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مشاهدة النسخة كاملة : Common Core Scrapped Under Florida Gov.?s Executive Order ? Curriculum Matters


ahlam1399
02-02-2019, 12:48 AM
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has signed an executive order to end the Sunshine State’s use of the Common Core State Standards.

By January 2020, the state education department must make recommendations on how to eliminate those standards (https://www.flgov.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/EO-19-32.pdf) “and ensure we return to the basics of reading, writing, and arithmetic,” the order states. The state education commissioner, Richard Corcoran, will submit the plan to the legislature for its 2020 session, DeSantis said*

The order fulfills a campaign promise DeSantis made to end the standards (https://hameed.nwar.uk/vb/In%20the%20Sunshine%20State,%20reading%20and%20mat h%20expectations%20are%20now%20simply%20called%20t he%20Florida%20Standards--but%20the%20state%20appears%20to%20have%20kept%20m ost%20common-core%20content%20while%20adding%20some%20pieces,%2 0including%20a%20cursive%20writing%20mandate%20and %20some%20calculus%20expectations), but leaves plenty of open questions about how long it will take for the state to untangle itself from the expectations. After all, content standards are the foundation upon which the state’s year-end tests, textbooks, and curriculum choices ultimately rest.*

It is also a sign of just how much the state’s education politics have changed. Former Gov. Jeb Bush and his education nonprofit, the Foundation for Excellence in Education, were an unabashed champion of the common core.*

Florida was one of 45 states, plus the district of Columbia, that adopted the common-core standards after they were rolled out in 2009. But as in dozens of other states, the standards ultimately became a political football, especially after the U.S. Department of Education encouraged their adoption.

Florida already made one batch of revisions to the common core back in 2014, adding cursive writing and calculus pieces among other things and rebranding them. But they remain substantially similar to the common core.*

A Changing Political Landscape in Florida

It’s unclear what specifically DeSantis objects to in the standards, which do require students to read, write, and learn standard algorithms for arithmetic. Still, there has long been a coalition in the state to end the use of the standards. Among other things, the Florida Stop Common Core Coalition claims the standards aren’t as rigorous as proponents say. It also contends the standards and related tests “psychologically manipulate” (https://www.flstopcccoalition.org/psychological-manipulation-in-common-core/) students and are meant to inculcate them in various social values.

Concerns about supposed liberal biases have been ascendant in Florida education policy circles. As Education Week has reported, a 2017 law permits anyone in the state to challenge any part of local curriculum decisions on the grounds that they contain bias. Early such challenges have asserted that*history textbooks (https://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2018/10/24/citizen-activists-push-to-revise-history-textbooks.html)*are too left-leaning and challenge the*teaching of evolution and climate change. (http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/curriculum/2018/12/under_flas_new_governor_science_curriculum_challen ges.html) DeSantis has been receptive to those claims, even appointing two proponents of those laws to his transition team.*

Nevertheless, the Florida Education Association sounded a cautiously optimistic note about the changes. A longstanding critic of testing, it sees the announcement as an opportunity to continue the conversation about appropriate testing policy.

“A deliberate look at what students must know is always appropriate, and it’s very encouraging to hear that Gov. DeSantis and Commissioner Corcoran plan to bring teachers and parents to the table as they go about reshaping Florida’s standards,” FEA President Fedrick Ingram in a statement. We’re also pleased to hear that the administration will look at streamlining testing. Parents and our members cite time spent on testing—as versus on genuine teaching and learning— as one of their top concerns. If all stakeholders are heard, we have confidence that this effort can improve public education in Florida.”

A Possible Boost for Civics Education?

The executive order also contains a few other provisions worth noting. It wants the commissioner to recommend ways to improve high school civics, “particularly the principles reflected in the United States Constitution,” so they’re ready for citizenship.

The state already has one of the most extensive civics education mandates of all the states, requiring all students to study the topic and take an end-of-course test in middle school making up nearly a third of their grade.*






Source link (http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/curriculum/2019/02/common_core_scrapped_under_flo.html)



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