Your district may have not bought a one-size-fits-all curriculum, which is great, but the testing IS one size fits all. In all the states that have rolled out the Common Core beta testing, the bulk of the students have failed, year after year. The opt-outs are strongest in the states where children have faced this testing.
CC standards demand a heavy emphasis on language. If your child has a language-based disability, as mine does, it immediately puts the curriculum out of reach. Now math, which was his strong suit, is trapped behind a curriculum that will fail you if you get the right answer if you can't answer who and why you got the answers in multiple sentences.
CC also demands that you are at grade level, even if you are not because of disability.
Next year, they will want to test my son for up to 20 hours with a test that is 5 years over his reading ability on items he has never been taught.
I do not plan to subject him to that.
Here's an article that explains more:
Common Core worrisome for special ed students
New standards may be 'overwhelming' for children with learning challenges
http://www.mv-voice.com/news/2014/02/18/common-core-worrisome-for-special-ed-students
Parents of children with learning challenges have reason to be concerned about the new national curriculum standards, known as Common Core, according to a pair of local special education officials.
"It's going to be a big problem that's going to lead to a lot of problems for a lot of kids," said Christine Case-Lo, co-founder of the Learning Challenges Committee, which functions a bit like a multi-school district PTA for special needs children.
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Common Core tests will require many more written-out answers, which explain how a pupil arrived at an answer. Not only will test-takers be asked what but now they'll be asked how and why.
"For many of the children who have learning differences, getting to the answer is difficult enough," Ruthie Wunderling, a learning specialist, said. Now they will not only be asked to answer a math problem, but they'll be required to explain how they arrived at their answer with proper syntax, grammar and punctuation.