Thursday, October 25, 2012

New standards, old content-lite teaching ? Joanne Jacobs

New Common Core Standards won?t help students learn if schools stick with the same old content and teaching strategies, writes Matthew Levey, a parent of three children in public schools and the husband of a teacher.

Non-fiction matters more than ever before, according to Common Core. So how does my tested-above-proficient 8th grader come to believe that the Confederacy was winning the Civil War prior to the Battle of Gettysburg? Perhaps it starts with history textbook with too many empty graphics, organized around themes rather than time. Maybe it starts by asking them to write about the battle before they were assigned the right chapters in the book? If content is king, children don?t seem to be getting enough.

?Children also need much more explicit instruction? to put content into context, Levey writes.

My daughter?s first written assignment this year was to imagine herself as a delegate in 1787, and explain whether she would vote for the Constitution if the Bill or Rights wasn?t included. Since my daughter hadn?t learned anything about the small states vs. big states debate, or any of the other big ideas that roiled Philadelphia that summer, all she could express was her feelings.

. . . Asked to write about the inevitability (or not) of the Civil War, my son struggled. He knew about slavery and industrialization, but years of the Teacher?s College writing model used in our local schools left him ill-prepared to organize his knowledge effectively. Judith Hochman, whose program is credited, in part, for helping save New Dorp High School correctly observes that ?much writing instruction prior to ninth grade ? is based around journals, free writing, memoirs, poems and fiction.?

The result, Hochman notes, is that students don?t know ?how to communicate effectively to an audience. Students are given little or no preparation for the types of expository writing required in high school, college, and the workplace.?

Raising standards without redesigning the curriculum and retraining teachers is doomed to fail, Levey predicts.?

Via Core Knowledge, where Robert Pondiscio has started a squishiness watch on the upcoming common social studies standards.??A draft framework will be released next month, he notes. ?If a?report by Education Week?s Catherine Gewertz?is any indication, they might be so devoid of curricular content as to be functionally meaningless.???The new standards won?t detail issues or events students should study, Gewertz writes. Instead they?ll describe ?the structure, tools and habits of mind? they should develop.

No content? Pondiscio offers the?Core Knowledge Sequence?for Pre-K to 8th grade as a reference.

Source: http://www.joannejacobs.com/2012/10/new-standards-old-content-lite-teaching/

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