What they’re saying about Common Core and Education in NC

Three items ran through my Twitter feed yesterday which nearly made me do a spit-take.

First, the new “nonpartisan news” non-profit, EducationNC, ran one of its first major articles. It was from the Governors Aide, Eric Guckian, titled “Every student deserves the right to reach their potential“.

The opening two paragraphs made me facepalm. The purpose of education for Eric Guckian and the Governor is so kids can get jobs and Mr. Guckian includes “most North Carolinians” in that belief:

Every child deserves an effective education that truly prepares them for success. The data is crystal clear – those states with the greatest increase in educational outcomes are the states with the largest increases in the income of their people and businesses.

Governor McCrory and I believe what most North Carolinians believe, that the purpose of an education is to gain the skills and knowledge that you need to get a job, earn money, and enjoy life.

Here’s the problem with these statements above — they are based on the idea that you can regiment education and therefore regiment what a child does in later life.  Education is for the development of basic skills that will enable any given child to prosper in life. It’s not about dictating a skill set businesses believe they need at any given point. Education is an idiosyncratic as the individual’s possible future.

Imagine your child grows up and finds a job that interests them as a technician at a drug company.  Now imagine your child grows up and his school has dictated to him that he will have to learn certain skills that require he end up as a technician at a drug company. See the distinction?

There is nothing wrong with business having a voice in education or looking to enhance a student’s experience. The focus on high school students is a relevant avenue for business, but the idea business needs should dictate the entire course of education before that level is a disservice to the child and to the community at large.

It has been proven time and again that businesses cannot predict outcomes or demand. Business has been unable to keep up with innovative trends and arguably has institutional blindness, yet business is increasingly taking up all the seats at the education discussion table to dictate what skills are being taught. In fact, with the introduction of Common Core, one can argue the own all the seats and the table itself.

I wasn’t sure whether to laugh or cry with this section of it; emphasis added:

When it comes to getting real results in education we must agree on 3 things:

First: No economy can grow faster than the rate at which the quality of its workforce improves.

Second: Our workforce can only improve when we have an education system that is preparing the next generation of leaders for the world of the future, not the past.

Third: We need to commit ourselves to being student focused. Our focus should be on the students and outcomes, not grown-ups and money.

“Outcomes”
DICTATED outcomes.

So, let’s look at that excerpt’s points above and examine how children are being characterized in a more abbreviated manner:
First: Workforce.
Second: Workforce.
Third: Students.

Second, NPR has an article out about North Carolina and the Academic Standards Review Commission.  It’s titled, “North Carolina Rethinks The Common Core“.

The NPR article has one of those sections in it where a teacher is claiming “just a set of standards” has made her a better math teacher.

As a result, Amy Cuthbertson swears she’s become a better math teacher. The 21-year veteran points to the success she’s having with her ninth graders at Dalton L. McMichael High School in Rockingham County. Math scores here are up. Cuthbertson says that’s in large part because students are learning how to apply advanced math concepts to the real world.

Statements like that make should concern parents.  What kind of teacher they were in the first place if they can’t recognize the concerns and flaws in the Common Core math?
[RelatedJames Milgram Speaks about Common Core Math 6th-12th – videos]

Some of the top identified flaws of the Math standards:

  • The Math standards are not high reaching. Like the ELA, the Math standards prepare students for admission to non-selective community colleges only.
  • Views Algebra II as college ready; students will not be prepared for STEM college coursework. Only 39% of students who enter college with Algebra II completion graduate with a 4 year degree and only 2.1% graduate with a STEM degree.
  • Unusual and unproven approach to geometry.
  • Include significant mathematical sophistication written at a level beyond understanding of most parents, students, administrators, decision makers and many teachers.
  • Lack coherence and clarity to be consistently interpreted by students, parents, teachers, administrators, curriculum developers, textbook developers/publishers, and assessment developers.
  • Standards are inappropriately placed, including delayed requirement for standard algorithms, which will hinder student success and waste valuable instructional time. Delays development of some key concepts and skills.
  • Treats important topics unevenly. This will result in inefficient use of instructional and practice time. Math Standards are not well-organized at the high school level. Some important topics are insufficiently covered. The standards are not divided into defined courses.

