the development of “competence profile(s)…that would record current state and development of individual’s knowledge & skills across different domains of professional & social life, and would accompany individuals throughout their life,” appears to have had a hand in the “Testing Action Plan” that was released by the White House this weekend.

According to the White House document, “A set-aside of $25 million would support competitive projects to help states develop innovative, new assessment models and address pressing needs they have identified for developing and implementing their assessments. This could include competency-based assessment.”

“The Administration will invite states that wish to request waivers of federal rules that stand in the way of innovative approaches to testing to work with the Department to promote high-quality, comparable, statewide measures. For example, the Department granted a temporary waiver to New Hampshire to pilot a competency-based assessment system in four districts.”

“The Department will also “establish “office hours” for any state or district that wishes to consult on how it can best reduce testing but still meet its policy objectives and requirements under the law; will engage in proactive outreach to states and districts on this topic; and will bring in experts to advise the Department, states, and districts on this work. The Department will also share tools already available to do this work, including The Council of Chief State School Officers’ Comprehensive Statewide Assessment Systems: A Framework for the Role of the State Education Agency.”

A shift to competency-based education has been in the works a least a decade, with the American Legislative Exchange Council, the Gates Foundation, and the Foundation for Excellence in Education (among others) at the helm of this shift.

The Council for Chief State School Officers has received upwards of 90 billion dollars in grants from the Gates Foundation in the past 6 years, much of it for the purpose of transitioning states to competency-based models.

The Common Core State Standards are a key piece of this transformation, as are the billions of dollars that have been invested in digital and online learning companies.

Several weeks ago, in a post called “Cashing in on Opt Out,” I wondered if investors like Vander Ark would be laughing all the way to the bank if SBAC and PARCC failed.

Pardon the absurd online photoshop job, but…looks like he’s on his way.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: arth; commoncore; curriculum; education; learning; schools; teaching
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1 posted on 10/26/2015 6:18:19 AM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

Cashing In on Opt Out?

Despite the fact that Maine dropped out of the Smarter Balanced Consortium this spring, McGraw-Hill Education, maker of the SBAC Assessment, has managed to stay a step ahead of us.

The same corporation that designed a test for fourth graders full of ninth-grade level reading passages and left more than handful of my kids in tears after they spent hours navigating its confusing, glitchy online interface, has sold its “summative assessment” assets to Data Recognition Corporation so that it can focus on the burgeoning “personalized,” “adaptive” learning market that is driving big pieces of the ESEA reauthorization.

Scott Marion, associate director of the National Center for the Improvement of Educational Assessment, said in Education Week that companies are always trying to gauge “where the market goes next,” and that “non-summative work is the next frontier.”

(Funny, that’s what I called it too.)

“Summative,” of course, means the big end-of-year test, which at least a handful of those at the top are encouraging us to move away from… but not for the reasons we would hope.

While most of us who teach and/or have children in public schools view the Opt-Out Movement as a way to protest corporate and profit-driven education reform, others – like Tom Vander Ark – see the movement away from the big-end-of-year test as a way to usher in a new era of all-encompassing, “competency-based” digital-ed reform that has the potential to make companies like McGraw-Hill Education bigger bucks than ever before.

Competency-based systems, which are rapidly and, in many cases, quietly, sweeping our nation by way of legislation crafted by the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) and Jeb Bush’s Foundation for Excellence in Education, essentially take the big test and spread it out over the course of the entire year, while restructuring our schools into grade-less systems where promotion and graduation is based on successful demonstration of certain outcomes. (Whose outcomes is a question for another day.)

Vander Ark, who previously served as Executive Director of Education for the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and now has a resume that includes, among other powerful positions, serving as treasurer for the International Association for K-12 Online Learning (iNACOL), Board Chair of Charter Board Partners, director of Bloomboard, Digital Learning Institute, and Imagination Foundation and advisor to the National Association for Charter School Authorizers (NACSA) and New Classrooms explains the shift toward this “new frontier” like this:

What’s new? There have been six important assessment developments since NCLB was enacted in 2002:

Student internet access has improved sufficiently to support an expectation of frequent online learning and assessment.
Performance assessment tools make it easier to construct, manage, and assess projects and standards-aligned prompts (see features on LDC CoreTools, and Buck Institute).
Embedded assessments are incorporated into many forms of digital content.
Formative assessment systems have improved dramatically. Platforms like MasteryConnect, Acuity, Edmodo, OpenEd, and Schoology make it easy to build, administer, and share standards-aligned assessments.
Adaptive assessment, such as MAPS from NWEA, is widely used. Adaptive learning, which combines adaptive assessment and targeted tutoring, is gaining widespread use in blended learning models. Providers include DreamBox (K-8 math) i-Ready from Curriculum Associates (k-8 math and reading), ALEKS from McGraw Hill (mostly secondary use).
Broader aims of student success, including self management and relational skills, are widely recognized as important and are being incorporated into state and district goals. The hard to measure skills and dispositions require broader feedback systems than traditional standardized testing.

A few months ago, many of us were perplexed when Education Commission of the States, which partners with Pearson (maker of the PARCC) produced this document offering information on Opt-Out. But, given that its funders include Lumina, which has been busy “leading the discussion ” on competency-based education, and the Gates Foundation, which has been instrumental in bringing competency (also known as proficiency) based policies to our states – oh! and also partners with BloomBoard and the National Association of Charter School Authorizers (see Vander Arks’s resume above) – does it make anyone else wonder if perhaps at least some of these folks were hoping we’d be up in arms over the new tests?

If the final ESEA reauthorization promotes “innovative” testing systems for competency-based systems, as the Senate version does now, while awarding grants for experiments in digital, adaptive learning, as an amendment in House version currently does, will these guys be laughing all the way to the bank?


