Senin, 11 Juni 2018

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Infographic: Analyzing Common Core from The SMARTER Balanced ...
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46 countries initially adopted the Common Core State Standards, although their application has not been uniform. At least 12 countries have introduced laws to repeal standards directly, and Indiana has since been withdrawn from the standard.

Among US territories, the US Virgin Islands, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands and the American Samoa Islands have adopted standards while Puerto Rico has not yet adopted standards.


Video Common Core implementation by state



Alabama

Alabama initially adopted the Standard, but the state scrapped its adoption in November 2013. Governor Robert Bentley cited federal intervention as an excuse for opposition, saying he was opposed for "the federal control of our educational system and I am opposed to Common Core because of the potential of federal intrusion." Curriculum country, called College and Ready Career Standards, are still in harmony with General Core standards.

Maps Common Core implementation by state



Alaska

Alaska chose not to adopt the Standard. While the debate continues in Alaska, the state has adopted its own new standard called Alaska Content and Performance Standards that Education Commissioner Mike Hanley has described as "very similar" to the General Core standards, and many local districts have chosen to adopt standards even though the country has not. Parents have the right to choose their children from standard testing.

Common Core: Helping Or Hurting?
src: az616578.vo.msecnd.net


Arizona

Arizona officially adopted the Standards. In 2014, Governor Jan Brewer signed an executive order that removes references to the "Common Core" of mathematical standards and reads the country, although they are still in line with national standards. The standard name has been changed to "Arizona College and Career Ready Standards." In the legislature, the Senate Education Committee passed a bill that will draw Arizona from the Common Core. On October 26, 2015, Arizona State Board of Education voted to lift the Common Core standard in 6-2 votes.

Three-Minute Video Explaining the Common Core State Standards ...
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Arkansas

Arkansas officially adopted the Standards in 2010. Several proposals during fiscal 2014 in the state legislature to delay implementation were not adopted. Arkansas is a member of the PARCC government.

COMMON CORE - Ready Washington
src: www.readywa.org


California

California officially adopted the Standards. Governor Jerry Brown allocated $ 1.25 billion in state budget to assist the implementation, but also assured educators that the Core-aligned test will not be used as part of the teacher's evaluation during the 2015-2016 academic year. Grants remain controversial with California teacher unions due to concerns about the use and size of grants. California is a member of the SBAC government.

Common Core State Standards & Next Generation Science Standards ...
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Colorado

Colorado officially adopted the Standards in 2010. The citizens' concerns about the Common Core, however, have resulted in drafts compiled by the parent group to suspend its implementation and appoint an independent panel to look at the standards, with State Sen. Vicki Marmer agreeing to bring it in the legislature.

California's Common Core State Standards Implementing the ...
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Connecticut

Connecticut officially adopted the Standards, but Governor Dannel Malloy has requested a delay in teacher evaluation based on Common Core testing, citing stress of system changes and saying "it is important that we alleviate significant demands on teachers and administrators and systems. In a public forum in Old Lyme, State Representative Marilyn Giuliano called on the state to "press the pause button" on implementation, saying he has introduced legislation to delay implementation until legislators hear feedback. Connecticut is the member who governs SBAC.

Common Core controversy continues in N.J. and across nation | NJ.com
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Delaware

Delaware officially adopted the Standard as an ELA and mathematical component of Delaware Prioritized Standards. Implementation has been considered successful in the state. Delaware is a member of the SBAC government.

Arizonans Against Common Core
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District of Columbia

Washington, DC, has adopted the Standards. The implementation of the District of Columbia is crucial to the speed and investment made in the standards. The District of Columbia is a member of the PARCC government.

COMMON CORE
src: www.tneagleforum.org


Florida

Florida initially adopted the Standard, but Governor Rick Scott has directed the state education council to withdraw from the Partnership for Readiness Assessment for College and Career. Scott also changed the standard name in Florida to Sunshine State Standards New Generation, saying "This is the Florida standard... This is our country.We will not ask the federal government to tell us how to do our education system."

In February 2014, the Department of Education approved 98 different changes to Florida standards, which are scheduled to take place in the 2014-2015 school year.


Georgia

Georgia formally adopted the Standards, but withdrew from the related tests in July 2013. While the implementation has been on track for the country, State Senator William Ligon submitted the law to withdraw from the Common Core completely. On February 19, 2015, Georgia formally renamed the Georgia Standards Standards standard, which incorporated several revisions relative to the General Core standard.


Hawaii

Hawaii officially adopted the Standards, with full class implementation starting in the school year 2013-14 and a harmonized assessment beginning in 2014-15. Hawaii is a member of the SBAC government.


Idaho

Idaho officially adopted the Standard as an ELA and a mathematical component of the Idaho Core Standards. Idaho is a member who organizes SBAC and starts testing in 2014.


Illinois

Illinois officially adopted the Standard and launched its implementation during the 2013-14 academic year. Illinois is a member of the PARCC government.


