Image credit: greenecountyteaparty.ohio.org
Gov. Kasich is still supporting Common Core, but the cleveland.com report on hearings and testimony in Columbus has a lot of useful links:
CLEVELAND, Ohio – The state legislature continues its debate
about the Common Core educational standards this
week, following a week that saw opponents of the Core criticize them, Gov. John Kasich weighing in on the
debate and two national polls offering varying national looks at support for
the Core.
Testimony started last week
on a bill that would kill the multi-state education standards
in Ohio. It resumed Tuesday and continues with testimony both
Wednesday morning and evening, with an afternoon break.
Testimony continues
Wednesday with Eric Gordon, chief executive officer of the Cleveland
schools, and Alan Rosskamm of the Breakthrough
charter school networkscheduled to testify in support of the
Common Core.
Marsha Mockabee, president of the Urban League of
Cleveland, is also scheduled to testify.
Linda
Gojak, a mathematics professor at John Carroll University who
is the immediate past president of the National Council of
Teachers of Mathematics, testified for the new standards on
Tuesday. See her written testimony HERE.
Also testifying Tuesday on
behalf of the standards was Char Shryock, director of curriculum for the Bay
Village schools. See her written testimony HERE.
Last week's Common Core
opponents from Northeast Ohio included state school board member Sarah Fowler,
who represents Ashtabula, Geauga, Portage and Trumbull counties, along with
portions of Lake and Summit counties. See her written testimony HERE.
Kasich last week said Ohio
needs stronger standards than the ones it has used the last several years.
While not backing the Common Core by name, Kasich supported the state's new
standards – standards that are mostly the Common Core.
He said that local
districts need the freedom to set their own curriculum to meet those standards
and that he believes they have that ability.
Kasich said he has not seen
enough evidence to kill the standards – as House Bill 597 now being debated would do –
but could re-evaluate his position if the hearings in the House find any new
information.
Here are a few news
accounts of Kasich's comments, given in response to a question when he was on
the road.
Here is a recording of the
short news conference where he discussed the Core, provided by Kasich's office: Kasich on Common Core July
2014.m4a
Spokesman Rob Nichols made
one key clarification to Kasich's remarks: "In that second sentence – he
said: 'We want local school boards to develop the curricula to "set"
those standards, advised by parents who live in those districts.' He
should have said 'meet' those standards, not 'set' those standards."
Nationally, two polls
dominated Common Core discussion, with their results showing increased
awareness of what the Common Core is, but mixed feelings about whether schools
should use the standards.
Here's what an annual poll
by Phi Delta Kappa and Gallup found, according to the two groups:
"Last year, almost
two-thirds of Americans had never heard of the CCSS. This year, 81 percent said
they had heard about the CCSS and 47 percent said they had heard a great deal
or a fair amount. And what they're hearing has led to opposition: 60 percent of
those questioned said they oppose the CCSS, with the biggest factor being a
belief that the standards will limit the flexibility of teachers to teach what
they think is best."
Another poll by Education
Next, a magazine published by the Hoover Institution at
Stanford University, found declining support for the Common Core, but
supporters still outnumbering opponents.
From the Education Next website:
Although a majority of the
public continues to support the standards set by CCSSI, and supporters
outnumber opponents by a two-to-one margin, trend lines show serious erosion in
support. In 2013, no less than 65% of the general public favored the standards,
but that portion is now just 53% (see Figure 1). Meanwhile, the opposition has
doubled from 13% to 26%. (The share taking no position on the issue has
remained essentially unchanged, at 21% in 2014.)
See also this report by Education Week on the
Education Next poll and this National Public Radio report on how wording of poll
questions may have influenced the results.
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For more background, go here for some good resources. Michelle Malkin reported on the maneuvering next door in Indiana earlier this year. Indiana parents are winning, and Ohioans Against Common Core can too.