Posted on 05/12/2015 11:41:25 AM PDT by Academiadotorg
In Austin, Texas, this SXSWedu sessions description sums up the matter: What if job performance was measured by a year-end test aiming to boil all of our work down to a single score? As meaningless as that would be, thats how our education system works, with the majority of instruction and student evaluation driven toward a single, year-end test.
LEGO Educations Stephan Turnipseed proclaims that employers want creativity, which is the number-one thing they are not getting. We need to drive creativity. The task ahead is not about learning creativity, but about unlearning it. Creative workers are desired in America, and if they cannot be cultivated here, Turnipseed warns, they will be found elsewhere.
Above all, we must free the teachers to teach, free the students to learn, [and] free the system to operate in an effective way.
Turnipseed is concerned with high-stakes testing. Children are told every day in our classrooms that theres only one right answer. However, he is careful not to dismiss standardized tests entirely. We need the school setting to more closely resemble how we actually lead our people, urges Turnipseed in an appeal for rethinking our outdated educational model.
Another panelist, Linda Darling-Hammond of the Stanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education, boldly asserts that [w]e are out-of-step with the rest of the world.
In her mind the issue of equity requires acute attention. In the United States
we have greater rates of child poverty, more segregation which has been growing, she argues. She believes that we spend less money on kids in low-wealth districts
[and] we have an unequal distribution of educators and curriculum. As for Common Core state standards, Darling-Hammond says they are adding performance tasks and open-ended items and more higher-order thinking skills. She claims that Hong Kong and Singapore have adopted similar learning benchmarks yet argues We have too much mandated from the federal and in some cases the state levels. States and local communities, Darling-Hammond professed, ought to create their own curriculums.
So we should have our kids forced to go to a bunch of meetings and spend most of their day dealing with e-mails?
Get the social issues out of the curricula. Teach fundamentals.
..after watching Dr Duke Pesta on Youtube, I know all I need to know about CCSS
You racist, you!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.