Indiana

Indiana initially adopted the Standard, but its implementation was suspended by law in May 2013. The bipartisan legislative panel failed to reach a consensus to proceed with the standards, and repealed laws passed in both the Indiana Senate and the State House Education Committee in February 2014, and the state officially withdrew from the Common Core in March 2014. The state publishes its successor, Indiana Academic Standards, in April 2014.


Iowa

Iowa officially adopted the Standard as an ELA and Iowa Core mathematical component, a standard K-12 state curriculum. Common Core was adopted in Iowa in 2010, with full implementation scheduled for completion in the 2014-2015 school year. Iowa is an SBAC affiliate member.


Kansas

Kansas officially adopted the Standard in 2010, but the law that failed to escape the State Senate in July 2013, almost failed in the State Building. House Bill 2621 was introduced at the 2014 legislative session, and will declare the next generation of standards, as well as the next generation of science standards adopted by the state in 2013, "null and void" in the state. However, by 2015, the General Core standards, in addition to those specified by the state Board of Education, remain part of the Kansas College Standards and Career Ready.

Kansas was formerly a member of SBAC, but the Kansas State Board of Education resigned from the consortium in 2013, rather than planning to assign its assessment development in the state of an institute at the University of Kansas. Tests using this instrument will begin in spring 2016.


Kentucky

Kentucky was the first state to adopt the Common Core in 2010 as part of the Kentucky Core Academy Standards, with a curriculum launched in the 2011-12 school year. Recently revoked in February 2017.


Louisiana

Louisiana formally adopted the Standard, but delayed the implementation of the Common Core for two years in November 2013. Debate is expected when the state legislature convenes in March 2014, but testing is still scheduled to be implemented for the 2014-2015 academic year. Governor Bobby Jindal has signaled his intention to end Common Core in the state, directing the Education and Legislative Councils to come up with alternatives that include "Louisiana standards and Louisiana tests." Bobby Jindal's curricular changes include a rejection of Common Core education standards for teaching English and math. In response, some charter schools led by teachers and parents filed a lawsuit against the governor.

Louisiana is a member of PARCC affiliation and its country assessment "including items developed through the PARCC process".


Maine

Maine officially adopted the Standards. Maine Equal Rights Center has launched a petition to add questions to the 2014 vote that will remove Maine from the Common Core, but Governor Paul LePage has shown support for the standard. Maine recently withdrew from SBAC.


Maryland

Maryland formally adopted the Standards, despite significant resistance to the implementation in the state of educators, lawmakers, and citizens, including a push planned by legislators of the Republican State to withdraw from the consortium. Maryland is one of five states that have received permission from the federal government, under No Child Left Behind, to not test students under both Common Core and state-level tests.

Legislation has also been filed in the state senate to delay teacher evaluation based on the General Core test until 2016-2017. This law is supported by Maryland Superintendent School Lillian Lowery. Another Senate bill has been proposed that will leave the teacher performance evaluation in the hands of the local school board.

Maryland is a member of the PARCC government.


Massachusetts

Massachusetts officially adopted the Standard, but the transition is delayed to the General Core for two years in November 2013. The common core is revoked in 2017


Michigan

Michigan officially adopted the Standard, although the implementation was suspended and then approved to proceed without Smarter Balanced testing. Michigan is a member of the SBAC government.


Minnesota

Minnesota partially adopted the Standard. The state chose to adopt only English standards, rejecting mathematical standards that support their own standards.


Mississippi

Mississippi officially adopted the Standards.

Mississippi is a member of PARCC affiliation.


Missouri

Missouri officially adopted the Standards. The opposition to the Common Core has been labeled as paranoia by some state legislators, causing one State Representative in the education panel to add $ 8 for seizure to "two high density aluminum rolls to create a headgear designed to deflect drones and/or read the minds of black helicopters and technology control. "Missouri is a member of the SBAC government.


Montana

Montana has officially adopted the Standards. Some Montana educational award winners write an opinion that supports the Common Core, and, among educators and legislators, adoption has proceeded smoothly, but there have been objections by some people voicing concerns about state sovereignty and applying it in violation of the Montana State Constitution. Montana is a member of the SBAC government.


Nebraska

Nebraska does not adopt the Standards. The reasons cited for not adopting include skepticism about mathematical standards and the lack of formal standards available at the time of adoption.


Nevada

Nevada officially adopted the Standard in 2012. There was no significant opposition to its implementation, but the Department of Education launched a messenger campaign in February 2014 to quell growing reaction in Northern Nevada. Nevada is a member of the SBAC government.


New Hampshire

New Hampshire officially adopted the Standards. A bill to resign from current standards at the New Hampshire Representative Building, but the country is still on track to begin testing in Spring 2015. New Hampshire is a member of the SBAC government.


New Jersey

New Jersey officially adopted the Standards. The New Jersey Board of Education has repeatedly passed a resolution that reaffirms their commitment to the standards. Gov. Chris Christie has vowed to pull the country out of the common core.

New Jersey is a member of the PARCC government.


New Mexico

New Mexico officially adopted the Standards. New Mexico is a member of the PARCC government.


