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In reply to the discussion: The Common Core could well be Obama's worst policy. [View all]frazzled
(18,402 posts)23. Majority of Educators Support the Common Core State Standards
Besides your complete falsehoods (that the CC was developed with no input from education professionals) and inanities about "being addicted to corporate cash," your post ignores the reality of the Common Core: Most teachers support it.
According to a new poll by the National Education Association, the Common Core State Standards are strongly supported by its members. Roughly two-thirds of educators are either wholeheartedly in favor of the standards (26 percent) or support them with some reservations (50 percent). Only 11 percent of those surveyed expressed opposition. Thirteen percent didnt know enough about the CCSS to form an opinion. Overall, 98 percent of NEA members have heard of the standards. In addition, 79 percent of respondents said they were well or somewhat prepared to implement the new standards. The survey questioned 1200 NEA members and was conducted in July by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research.
In recent months, critics and many politicians have leveled a slew of charges against the standards, including the assertion that they are opposed by the very people, other than students, who will be affected the most classroom teachers. The new NEA poll strongly refutes this claim.
...
What is it about the Common Core that generates educator support? 38 percent cited clearer guidelines and education goals, 27 percent said the standards are already aligned with what they teach, and 23 percent believed the standards are more rigorous.
http://neatoday.org/2013/09/12/nea-poll-majority-of-educators-support-the-common-core-state-standards/
In recent months, critics and many politicians have leveled a slew of charges against the standards, including the assertion that they are opposed by the very people, other than students, who will be affected the most classroom teachers. The new NEA poll strongly refutes this claim.
...
What is it about the Common Core that generates educator support? 38 percent cited clearer guidelines and education goals, 27 percent said the standards are already aligned with what they teach, and 23 percent believed the standards are more rigorous.
http://neatoday.org/2013/09/12/nea-poll-majority-of-educators-support-the-common-core-state-standards/
I don't know what your agenda is--apparently to try to convince us that President Obama thought up and devised the Common Core (untrue by any measure) in his bloodthirsty greed for corporate cash--but its hyperbolic, imprecise, and sometimes plain false arguments are not going to work on informed people. Please, God, tell me you're not an educator.
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Well, this 'corporatist' was able to destroy the two main points of the OP with five seconds
msanthrope
Mar 2014
#7
I think you are conflating two items....the CC itself, and its launch. That individual
msanthrope
Mar 2014
#41
Seriously, Jeff, if you believe that the common core gives school districts and teachers control
Squinch
Mar 2014
#16
I am a teacher and have to call total bs on the notion that this improves creative control of the
dsc
Mar 2014
#26
We have CC in our state..if and that is a IF they are telling the truth Grades are improving here
Tippy
Mar 2014
#12
Having been a PS teacher (before law school) I will tell you that CC will go a long way
msanthrope
Mar 2014
#19
Quite serious. The profession will survive, and be better for higher standards. nt
msanthrope
Mar 2014
#33
I'm not blaming teachers for anything. I think the vast majority of them will do just fine
msanthrope
Mar 2014
#35
Wow. A lot of kool-aid drinking by those who would like to believe that opposition to the common
Squinch
Mar 2014
#18
The idea of national standards sounds good, but I agree with others that it ignores learning issues.
charmay
Mar 2014
#25
I worry that they are putting a straitjacket on teachers. Too many requirements.
reformist2
Mar 2014
#30
Obama's educational policies are the reason I am now an independent, and will not vote for any
liberal_at_heart
Mar 2014
#63
The education of our children, our future is the single most important issue we face
Puzzledtraveller
Mar 2014
#67
Where specifically did you read the "science common core" that disappointed you?
bhikkhu
Mar 2014
#73