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Parent education session: Common core Q&A Michael J. Maher, PhD Assistant Dean, College of Education NC State University April 24, 2014

Parent education session: Common core Q&A

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Parent education session: Common core Q&A. Michael J. Maher, PhD Assistant Dean, College of Education NC State University April 24, 2014. Introduction. Michael Maher Current: Assistant Dean for Professional Education & Accreditation, College of Education, NC State - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

Parent education session: Common core Q&A

Michael J. Maher, PhDAssistant Dean, College of Education

NC State UniversityApril 24, 2014

Page 2: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

Introduction• Michael Maher

• Current:• Assistant Dean for Professional Education & Accreditation,

College of Education, NC State• Oversight of teacher education and other school

professionals programs (counseling, social work, school administration, psychology)

• K-12 & Teacher Education Policy • Former:

• Assistant Professor, Teacher Education• High School Science Teacher

• Family• Two daughters enrolled in the Wake County Public Schools

Page 3: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

Foundational Concepts• Perception is selective

• Perception filters through our past experience

• Perception narrows when we perceive a threat to our sense of self, goals, or safety

• Problems arise when our perception of a situation is incomplete or distorted

Page 4: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

Foundational Concepts• Perceptions and

interpretations occur almost simultaneously

• Interpretations come from our past relationships, it is the “story” we tell ourselves about what is happening

Page 5: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

Foundational Concepts• Different people tell

themselves different stories about the same perception

• Problems arise when:• we assume our story is

the only reality

Page 6: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

Foundational Concepts• New goals for education require intellectually demanding

experiences that are developmental and continuous as opposed to brief and episodic.

• What we do in school can essentially be divided into two categories• Algorithmic: follow a set of established instructions down a

singular path to one conclusion• Heuristic: a problem in which one experiments with

possibilities to devise a novel solution

Page 7: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

What?• What is the Common Core?

• The Common Core is a set of College and Career-Ready standards for grades k-12 in Mathematics & English/Language Arts

• The standards represent goals for student learning

• They are NOT a curriculum• They DO include both algorithmic and heuristic

standards.

Page 8: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

When?• When were the Common Core standards

adopted by NC?• The Standards were adopted by NC in 2010• Full implementation began in 2012-2013

Page 9: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

When?North Carolina first established a Standard Course of Study (SCOS) in 1898

• NC SCOS provides every content area with a set of competencies for each grade and high school course

• The NCSCOS includes the Common Core Standards (Math & ELA) and Essential Standards (all other subjects)

• Standards are regularly reviewed and updated (approximately every 5 years)

Page 10: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

WHy?• Why did NC adopt the Common Core

Standards?• In 2010, NC was one of 12 states to win a

federal Race to the Top grant totaling nearly $400 million.

• One requirement of the grant competition was that the state utilize College & Career Ready standards.

Page 11: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

Who?• Who was involved in the development of the

Common Core Standards?• The standards began with the work of the

National Governors Association (NGA) and the Council of Chief State School Officers

• The standards themselves were developed by teachers, content & pedagogy experts, administrators, parents, and state leaders in work groups and feedback groups.

Page 12: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

Where?• Where else have these standards been

implemented• Forty-four states, the District of Columbia, four

territories, and the Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA) have adopted the Common Core State Standards. 

Page 13: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

How?• How do these standards impact teachers?

• Required professional development• Increased collaboration• Greater flexibility in developing curriculum• Easier transition between grades

Page 14: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

How?• How do these standards impact children?

• More rigorous• Fundamentally shift how we ask them to solve

problems• Not only allows children (families) to move more

easily between districts, but between states• Allows parents to make informed decisions

about the quality of education since states will use common benchmarks & standards

• Allows for more accurate international comparisons

Page 15: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

How?• Should I support the Common Core?

• That’s entirely up to you.

Page 16: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

Common beliefs• The Common Core are Federal

Standards

• The Common Core was paid for by large corporations

• The Common Core will increase testing in North Carolina

• The is no way to modify/update the standards

Page 17: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

Questions?• Contact Information:

• Email• [email protected]

• Twitter• @mj_maher

• Facebook• Professional Education @ NCSU

• Website• http://mjmaher.weebly.com/

• Slides• http://www.slideshare.net/mjmaher

Page 18: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

Resources• Common Core

Website:: http://www.corestandards.org/

• NPR:http://www.npr.org/2014/03/18/291166780/q-a-a-crash-course-on-common-core?ft=1&f=1013

•  Atlantic:http://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2014/04/confusing-math-homework-don-t-blame-the-common-core/360064/

• Hechinger Report:http://hechingerreport.org/content/first-grade-teacher-dives-into-common-core-with-cautious-optimism_13033/

• http://hechingerreport.org/content/parents-return-to-school-to-help-children-with-common-core-inspired-homework_13873/

• http://hechingerreport.org/content/just-facts-please-common-core-transforms-schools-teach-writing_15452/

Page 19: Parent education session:  Common core Q&A

Resources• WUNC:http

://wunc.org/post/fact-check-clearing-7-common-core-claims

• US News & World Report:http://www.usnews.com/news/special-reports/a-guide-to-common-core/articles/2014/03/04/common-core-myths-and-facts

• http://www.usnews.com/news/special-reports/a-guide-to-common-core/articles/2014/04/17/common-core-honoring-the-societal-contract-of-success-through-education

• Edutopia:http://www.edutopia.org/blog/common-core-critical-thinking-aesop-vincent-mastro

•  Education Week:http://www.edweek.org/ew/collections/common-core-in-action-report-2014/index.html

•  Common Core Hearing:http://youtu.be/CpBjioT7Z1Y 10:33