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time to update the standards


  • To: ca-resisters@serv1.ncte.org, <ca-resisters@interversity.org>
  • Subject: time to update the standards
  • From: George Sheridan <learn@jps.net>
  • Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2007 11:00:03 -0800



Gary Hart: Update the state's education standards


By Gary Hart - Special To The Bee

<http://www.sacbee.com/110/story/110622.html>http://www.sacbee.com/110/story/110622.html
Published Sunday, January 21, 2007
Story appeared in FORUM section, Page E4


It's no wonder that any mention of revision of California's K-12 student academic standards causes as much controversy and resistance as the standards themselves did when first adopted. No reform in modern California public education has improved student achievement more than these along with a testing and accountability system based on them. That is why any suggestion of changing the standards has been viewed as heretical by many education leaders. But as one of the architects of this system, I believe the time is now right to take a fresh look at what we expect of our children.

Just a decade ago, before our state adopted the standards -- a nationally renowned blueprint for what every child should know and be able to do in every grade -- expectations varied widely from school to school. Since then, we have aligned our pupil testing system to these measurements, and have held all schools accountable for teaching them.

The standards for what we expect our students to learn must be flexible enough to allow our schools to adapt to a demanding and rapidly changing world -- they were not meant to be chiseled in stone. Earlier this month, Education Week, with backing from the Pew Center on the States, issued a comparative rating of the nation's 50 states on a number of education indicators. California was judged as having a strong standard system in place, but scored unsatisfactory in one area: no regular timeline for revising them.

Much has changed and been learned since their initial adoption a decade ago -- a careful revision can both strengthen and clarify what skills and knowledge we want our students to learn and our teachers to teach.

There are three compelling reasons review and revision of California's academic standards is necessary:

? These measures were formulated five years before Sept. 11. Our students need exposure to concepts (and their historical antecedents) such as terrorism, religious fundamentalism and nuclear proliferation -- all concepts missing in the current history/social science content standards. In the science content area, global warming needs to be acknowledged and the fifth-grade standard calling on students to know all "nine" planets ought to be revised now that Pluto is reclassified.

? We have failed to integrate career and technical education concepts into the standards. This is a serious deficiency and an obstacle to establishing rigorous job skills into the mainstream curriculum. In addition, little effort has been made to align our standards with the University of California and California State University systems. A national project sponsored by the National Governors Association and the America's Diploma Project has had great success in assisting states with such integration efforts. California could benefit from such a collaboration.

? A common complaint from educators about state standards is that in an effort to cover so much knowledge and so many skills, little is explored in depth. That leads to superficial coverage, guilt-ridden and frantic teachers who can't get through it all, and struggling students who get left behind. We need to be more selective and consider differentiating among standards based upon importance. The maxim "less is more" applies here -- it would allow for more substantive coverage of crucial topics, provide opportunities for "pacing" for struggling students and permit some much needed curriculum flexibility for teachers.

Defenders of the status quo will argue that serious review would lead to watering down of California's system. I disagree. I believe the state's political, business and educational leadership is committed to academic excellence and doesn't want to return to mediocre or nonexistent standards. Other opponents will argue that this review would be too complicated, controversial and time consuming. But the world is changing, knowledge continues to grow exponentially and this is not the time for complacent California leaders.

California's standards-based education system has served us well in part because we have been willing to modify important components such as our test, textbook and accountability systems. The time is overdue to review and strengthen our standards and give our students the knowledge and skills they need to succeed in an increasingly complex and changing world.


About the writer:

Gary Hart, a former state secretary of education and state senator, is director of the California State University Institute for Education Reform. Reach him at <mailto:ghart@calstate.edu>ghart@calstate.edu.


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George Sheridan

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