2 posted on 10/26/2015 6:21:16 AM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

Just wish they’d go back to the 3 Rs


3 posted on 10/26/2015 6:31:43 AM PDT by FES0844
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com
So let's see ... the education system gave us the men and women who fought and won WWII; then gave us the men and women who put a man on the moon.
What's changed in the last 40-50 years? Liberalism.
4 posted on 10/26/2015 6:33:43 AM PDT by oh8eleven (RVN '67-'68)
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com
> "Mr. Vander Ark, who is also a board member of a group called Global Education Futures, which recently put out this document that calls for turning “live education” into a “premium service” and advocates for the development of “competence profile(s)…that would record current state and development of individual’s knowledge & skills across different domains of professional & social life, and would accompany individuals throughout their life,” appears to have had a hand in the “Testing Action Plan” that was released by the White House this weekend."

Sort of sounds like a student indoctrination scheme with a neofascist NWO ring to it doesn't it?

5 posted on 10/26/2015 6:38:43 AM PDT by jsanders2001
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

The supposed superior Common Core standards is a mis-direction, has been all along since school districts have standards that have been developed over the centuries.

The main focus of Common Core, besides dumbing down the population, is the test — nationalized testing. He who writes the tests CONTROLS what is being taught.

What will be required to be taught, especially about American history, would surprise people.

I use my old standby example: When Common Core was placed here in Louisiana by Bobby Jindal, one of the first curriculum changes was to change the course “American history” to “United States history”. There is too much of America invested in the term “American” for the term to be emphasized in student memory.


6 posted on 10/26/2015 6:41:18 AM PDT by odawg
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

Bkmrk.


7 posted on 10/26/2015 6:46:38 AM PDT by RushIsMyTeddyBear (I'm fed up.)
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

M4L common core


8 posted on 10/26/2015 6:47:12 AM PDT by Scrambler Bob (Using 4th keyboard due to wearing out the "/" and "s" on the previous 3)
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To: odawg

Jeb wants to know why he is such a loser


9 posted on 10/26/2015 6:47:17 AM PDT by scooby321
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To: FES0844
I agree...however....

if you correct their spelling, you're stepping on their creativeness.

If they learn to write, they may be able to sign a check some day.

The Constitution is in script and all our early documents. Then there's grandma's old letters.

Learning should be practical, too.

I taught my grandchildren both script and their multiplication tables and corrected her spelling.

10 posted on 10/26/2015 7:02:25 AM PDT by Sacajaweau
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To: odawg
There is too much of America invested in the term “American” for the term to be emphasized in student memory.

This is one change that I don't have a problem with. I was just in Peru, Bolivia and Chile and trust me, they consider themselves, and are, "American". United States is much more precise.

11 posted on 10/26/2015 7:03:34 AM PDT by semimojo
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To: semimojo

Our Founding Fathers bequeathed, specifically, that name to us. We have had the identity “American” since our founding as a nation.

All throughout history, when the term “American” is used, there is no question as to whom it refers.

If American men don’t have the gonads to stand up for their identity, and passively allow another group to assume their identity, with their blessing, then the nation is over.


12 posted on 10/26/2015 7:09:46 AM PDT by odawg
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To: odawg; semimojo

I agree.

I’ve travelled the world also including the Americas and I don’t give a damn about others claiming they are ‘Americans’, but I do give a damn about diluting our identity.

That doesn’t mean we as Americans should just say we’re United Stateians. Heck, Mexico calls itself the United States of Mexico and they reminded me that they too are ‘Americans’. No, they are Mexicans. Peruvians are Peruvians; Bolivians are Bolivians, etc., end of story.

We are Americans, we will remain Americans. If others claim they are Americans, fine. They can go to the end of the line before they try and enter through the Trump Gate.


13 posted on 10/26/2015 7:24:08 AM PDT by Hostage (ARTICLE V)
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

Not teaching children,but training them to become Lemmings


14 posted on 10/26/2015 7:25:34 AM PDT by butlerweave
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

Thanks for posting this piece. It was a chore to make my eyes and mind pay attention to all the acronyms and namby-pamby bureaucratic educational pablum.

But I got through it and it helped to better define just what the hell ‘Common Core’ is all about. It’s about corporatism and branding of children, played out in profits and profiles. Screw ‘em.


15 posted on 10/26/2015 7:27:36 AM PDT by Hostage (ARTICLE V)
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To: butlerweave

Sounds like, by removing age-drive grade promotion and making promotion dependent on proving competency through individualized learning, they’re removing social competitiveness and the stigma associated with failing to keep up with ones peers.

IOW it’s the “everyone gets a trophy” mentality of kids sports applied to the education system.

There’s no way thats good. I know that a heck of a motor kids get passed along to higher grades/social promotion than used to be the case. I mean, when I was a kid the fear of being “held back” was a HUGE motivating force in getting the work done.

But this sort of thing is only going to make the problems from existing social promotion worse, institutionalizing mediocrity by removing a lot of the incentive that challenges kids to push ahead educationally.


16 posted on 10/26/2015 7:40:27 AM PDT by tanknetter
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

bkmk


17 posted on 10/26/2015 9:23:56 AM PDT by AllAmericanGirl44
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To: oh8eleven

Liberaltarian tech heads are the worst.


18 posted on 10/26/2015 10:37:05 AM PDT by SaraJohnson
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com; 2Jedismom; 6amgelsmama; AAABEST; aberaussie; AccountantMom; Aggie Mama; ...

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.

19 posted on 10/26/2015 4:37:06 PM PDT by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith...)
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To: metmom

Please add me to: Homeschool Ping List and the Another Reason to Homeschool Ping list.

I homeschooled out 11 adopted children


20 posted on 10/27/2015 2:26:25 AM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com
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