Common Core’s Revenge
September 15, 2014, Spencer Irvine, 0 Comments
The Pioneer Institute, a Massachusetts-based think tank, released a new study, 
“The Revenge of K-12: How Common Core and the New SAT Lower College Standards 
in the U.S.” to help parents, teachers, and policymakers understand the 
problems with the Common Core State Standards.
Authors Robert Phelps and Common Core Validation Committee member R. James 
Milgram go in-depth on the background of the Common Core standards and the 
qualifications (or lack thereof) of the writers of the standards. Milgram, an 
emeritus professor of mathematics at Stanford University, was one of five 
members of the validation committee who refused to sign onto the standards and 
to endorse it.
The validation committee included “four non-U.S. citizens (an Australian, 
Englishman, German, and a Taiwanese), and R. James Milgram was the only 
mathematician in the committee and the only member with a Ph.D. from outside a 
school of education.” The committee could not demand changes in the drafts of 
the standards after a certain point, which Milgram said was after he tried to 
raise the math standards. The authors state, “In the end, committee members 
could only sign or refuse to sign a letter affirming that the CCS were 
research-based and internationally benchmarked. The letter was signed by 24 of 
the final 29 members.”
However, Phelps and Migram say the project’s intention was “to look attractive 
to both education schools and content experts” to get approval. Instead of 
being a good set of education standards, it was a political compromise.
Also, Common Core descends from the “dismal results from their key predecessors 
– the allegedly higher-order, more authentic, performance, based tests 
administered in Maryland (MSPAP), California (CLAS), and Kentucky (KIRIS) in 
the 1990s.” Why did these older tests fail? There were too many instances of 
“unreliable scores; volatile test score trends; secrecy of items and forms; and 
absence of individual scores in some cases…large expenditures of time…[and] 
inconsistent grading.” Common Core revives principles from the controversial 
and failed 1989 National Council of Teachers of Mathematics curriculum, which 
led to a rebellion of California parents and leaders of the high tech industry 
due to its inadequacies. The new Common Core tests, Partnership for Assessment 
of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) and Smarter Balanced Assessment 
Consortium (SBAC), are the latest reincarnations of the previous tests.
Why all the outrage in the past? Parents were wary and unhappy with “fuzzy 
math” proposed by those standards, which is why there is opposition to Common 
Core. Common Core pushes “fuzzy math,” where there is a substantial 
overreliance on calculators or finger counting for simple math problems and no 
teaching of multiplication or long division. The Common Core standards from 
kindergarten to seventh grade are 90% better than before because the previous 
standards were “of the abysmal quality of the vast majority of the previous 
state standards.”
Under Common Core, eighth graders do not need to finish Algebra I courses and 
instead learn rudimentary geometry, which Milgram and Phelps call “very close 
to an approach tested in the former Soviet Union in the late 1970’s and early 
1980s.” And, from grades 9-12, geometry development and teaching is just as 
experimental, teaching trigonometric standards typically reserved for 
trigonometry classes and not developing math skills beyond Algebra II.
Why the disconnect in standards? The writers of the Common Core were 
inexperienced and many had connections to the Gates Foundation.
Jason Zimba, one of the writers of the math curriculum, is a retired physics 
and mathematics professor at Bennington College with a Ph.D. in mathematical 
sciences. But, Zimba had no experience writing educational standards. He had 
worked with Common Core English language arts writer, David Coleman, at Student 
Assessment Partners. Another math writer, William McCallum, worked as a 
consultant for Achieve, Inc., a primary designer of Common Core, and was a math 
professor at the University of Arizona with a Ph.D. in mathematics.
Phil Daro worked with Zimba and McCallum on Common Core math standards, but his 
connections as the recipient of several Gates Foundation grants and who worked 
for the National Center for Education and the Economy (NCEE). NCCE was headed 
by a Common Core reviewing group member by the name of Marc Tucker. Daro was an 
English major undergraduate whose only background in mathematics was a brief 
stint as a middle school mathematics teacher who coauthored a 2013 report which 
concluded that algebra was necessary for community college readiness, not 
overall college readiness.
The English standards had similar levels of intrigue, where standards writer 
David Coleman “had no teaching experience in K-12 or above,” has both an 
undergraduate and master’s degree in philosophy, yet is currently the president 
of the College Board. Coleman was quoted as saying to a crowd at the University 
of Pittsburgh in 2011, “We’re composed of that collection of unqualified people 
who were involved in developing the common standards.” He admitted in a 
separate speech, “I probably spend a little more time on literacy because as 
weak as my qualifications are there, in math they’re even more desperate in 
their lacking.”
Two other writers of the English language arts standards were Susan Pimentel, 
whose only teaching experience was in the Head Start program and as a 
consultant to Achieve, Inc.’s work on the American Diploma Project, and James 
Patterson, a journalism undergrad and a staff member of ACT specializing in 
language arts, who had taught at secondary school level. None had worked on 
writing education standards.
Coleman, now president of the College Board, hired former rival and competitor 
at ACT Cyndie Schmieser, who helped Coleman eliminate high standards such as 
penalties for guessing on tests, making the writing test optional for 
test-takers, and allowing students to choose which test score to send to 
college. Also, school districts are saving ACT and the College Board money by 
administering the tests themselves. Coleman has also hinted at changing 
Advanced Placement, or AP, high school courses and their curriculum.
The authors of the study point out that achievement and aptitude are two 
different measures and Common Core does not take that into account. The U.S. 
already struggles with its current educational system, but does not try to 
adjust as their European or East Asian counterparts, who cater to students’ 
strengths and offer technical schooling. Instead, American students continue to 
drop out of school if they don’t make it to college and are left without an 
alternative.
With the college-or-bust American mentality, we see “only 2 percent of STEM 
[science, technology, engineering and math]-intending students whose first 
college course is pre-calculus or lower, ever graduate with a major in STEM 
areas today.” Students are inadequately prepared by not completing Algebra II 
or calculus classes before graduating from high school. Statistics show that 7 
percent of students with only Algebra 1 education background obtained 4-year 
degrees in 1992, and while in 1982, students who completed Algebra 2 had a 46 
percent chance of obtaining a bachelor’s degree. But, in 1992 it dropped to 39 
percent.
 
http://www.academia.org/common-cores-revenge/

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