castleview
I'm on my 103rd attempt to grown
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2004
- Messages
- 5,509
. I thought that's why IEPs were implemented, to let teachers and parents and administrators come up with plans to help kids who "fall through the cracks" learn what they need to.
IEPs are generally for special needs students. Either way, why would you create a system that would require so many students get IEPs. See Jody's link
"Every year in the United States, nearly 60% of first-year college students discover that, despite being fully eligible to attend college, they are not ready for postsecondary studies."
http://www.highereducation.org/reports/college_readiness/gap.shtml
So many college students shouldn't be in college. But the same people pushing common core are the people who wanted everyone on a college path.
Again, this is specific to your district...not CC. My kids do none of that. But that is because your district is afraid your students will fail and they spend their day teaching to the test. This was a problem with districts struggling 10 years ago when I was sill teaching. Testing does not enhance the curriculum, that is your administrators POV not every administrators.
Can I ask, have you spoken out at a board meeting on this problem? You have been given examples of now two districts who do not buy magic bullet curriculum in a box programs, but actually write their own based on the ability and needs of their students. It would be beneficial if you spoke about doing this in your district. It will take a couple of years, but you could have a new math curriculum implemented and then move to ELA. Help your district see how they are failing the students by implementing the standards in this way.
I will say these threads scare me for our children's future. Not because I think CC is a problem, but CC brought to light the sad, sad state of the American Education system. Students are so far behind that reasonable K standards are things that were not introduced until 6th grade in some districts. Teachers cannot teach because they themselves are lacking the knowledge/skills and our administrators do not know what tools their students need and think that buying and implementing a curriculum without any changes to meet their specific students works
**My last paragraph is not talking about all students, all teachers or all administrators.....but based on the threads and blog post it appears to be a large chunk of our nation.
OMG yes. I've been to plenty of meetings. But I disagree that CC is bringing to light the "sad state of our education system". That's exactly what slimy corporate reformers - the same ones that only test scores to evaluate teachers - want you to believe. Please don't fall for that. CC is just a boon for private curriculum writers and testing software companies.
A few friends of mine our professors at several different colleges, and they tell me all the time how the kids are not ready for their work. One friend teaches English and the students can't even do a basic outline for an essay.
I'm back in school now and can attest to that. But as I stated above, that will happen if you attempt to prepare kids for college when they would be better off going into a trade.
There's no guarantee at all that Common Core will fix any of that. In fact, it may make it much worse, as Dr. Milgrim points out.
That 60 percent would need help doesn't surprise me as these kids are victims of NCLB and Everyday Math and the like. Also, more and more kids are being forced on a college track who 20 years ago would have done something more trade orientated that they were better suited for.
The numbers are so hard to compare to when I was growing up, because far fewer went to college. Most the kids in our neighborhood are going to U-M and MSU, and they don't need any remedial help.
But what if we start graduating far less people from high school? That is where I fear Common Core is leading many children who aren't highly auditory.
Bill Gates said it will take a decade to see the results of CC. That's nice, but my child's schooling will take place during that decade, so no thanks.
This is getting WAY off topic, but this is my biggest beef with the K-12 education system as it stands now. Not everybody can go to college. Not everybody SHOULD go to college. Apprenticeship is something I think should be seriously considered.
See my above comments. What's sad is that schools are taking the blame for that when just about every teacher and administrator I know is against putting all kids on the same path.
There's also no guarantee CC won't help. YOU pointed out most kids went to college before CC (implying things were fine), FlightlessDuck simply pointed while they went to college, the majority weren't prepared for it.
Have you gone to a school board meeting to express your concerns?
If you are speaking to me, yes I bug the school board. We did have a problem a few years ago when they saw their job as simply rubber stamping what the superintendent said. But that has improved a little. As for whether CC will work, my kid shouldn't be the guinea pig. He's already dealt with teaching tactics (forced upon the teachers) that I think have hurt him.
I have to be missing something because there is not only nothing wrong with the problem but it isn't related to CC in the slightest. I would have seen this exact same word problem in the 80's when I was in 3rd grade and that was long before CC or NCLB.
If the student didn't know what domestically means they just ask their parent or the teacher and then do the math problem once they know the vocabulary. It is simple subtraction. The point of word problems is to force the student to apply mathematical concepts to real world scenarios and I had a lot of word problems in school.
OP, are you implying that word problems are somehow new to CC because they are not. I remember doing word problems while learning relational operators (<, >, =) in 2nd grade so doing them in 3rd grade is also not something introduced by CC. It seems like CC is now used as the reason why parents or teachers don't like any aspect of curriculum even when CC has nothing to do with it.
It depends on your district. I graduated HS from the same district as my dad and both in the 60's when he graduated and the 90's when I graduated there were both college tracks and vocational tracks and the district still has both today. The vocational choices have changed over time (and it is called something different then vocational) but has not gone away. You can still take your core high school classes like math and English and then go off to class to become a carpenter or auto mechanic all in the same school district. There are also some vocational tracks that meld the two, like medical assisting and programming, where you will likely be going on to college but are getting a better base in your high school years for your future degree then the standard curriculum would offer.
You probably had a much better background before you did that problem. You probably also were taught from a build up theory which is math as far as I'm concerned. The curriculums he has used are top down and sometimes sideways.
Have you thought about math tutoring programs to help him get the basics you feel he's missing?
Yes. We are still trying to pinpoint exactly what the issue is though. He obviously gets it in the end, but why is he shutting down? I've thought long and hard, and I'm still not sure. I know they are so hung up on writing out the steps that he feels he can ONLY do it that way, even if there is a simpler method.