New York

New York officially adopted the Standards. The State Council of the Regent postponed the implementation for an additional five years in February 2014 to give the school more time to apply, as well as to offer a two-year amnesty teacher than evaluated on the standards. This delay means that the standard will not be a requirement for high school students until 2022. The issue has also prompted the nation's leading teachers' union, New York State Teachers United, to withdraw their support for the "as applied" standard, also called for the resignation of State Education Commissioner John King and a three-year moratorium on testing. Other implementation actions have taken place, however, with Governor Andrew Cuomo holding a supervisory panel.

New York is a member of PARCC's board, but has not used their statewide judgment; in 2015 they conducted trials in 25 schools.


North Carolina

North Carolina officially adopted the Standards. The state is one of the first to adopt the standard, but the hearing was held in 2014 to discuss the future of standards in the state, with Lieutenant Governor Dan Forest calling for a commission to complete a detailed review of the standards. The North Carolina General Assembly will consider a bill in May 2014 that will result in North Carolina moving away from the standard while creating a new set of education standards to replace it. North Carolina is an SBAC affiliate member.


North Dakota

North Dakota has officially adopted the Standards. A bill proposed in the state legislature on 2/12/2015 to eliminate the common core in public schools was defeated 46-48. North Dakota is a member of the SBAC government.


Ohio

Ohio officially adopted the Standards. In 2013, the law is proposed to ban adoption of standards by Ohio Republicans. Another bill was introduced in January 2014 to end the student exams. Ohio recently withdrew from PARCC.


Oklahoma

Oklahoma formally adopted the Standards, but tentatively withdrew from related tests in July 2013. Several laws have been introduced in Oklahoma's legislature to revoke standards, and standards are officially lifted in June 2014.


Oregon

The Oregon State Board of Education officially adopted the Standards on October 28, 2010, one of the first states to do so. Oregon is a member of the SBAC government.


Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania officially adopted the Standard, but Governor Tom Corbett ceased its implementation in May 2013 after finding a split between the opinions of MPs, and the state has announced they are withdrawing from related tests.


Rhode Island

Rhode Island officially adopted the Standards, but, in February 2014, calls for delays or retractions have increased, with State Representative Gregg Amore introducing legislation that would delay implementation. Rhode Island is a member of the PARCC government.


South Carolina

South Carolina officially adopted the Standard, although the standard is still controversial. Governor Nikki Haley criticized the standards, saying "We never want to educate South Carolina children like they are educating Californian kids." A bill to lift standards beginning in 2015-2016 school year is officially signed by Governor Haley in June 2014 after deliberations in the state legislature.


South Dakota

South Dakota has officially adopted the Standards. Some of the bills that deal with the Common Core are in the State Senate, but a bill that will replace Common Core with different country standards is defeated on the committee. South Dakota is a member of the SBAC government.


Tennessee

Tennessee officially adopted the Standards. According to a poll conducted by the Tennessee Consortium on Research, Evaluation and Development, teachers in Tennessee have a positive outlook on standards and implementation. The Bradley County Commission, however, voted to support the bill at Tennessee House and Senate which would "stop the use of state Core General standards." Several proposals have been proposed to reduce, delay, or directly revoke standards in Tennessee. Tennessee passed a law to abolish the common core by 2016. The new standard, The Tennessee Academic Standards, is implemented in English and Mathematics for the school year 2017/2018.


Texas

Texas does not adopt the Standard, and is not a member of the consortium. Governor Rick Perry opposed adoption in 2010, citing state rights issues, federal intervention in education, implementation costs, and "the adoption of unproven national standards and tests, costs-prohibitions."


Utah

Utah officially adopted the Standard, but withdrew from the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium in August 2012.


Vermont

Vermont officially adopted the Standards. Vermont is a member of the SBAC government.


Virginia

Virginia does not adopt the Standards, and is not a member of the consortium. While the Virginia Board of Education opposes adoption, it states that they are "committed to the Virginia Standards of Learning (SOL) program and are opposing the adoption of the newly developed Core State Standards as a prerequisite for participating in competitive grants and federal rights programs." Learning Standards are "generally aligned" with the Common Core.


Washington

Washington formally adopted the Standards. Washington is a member of the SBAC government.


West Virginia

West Virginia officially adopted the Standards. West Virginia was renamed the "West Virginia Next Generation Content Generation Standard," and two bills have been filed in the state legislature. One bill, House Bill 4383, will delay implementation until 2016. Others, House Bill 4390, will attract West Virginia from the Common Core completely. West Virginia is a member of the SBAC government.


Wisconsin

Wisconsin officially adopted the Standards. A bill was quickly tracked in a legislative body that would repeal standards in Wisconsin but was withdrawn from the floor in February 2014. It is believed that the bill will be reconsidered in March 2014. Governor Scott Walker backed the bill, while Wisconsin School Superintendent Tony Evers has written to legislative in opposition. Wisconsin is a member of the SBAC government.


Wyoming

Wyoming officially adopted the Standards. A bill on the House of Representatives will convene parliamentary panel and educators to consider the future of Common Core in the state, and forbids the country from entering the Smarter Consortium of Appraisers. Wyoming is an SBAC affiliate member.


References

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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