The NPR article goes on to quote both co-chairs of the ASRC.  Scroll down the article to the section titled, ‘Review and Replace‘.   Metcalf and Peek disagree on the intent of SB 812.  The author of SB 812, Sen. Tillman, has unequivocally indicated the intent is to replace and not just rehash or rename. I noticed NPR did not include a comment from Tillman.

I give NPR credit for noting Peek’s ties to the Governor, but NPR fails to mention Peek’s other important background pieces and vigorous support of Common Core. Those exclusions by NPR made these sentences (below) near the end a bit awkward for those of us who did our homework.

Peek says he’s confident that the commission will reach a consensus if, and only if, it’s based on the educational merits of the standards.

And I can tell you right now that we’re not going to be used as a tool for some political outcome,” he says.

All of the political ties aside, there have been visible signs that Mr. Peek is genuinely concerned with the math aspect of Common Core.

Third, The NC Schools Superintendents Association (NCSSA) has released their “North Carolina Guide to Strengthening Our Public Schools“.

Don’t get too excited, it’s more of the same empty catch phrases and buzzwords we’ve seen over the last few years coupled with the underlying theme we need to throw more money at the problems to fix things.

Do these recommendations below look familiar?

Prepared Graduates | All North Carolina students will graduate prepared for college, careers, and citizenship.

Assessment | School districts will use multiple, balanced, and appropriate assessments to measure student growth and achievement.

Instructional Delivery | All North Carolina public school students will receive high quality instruction delivered by the nation’s best teachers.

Digital Learning | North Carolina will embrace digital learning to transform our public schools and communities.

Human Capital | Develop North Carolina’s human capital for the provision of high-quality public education.

Funding Public Education | North Carolina will rank 25th nationwide in public school funding by 2025.

 

Note that in the full report, when discussing ‘human capital’, the opinions of the Aspen Institute and Linda Darling Hammond have been used to inform the section.

And, of course, CCSSO President and NC Superintendent “applauds” this ‘plan’:

Jan. 14, 2015
State Superintendent June Atkinson ApplaudsLocal Superintendents’ Guide to Strengthening Public Schools 

The following statement is from State Superintendent June Atkinson regarding the North Carolina School Superintendents Association’s new North Carolina Guide to Strengthening Our Public Schools, available at http://www.ncasa.net/assets/1/20/supt-guide-press_release_1-13-15_(2).pdf?1248:

“Local school superintendents in North Carolina made history this week when they stood united to unveil their vision and leadership document on how North Carolina can strengthen its public schools. I applaud this leadership and support the identified focus areas, especially related to prepared graduates, digital learning, human capital and funding our public schools at a higher level. While every school district has its own unique challenges and strengths, all public schools stand to benefit when educators stand together on behalf of the 1.5 million public school students in our state.”

 

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Academic Standards Review Commission, Common Core, EDUCATION, NC Ed Updates | Tagged , | 3 Comments

CCSSO President Questions Testing For Homeschoolers

AtkinsonPresElect

Dr. Atkinson is now full president of the CCSSO

Yesterday, I reported on the Holshouser Legislators Retreat 2015. This was an invitation only event with various NC educrats, legislators, “non-profits” and businesses discussing your child’s education future without you – again.

One tweet I left out of the previous story was from the President of the Council of Chief State School Officers. Folks in North Carolina know her as the NC State Superintendent, June Atkinson.

Dr. Atkinson tweeted this question out at the Holhouser event:

What tests is she referring to exactly?  Students in North Carolina, regardless of their ‘school choice’, are tested at various points.  The point of choosing one education route over another to avoid standardized testing is gaining momentum.

