W Post
 
 
 
Common Core Standards: 
arguments against — and for
 
Posted by _Valerie Strauss_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/valerie-strauss/2011/03/07/ABZrToO_page.html)  
on January 15, 2013

 
.
.
In a _recent  post_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2013/01/08/five-key-questions-about-the-common-core-standards/)
 , Yong Zhao, 
presidential chair and associate dean for global education  at the University 
of Oregon’s College of Education, asked five key questions  about the 
Common Core State Standards, which are coming to 46 states and the  District of 
Columbia. He concluded: “The efforts to develop common curricula  nationally 
and internationally are simply working to perfect an outdated  paradigm. The 
outcomes are precisely the opposite of the talents we need for the  new era.
” Here is a response to that post from Marc Tucker, president of  the 
non-profit National Center on Education and the Economy and an  internationally 
known expert on reform, explains why this approach is actually  harming 
rather than helping schools. Tucker is also editor of “_Surpassing Shanghai: An 
Agenda for  American Education Built on the World’s Leading Systems_ 
(http://www.hepg.org/hep/book/142) ” (Harvard Education  Press, November 2011).
.
. 
By Marc Tucker 
Most of the arguments I have heard against the_  Common Core State 
Standards_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2013/01/10/what-english-classes-should-look-like-in-common-core-era/)
  strike me as hardly worth 
responding to, but I  _came across a piece_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2013/01/08/five-key-questions-about-the-common-core-sta
ndards/)  on the subject the other day by Yong Zhao  that is rather 
thoughtful. Zhao is presidential chair and associate dean for  global education 
at 
the University of Oregon’s College of Education, where he  also serves as 
director of the Center for Advanced Technology in Education. He  grew up in 
China. When my organization organized a research trip to China to try  to 
understand its rapidly changing education system, we engaged Zhao as our  
guide. 
In the course of that trip, I came to respect Zhao and his views. His  
piece appeared in _Valerie  Strauss’ blog, The Answer Sheet_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2013/01/08/five-key-questions-about-the-com
mon-core-standards/)  on washingtonpost.com 
In his piece, Zhao argues, as I and many others have, that labor markets 
are  increasingly global, so that people at any given skill level are 
competing with  others, all over the globe, with similar skills. The result, is 
that 
those with  a given set of skills who are willing to work for less than 
others with the same  set of skills will typically be hired to do it, leaving 
those charging more  without work. And he then asks, how then can workers in 
high wage countries  compete without substantially lowering their wages, and 
therefore their standard  of living? 
He also notes, as others have, that more jobs are being automated out of  
existence than are being exported to low cost countries. It is the jobs that  
mostly require routine skills that are first to be automated. 
Clearly, the workers in high labor cost countries will be able to hold on 
to  their standard of living only if they can add some value that their 
competitors  cannot. Zhao agrees that the thing they must be able to add is the 
capacity to  create the future, the capacity for creativity and innovation, 
as well as a  related set of skills in the arena of empathy and play. He also 
agrees that, in  the world our children are likely to become adults in, 
they will need to be much  more familiar with the way people far from the 
United States live and think. 
So far, we are in agreement. 

 
 
 



