While maybe in poker you can beat something with nothing, that’s not true in politics, as detractors of usage of the Common Core State Standards in Louisiana found out yesterday in the House Education Committee.
A pair of bills met with defeat
at the hands of the committee that would have significantly altered or derailed
for some time, if not entirely defeated, the program. Developed
under the auspices of the nation’s governors with input from education
administrators, teachers, and academicians, CCSS sets up conceptual benchmarks that
students are to attain, concentrating on critical thinking ability, while
leaving content up to states. Having the same set of concepts as learning goals
enables across states comparative
testing under four different systems, which are related to standards used
to test internationally. Louisiana previously committed to participation in the
one known as Partnership for Assessment
Readiness for College and Careers.
One bill, HB
558 by state Rep. Cameron Henry,
would have removed the state’s participation from PARCC and, unless replaced by
other actions with participation in one of the other three systems, would have
mooted much of the utility of CCSS, for while the advantage of a program to
stimulate critical thinking would have remained, no longer would results be
comparable and additional data given to assessing how well educators were
doing, making it difficult to ensure performance of a quality job. The other
bill, HB
381 by state Rep. Brett Geymann,
would have put a moratorium on CCSS implementation (which would have gone into
effect after this year’s trial run and testing) and launch a process that could
come up with something completely different, with no guarantee that this could
be done, or could come up with anything better, or have any accountability to
whatever result it produced.
Both were defeated, largely
because CCSS opposition in general has been based more upon emotive rather than
rational responses – although in the specific cases of politicians involved,
for some of these opponents their reasons were tied to perceptions of presumed
political career advancement. Concerning HB 558, the issue of data protection
has become conflated with that of using PARCC as the evaluative instrument when
they in fact are different and solving for the legitimate
concerns of the former does not entail scrapping entirely the latter. Nor
did the bill send the state to any of the other three systems, which would have
left it in limbo for an unspecified period.
Supporters of HB 381 also tended
to allow emotive considerations to conflate the extraneous with the essential.
Louisiana uniquely decided to allow the districts themselves to come up with
the content of the curriculum to match standards and to train their teachers,
which went smoothly in some districts but in discombobulated fashion in others.
Superintendent of Education John
White in retrospect now belatedly realizes, and has directed DOE to provide,
more
direction and assistance from the state level, but this is a problem in
process, not in concept.
Perhaps no criticism of CCSS
confounds logic as much as the claim that it does not represent quality in
standards at least as good as what the state has presently, or that it in fact
is worse. Representatives
from a number of organizations, including those who have championed recent
effective education reforms such as charter school approaches, value-added
measurements of teaching, and school accountability measures, almost exclusively
believe the largely-untried standards are an improvement. Yet opponents are
wont to argue against them by saying these never have been proven to be
effective, which distracts from the real issue that not only have they not been
proven ineffective, but, more importantly, this does not mean automatically
something else must be better. Why should CCSS get axed, when the state vetted
it four years ago (where were the opponents then?), when it’s been undergoing
implementation since, when there’s no proof of its ineffectiveness, and there’s
no alternative on the horizon other than the current default already undergoing
change – and especially when complaints about its quality by some parents and
teachers is that, if anything, it’s
too demanding (which regrettably
probably speaks more for the abilities of the complainers than as any genuine
criticism of the program)?
For in the final analysis, all
the opponents had to play was feelings about this or that and conjectures about
conspiracies, with no hard evidence to demonstrate unambiguous demerits of CCSS
nor any plan to roll out anything better. This captured neatly the populist
dimension of Louisiana’s political culture – find a bogeyman, impute
malevolence, spin an apocalyptic scenario should not the out-group be
confronted, and present yourself as the instrument by which to lead the
confrontation – in its method for a politician to gain political power or
simply to reaffirm his relevance. But principled it was not, and enough
lawmakers needed to be shown on principle, and could not be, why CCSS was so
inferior, to the point that it was better to scrap it with nothing waiting in
the wings to take its place.
This does not mean that CCSS is
the answer to all problems, nor that vigilance should not be maintained to
ensure it does not get hijacked and turned into that bogeyman detractors warn
about, nor it now is absolved of demonstrated difficulties such as its implementation
and data privacy safeguards. And there are opponents out there who will provide
a more principled basis by which to defeat it – but based on mythology
concerning various aspects of testing, rigor in learning methods, and fantasies
about corporate America. It does mean that more compelling argumentation than
innuendo by opponents, rendered factually and logically, is necessary to change
enough minds for them to win the debate.
ReplyDeleteOh, where was our leader, Governor Jindal, in all this?
Oops, he indicated he was against CCSS and for these bills!
Let's see: he was for it, before he was against it.
Yep, that's our guy. Integrity, integrity, integrity!!!
[Aside: you forgot to mention any of this in your post.]
I see this morning: another "spending freeze" by our marvelously managing Governor. I've heard him tell us all how the economy is booming and better than any other in the south. Where are the revenues from his thriving economy?
ReplyDeleteWhy don't you write about this, Professor, and explain to us lesser ones how we just don't, and can't, understand what is going on?????????
ReplyDeleteYep, another mid-year budget cut in a BOOMING ECONOMY????????
Read Forgotston latest post, Professor Cockalorum, and tell us how he is wrong!