Dr. Atkinson is couching a narrative in her question and being a bit intellectually dishonest with tying ‘school choice’ to public school accountability measures. Notice she doesn’t mention charter schools?   [Flashback: Atkinson and ‘Schools of Terror’]

This question of Atkinson’s is arguably about casting homeschool and private school in a bad light because they pull students (and revenue) away from public schools.  Also, we can’t have kids escaping the public system and having various data sets collected now can we?

School choice is about the student and their family having the opportunity to choose the best educational option for them, usually outside of the public school system. That choice could be homeschool, private school or charter school.  The three can be, and often are, very different in a variety of ways. The choice made by the parents and students is also multi-faceted. Arguably, all three ‘school choice’ options mentioned here are different from public school in just as many ways.

If Dr. Atkinson is attempting to make the argument that part of the ‘school choice’ made by parents and students needs to fit into a one-size-fits all public school testing regimen, she’s missed the point of ‘choice’ entirely.

 UPDATE:  State task force recommends ending end-of-grade testing

Atkinson is quoted:

The beauty of this proposal is giving great empowerment to school districts and teachers,” Atkinson said. “It gets it back to a place where we have balance.
“We do not have balance (right now).”

But let’s subject homeschoolers to public tests, right?

Related Reading:

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), EDUCATION, Homeschool, June Atkinson, Testing, Twitter | Tagged | 14 Comments

Another Education “Non-profit”: EducationNC

On Monday, yet another ‘non-profit’ dealing with education was launched in North Carolina.

I went digging:

This was the answer:

“Nonpartisan”…right.
Nothing about Education in North Carolina is “nonpartisan” or at least never stays that way. Just follow the money.

So, according to Ms. Rash’s tweet, apparently the Lt. Governor is/was involved here?

Yes, Lt. Governor Forest was at the EWA Conference in a session called “Political points of view on the Common Core“. EducationNC reported on it. That’s about the sum of the connection there.

Note the host listed in the opening moments of the video of this conference which EducationNC has embedded on their site: “UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication”. The title of the session is “Taking political stock of the Common Core“.

A second session was reported on by EducationNC called “EWA Conference: The southern context of Common Core“. Check out the opening credits and note who was presenting. The opening question in the video is ‘why has Common Core generated such political heat in the South?’ No subtext or bias there. No sir.

I’ll take a look at both of these presentations in a separate article. In the meantime, remember these sessions, who hosted them and who presented in them as you read on. Be sure to read to the very end of the article.

Let’s take a closer look at EducationNC, shall we?
Remember, EducationNC is “a nonpartisan news source engaging NC in a bipartisan conversation”.

It is my personal assertion that this organization is less about “nonpartisan news” in education and more about branding and steering education narratives in North Carolina with an eye towards influencing public opinion.  Time will tell, but my gut says this is a PR outfit dressed up as a non-profit. Looking at their board and supporters lends some credence to this hunch; same people, same money.

All of what I am about to present is public record.

EducationNC Launch:  January 12, 2015
Tagline on the website: “Including you in a conversation about our public schools”
Website: https://www.ednc.org/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/EducationNC/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/educationnc
Physical address: EducationNC 220 Fayetteville Street, Third Floor, Raleigh NC 27601
Mailing Address: EducationNC PO Box 1636 Raleigh NC 27602
EducationNC is a 501(c)(3):  View the NC Secretary of State profile for EducationNC. Registering agent is C. Conner Lee.
2014 990 Filing: View the November 2014 filing that lists Andrew Holton as the director.