But Zhao then takes an interesting leap. He points out that we do not—
indeed  cannot—know what work will be available when today’s infants leave 
college and  enter the workforce. And he points out that, in global markets, 
small niches in  percentage terms will still generate very large markets in 
absolute terms, and  he concludes from this that that the future will belong to 
those who can invent  new solutions for niche markets, people with great 
creative and entrepreneurial  abilities who do not need to know a little about 
a lot, but rather a lot about a  little. The implication we are apparently 
meant to draw from these statements is  that the _Common  Core is too narrow 
_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/post/choking-on-the-common-core-standards/2011/12/02/gIQAG6cpPO_blog.html)
 and rigid for the future 
our children will face, that we  need a non-standard education for a 
non-standard, creative, unknowable future  where little niches, not mass 
markets 
and mass market thinking, will reign. 
This kind of thinking is, to my mind, seductive, but I cannot agree. It is  
now more important than ever to figure out what all young people need to 
know  and be able to do. The literature is clear. Truly creative people know a 
lot and  they have worked hard at learning it. They typically know a lot 
about unrelated  things and their creativity comes from putting those 
unrelated things together  in unusual ways. Learning almost anything really 
well 
depends on mastering the  conceptual structure of the underlying disciplines, 
because, without that  scaffolding, we are not able to put new information 
and skills to work. Zhao  says that we will not be competitive simply by 
producing a nation of good test  takers. That is, of course, true. Leading 
Asian 
educators are very much afraid  that they have succeeded in producing good 
test takers who are not going to be  very good at inventing the future. But 
that does not absolve us of the  responsibility for figuring out what all 
students will need to know to be  competitive in a highly competitive global 
labor market, nor does it absolve us  of the responsibility to figure out how 
to assess the skills we think are most  important. 
It is true that the future will be full of jobs that do not exist now and  
challenges we cannot even imagine yet, never mind anticipate accurately. 
But,  whatever those challenges turn out to be, I can guarantee you that they 
will not  be met by people without strong quantitative skills, people who 
cannot construct  a sound argument, people who know little of history or 
geography or economics,  people who cannot write well. 
Zhao grew up in a country in which the aim was not learning but success on  
the test. There was wide agreement that the tests were deeply flawed,  
emphasizing what Mao called “stuffing the duck”— shoving facts and procedures  
into students—in lieu of analysis, synthesis and creativity. But few wanted 
to  change the system, because the tests were one of the few incorruptible 
parts of  a deeply corrupt system. So Zhao is very much aware of the 
consequences of a  rigid system set to outdated standards. But that is not the 
problem in the  United States. We don’t suffer from ancient standards wildly 
out 
of tune with  the times, enforced by tests that are no better. We suffer 
from lack of  agreement on any standards that could define what all students 
must know and be  able to do before they go their separate ways. We suffer in 
a great many schools  from implicit standards that translate into abysmally 
low expectations for far  too many students. 
Without broad agreement on a well designed and internationally benchmarked  
system of standards, we have no hope of producing a nation of students who 
have  the kind of skills, knowledge and creative capacities the nation so 
desperately  needs. There is no substitute for spelling out what we think 
students everywhere  should know and be able to do. Spelling it out is no 
guarantee that it will  happen, but failing to spell it out is a guarantee that 
we 
will not get a nation  of young people capable of meeting the challenges 
ahead. 
Zhao apparently believes that standards mean standardization and  
standardization would inevitably lead to an inability to produce creative  
solutions 
to the problems the workforce will face in the years ahead. That could  
certainly happen. But it need not happen. 
Taking a page from my friend _Will Fitzhugh_ (http://www.tcr.org/) ,  if it 
were up to me, every high school student would have to produce a 15- to  
20-page history research paper in order to graduate, a research paper that  
demonstrated a reasonable command of the relevant historical facts, the 
ability  to organize the material in a logical and compelling way, the ability 
to 
make  and to critique a compelling argument, the ability to synthesize 
material from  multiple sources in an original way and the ability to analyze 
the 
forces at  work in the historical arena being described. 
What I just described is a standard. But it need not—indeed should not—
lead  to standardized, cookie-cutter research papers. Nor will it ever go out 
of  fashion. Students ought to be able to demonstrate the kinds of skills and 
 knowledge I just described no matter which new jobs spring up out of 
nowhere  twenty years from now. Being able to do what I just described will 
diminish no  one’s creativity. Nor will it dim their entrepreneurial spirit.  
It is simply not true that our inability to predict the jobs people will 
have  to do in the future and the demand of creative, entrepreneurial young 
people  relieves us of the obligation to figure out what skills and knowledge 
all young  people need to have before they go their separate ways, or the 
obligation to  translate that list of skills and knowledge into standards and 
assessments that  can drive instruction in our schools.

-- 
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