Saturday, October 5, 2013

GOVERNOR MARKELL OF DELAWARE MOCKS CRITICISM OF COMMON CORE AS "MYTHOLOGY"

GOVERNOR MARKELL OF DELAWARE
DEEPLY INVOLVED IN COMMON CORE
DENIES FEDERAL TAKEOVER OF EDUCATION
COVERS UP SOCIALIST AIMS
"HIGHER STANDARDS" THAT ARE REALLY LOWER

Governor's Jack Markell's Weekly Message 

September 6, 2013

Misleads Public with Erroneous Claims 
About Common Core
Published on Sep 6, 2013 on YouTube:
In his weekly message, filmed at Silver Lake Elementary School in Middletown, Governor Markell discusses the Common Core State Standards and their impact on student achievement in Delaware. 
"This is a bipartisan effort, driven by states across the country, to raise the bar for our students without interference from federal mandates," said Governor Markell. "It emphasizes the ability of our next generation of workers -- your kids, our kids -- to apply lessons learned in the classroom to real-world situations."

                                     

MARKELL CLAIMS: "THIS IS NOT ABOUT A NATIONAL CURRICULUM" (WHEN IT IS!)




  • FROM STATE OF DELAWARE WEBSITE: 
"The Governor made education one of his top priorities. As a result, Delaware won President Obama's Race to the Top competition to significantly improve public schools. Delaware’s plan was ranked first of 40 state plans by the U.S. Department of Education and was one of just two plans to receive initial funding.
Governor Markell has also worked to advocate on behalf of Delawareans and bring national attention to his home state through a number of leadership roles including his recent role (2012-2013) as Chair of the National Governors Association (NGA). His Chair’s initiative was A Better Bottom Line: Employing People with Disabilities. The Governor is:
  • Chairman of the National Board of Directors for Jobs for America's Graduates (JAG)
  • National Governors Association (NGA) Executive Committee Member
  • Former Chair, National Governors Association
  • Former Co-Chair of the Common Core Standards Initiative, a joint effort of NGA and the Council of Chief State School Officers to develop Common Core Standards for education
  • Former Board Member, National Assessment Governing Board, nominated by US Education Secretary, Arne Duncan
  • Former Chair of the Democratic Governors Association (DGA)
  • Former Chair of the Education, Early Childhood and Workforce Committee, NGA (July 2010 - Dec 2010)
  • Former Vice Chair of the NGA Economic Development and Commerce Committee (Jan 2010 - July 2010)"

MARKELL MOCKS COMMON CORE DOUBTERS AS MYTHOLOGIZERS

























































Markell tells MSNBC about criticism of Common Core:
“No, because it’s not based in fact,” Markell responded. “It’s based on this mythology.”
Markell's Washington Post op-ed article filled with an "abundance of inaccuracies and lies by omission" about Common Core as described in: 
Markell's Washington Post article reprinted in full here, as seen originally at:

Back to previous page

The tea party is wrong on the Common Core curriculum

By Jack Markell, Published: June 9

Jack Markell, the governor of Delaware, co-chaired the Common Core Standards Initiative.
Over the past three years, 45 states have adopted the Common Core State Standards. These objectives were developed to ensure that America’s students acquire the academic skills they need to reach their full potential.
Yet the Common Core standards are under serious assault by the tea party movement, which argues that they were developed by the federal government [“A new battle for tea party,” front page, May 31]. This assertion lacks any basis in fact. The Common Core was developed during a year-long process by state leaders — Democrats and Republicans — along with highly respected members of the business community and people in education, including many teachers.
Rather than representing a takeover by the federal government, Common Core shows why states have always led in the area of education policy. State leaders realized that we can best accomplish our goals by working together with common guidelines that allow us to raise the bar for our students and share resources without interference from federal mandates.
Opponents of higher standards also argue that the Common Core will eliminate local control of a school’s curriculum. This, too, is simply not true. Previously, each state had set its own standards; now, the majority of states will have the same ones. Local school boards have had, and will continue to have, discretion in how to work with their schools and educators to teach those higher objectives — from the texts they use to the teaching techniques they employ. The difference is that the expectations for a high school junior in Delaware will be the same as in California.
If the crusaders against Common Core don’t think this is important, they should speak with military families. Their stories — told to support groups and educators — illuminate the benefits of having expectations for students that don’t vary by Zip code and that prepare their children for a global economy. They talk about moving to a new state with better academic standards, and how their kids initially struggle to meet more challenging goals but ultimately flourish beyond the levels that their previous accomplishments would have suggested.
Luckily, though opponents’ voices are loud, they are not the majority. The Common Core effort represents one of the few initiatives so fundamental to the prosperity of our country that it has received support from organizations as diverse as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, teachers unions, the National Parent Teacher Association and the U.S. Army.
Supporters of the standards recognize that we are in a global war for jobs, best characterized as a global war for talent. According to Gallup, 3 billion people are looking for jobs in a world that has only 1.2 billion good jobs to offer. To compete and win on the global stage, our country’s leaders must demand more of ourselves and do our students the favor of demanding more of them. That means an education that doesn’t just produce diplomas but also gives our students the tools they need to compete with their counterparts around the world for college admission and careers.
The Common Core initiative is driven by the highest international bench marks as well as a thorough, evidence-based study of the skills required for students to attain college and career readiness by the time they don their high school graduation gowns. We have maintained an intense focus on the ability of our next generation of workers to apply lessons learned in the classroom to real-world situations. In today’s economy, these skill sets are not controversial. They include “writing arguments to support claims,” “using probability to evaluate the outcomes of decisions,” “participating effectively in a range of collaborative discussions” and “making sense of math problems and persevering in solving them.” The Common Core standards will ensure that students gain these necessary skills.
It’s time to focus on the difficult work that comes with effectively implementing higher standards across hundreds of thousands of classrooms. We cannot let fringe movements distract us from this goal, and we cannot let this moment pass. All of us who believe in the Common Core must vocally and visibly debunk the myths — and fight for a future that gives all of our nation’s children the best chance to succeed.
Read more on this topic: Michael Gerson: GOP fear of Common Core education standards unfounded Katrina vanden Heuvel: Stakes on standardized testing are too high Deborah Kenny: The right curriculum for kindergarten is play Joshua P. Starr: Schools need a timeout on standardized tests Valerie Strauss: Five key questions about the Common Core standards Alexandra Petri: Does the Common Core mean the end of reading?
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