EducationNC was previously called “Emerging Tar Heel Leaders Inc.” according to their website:

“EdNC was founded by Gerry Hancock and Ferrel Guillory. Mebane Rash serves as the CEO, President, and Editor-in-Chief. The CEO has independent control of all content. Our Board of Directors guides the mission, strategic vision, and financial sustainability of EdNC. EdNC is a 501(c)(3), formerly known as Emerging Tar Heel Leaders Inc., and our work is supported by foundation grants, corporate contributions, individual contributions, and event revenue. “

Emerging Tar Heel Leaders used to have a website that resided at “www.ethl.org ” according to its LinkedIn profile. The website is now defunct, however the WayBack Machine offered some archived page hits. The partners for Emerging Tar Heels included Blue Cross Blue Shield NC (BCBSNC). EducationNC’s board includes Brad Wilson, President and CEO of BCBCNC.

Gerry Hancock is also involved with NC Public Schools Forum. As are many of the EducationNC board members.  Ferrell Guillory has ties to Jim Hunt, The Hunt Institute and UNC. According to the excerpt on EducationNC for Guillory:

Executive Director, Program in Public Life & Professor of the Practice of Journalism, UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication
Author, Reporter, and Former Editor of the Editorial Page, News & Observer Member, NC Journalism Hall of Fame

Staff
EducationNC’s staff list consists of Mebane Rash, Alisa Herr and Alex Grandos. From looking at their bios, one has to wonder where they will draw the education  is aside from having attended various schools?

Mebane Rash is the CEO of EducationNC. A search at the Board of Elections shows Rash is not registered to vote in NC, at least not under the name Mebane Rash.  As an attorney who, per her LinkedIn profile, previously worked for The N.C. Center for Public Policy Research. Her bio is light on education and heavy on legal and states that, ” she currently serves on the inaugural Z. Smith Reynolds Leadership Council. ” Just remember who Z. Smith Reynolds funds. Read the whole bio.  Update: Apparently, I’ve been informed that Margaret is Ms Rash’s first name, not Mebane. This made it possible to locate her voter registration.

Alisa Herr is the CTO with a masters in Library Science and, according to her LinkedIn is very much into web development.  A search of the Board of Elections showed Herr has no voter record available.

Alex Granados, according to his bio, was a graduate from “the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a degree in journalism in 2005″.  Mr. Granados also has no voter registration record for viewing at the NC state Board of Elections.

It’s a heck of an odd coincidence that all three of these individuals have no voter records available for public view. Perhaps it is a glitch. Try looking for yourself.

Board of Directors
Many political heavy hitters, NC education officials and business people are on the list of the Board of Directors for EducationNC, including multiples ties back to the UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication.

Who funds this ‘nonpartisan news’ non-profit?
Just look at their “supporters” page, which I have included further down under the heading “EducationNC Supporters”.

As one can see from that list, a lot of cash is flowing into yet another ‘education non-profit’. See anyone familiar?  SAS, Goodnight, BEST NC, Z. Smith Reynolds…

What or who is the Low Wealth Schools Consortium (LWSC)? How are they Low Wealth and have $100k to drop on another non-profit? Apparently Superintendent Dr.Ed Croom runs it?  Is this anything like the “NC Large District Superintendent Consortium”?

A Google search turned up little to nothing on the LWSC, however I finally located information about the LWSC at the NC Secretary of State under the lobbying section. Coincidentally, Gerry Hancock is the primary lobbyist listed for LWSC.

EducationNC Supporters

$100,000+

  • Low Wealth Schools Consortium

Up to $100,000

Up to $75,000

Up to $25,000

Up to $10,000

Up to $5,000

  • Emerging Tar Heel Leaders, Inc.
  • International Affairs Council of North Carolina
  • Tom and Susan Rabon Charitable Foundation

In-kind

Individual contributors

  • Hunter and J.B. Buxton
  • Ann Campbell
  • Kathleen and Ferrel Guillory
  • Dennis and Betty Chafin Rash
  • Mebane Rash
  • The Lloyd and Margaret Rash Family Fund
  • Marsha and EJ Sherry
  • Amy Strecker
  • Hutch and Wells Whitman

Special thanks

Many thanks to Stevens Martin Vaughn & Tadych PLLC for representing EdNC on first amendment and communications issues.

Related Content:

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), EDUCATION | Tagged , | 7 Comments

News and Observer Waves Bye-Bye to Occupy Raleigh

Josh Shaffer at the News and Observer has an article up that arguable waves bye-bye to Occupy Raleigh. (Update: The original article link no longer works. It was moved here.)

While the last entry on their website is from 2013, this was news to Occupy Raleigh.

 

– Archives on Occupy Raleigh

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Occupy | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Holshouser Legislators Retreat 2015

Government here to help common coreThe 2015 Governor Jim Holshouser Legislators Retreat took place yesterday.  I managed to capture some of the topics via Twitter from the hashtag #HLR2015.

The main theme gleaned from it appears to be your kids are “human capitol” which is the “life bud” of business:

All your kids are belong to them?

This event was by invitation only. From the Hunt Institute website:

2015 Governor Jim Holshouser Legislators Retreat
“Event attendance is by invitation only. If you have an invitation code, please enter it in the form to the right to view more information about this event.” Many NC legislators attended. Was yours there? Ask them.

Please see my Storify Article, Holshouser Legislators Retreat 2015, for more.

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Common Core, EDUCATION | 2 Comments

Gates Funded Start Up’s Director Is Tarheel Of The Week

The News and Observer’s Tarheel of the Week is Tony Habit of NC New Schools. Anyone fighting Common Core in the state has heard both of those names at least a few times. Funnily enough, the N&O article doesn’t mention Common Core — at all.

bill-gatesMr. Habit has  more than dabbled in supporting the fundamentally flawed and experimental Common Core, of which his former benefactor Bill Gates says about it that, “It would be great if our education stuff worked, but that we won’t know for probably a decade.

New Schools Project is a great friend of the Chamber and their “Hire Standards” program. NC New Schools has many friends, including the office of the Governor and the NCBCE.

According to emails I obtained in a Freedom of Information request, Habit has been in communications helping direct the “NC Large Districts Superintendent Consortium” NCLDSC recommended a “7 year lock in of Common Core”.

Why are “non-profits”, business people from NC, The Chamber of Commerce and Jeb Bush’s foundation in Florida driving education in this state?

The big question that keeps coming up and no news outlet is asking is, who is in charge of education in this state? Businesses or the state?  What does the Department of Public Instruction do, exactly?

The N&O article does mention where NC New Schools received its start-up money, but it couches it with state money too:

 “Its initial funding was from the state and $24 million in grants from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.”

See the grants from Gates Mr. Habit and his NC New Schools received and then one might understand why the N&O didn’t break out the numbers in the sentence above.

Read about the big $2o million dollar federal grant the NC New Schools won thanks to $500,000 from Golden LEAF Foundation, SAS, Goodnight Educational Foundation, Carnegie Corporation of New York, and Wells Fargo Foundation.  This was the largest grant in the Dept. of Education’s i3 project.

From the NC New Schools downloadable application information:

North Carolina New Schools (NCNS) proposes to implement Early College Strategies for All in order to: (1) scale up and expand North Carolina’s early college work to include one District Reach Model and six new early college schools? (2) develop seven Model Schools within N.C. that can be used as national study schools? (3) work with two additional states to build the capacity to open six early colleges based on the NCNS model? and, (4) provide state and regional level capacity building to two additional states to set the foundation for those states to open early colleges in the future.

The project has to do with”transforming education in rural high schools”. The project involved setting up six more early college high schools. Habit has been promoting this idea all over North Carolina and in Maine.  

Is early college promotion necessarily a bad thing? No. However, how far, wide and deep does NC New Schools wish to take this? Consider the current higher education bubble when thinking about this.

Again, who is driving education in our state? Where are they taking it?

 

Related:

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Common Core | Tagged | 1 Comment