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School & District Management

Common Core May Persist, Even in Opposition States

By Andrew Ujifusa 鈥 July 30, 2014 7 min read
Janet Barresi, center, state superintendent of Oklahoma schools, speaks on the Oklahoma Standards Development Process plan to develop new state education standards, pictured in a chart at rear, during a state school board meeting in Oklahoma City, earlier this month. The board voted to again delay a formal plan for adopting new education standards in math and English amid opposition to the proposal by three education groups that represent public school boards and administrators from across the state.
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Opponents of the Common Core State Standards got a boost in recent weeks, as Missouri and North Carolina moved to reassess their involvement, while the governors of Utah and Wisconsin distanced themselves from the standards.

Less clear is what exactly those opponents have won. The early pattern suggests that the common standards could undergo some relatively minor changes but still persist in states where opposition has led to high-profile bills and big headlines.

The formal structures that buttress the standards, and the related tests from two federally funded consortia, have eroded somewhat, as states reconsider their adoptions of the standards and reject the common tests. And common-core advocates have other worries鈥攎ost notably, whether states, districts, and schools have done enough to make sure the standards work well in classrooms.

However, so far there is little sign and not a great deal of precedent that the states backing away from the common core, or considering doing so, will ultimately produce anything that is truly different from those standards.

鈥淭he common core is not a yes-no,鈥 said Michael McShane, a research fellow at the Washington-based American Enterprise Institute. 鈥淭here are shades of gray in there.鈥

鈥楻epeal Lite鈥 Strategy Seen

Florida, where state lawmakers rebuffed legislation to put the brakes on the common core, could end up being an archetype for states moving to re-examine the standards rather than repeal them outright.

After soliciting public input on where the common core in Florida should be changed, the state school board adopted some alterations to the standards in March. But officials did not dump or vastly change the common core. (Adoption guidelines for the standards said that states can supplement the common core with their own specific standards, up to an additional 15 percent worth of standards.)

The language concerning the common core in new laws in Missouri and North Carolina reflects a similar approach. In both states, the laws create groups鈥攚ith some members appointed by state legislators鈥攖hat will review the common core and make recommendations about English/language arts and math standards to their respective state boards. But there鈥檚 no explicit prohibition on any set of standards, or reversals of those states鈥 prior adoptions of the common core.

And even though board members will likely be under political pressure to seriously consider and adopt recommendations from those advisory groups, nothing obligates the state boards to detach themselves from the common standards.

Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon, a Democrat, and North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory, a Republican, both stressed that the bills they signed into law July 14 and July 22, respectively, constituted reviews of the standards and opportunities to raise academic expectations in general. Gov. Nixon noted in a statement that the relevant bill was originally written to 鈥渂an鈥 the standards, while Gov. McCrory stated that he was focused on how the review would deal with 鈥渢esting issues.鈥

In South Carolina, the state education department has begun drafting new standards based on a measure signed by Gov. Nikki Haley, a Republican, in May. But the executive director of the state鈥檚 91制片厂视频 Oversight Committee, Melanie Barton, said in June that significant changes to the common core won鈥檛 be possible by the time the state鈥檚 new standards are used in the 2015-16 school year.

And despite such moves, Missouri, North Carolina, and South Carolina will all retain the common core in schools for at least the 2014-15 school year. None of those three states has explicitly prohibited the standards, and what exactly a ban on the common core would look like isn鈥檛 clear.

鈥淚t鈥檚 what I call Repeal Lite. You get to pound your chest and say, 鈥業 threw out the common core,鈥欌 said Bob Wise, the president of the Alliance for Excellent 91制片厂视频, a Washington-based group that supports the common core, and a former Democratic governor of West Virginia.

Achieving a Broader Goal?

Political and policy goals based on rejecting the standards also can be quickly mired in legal and bureaucratic maneuvering. Despite the anti-common-core declarations of Gov. Bobby Jindal鈥攁 Republican who is widely assumed to be interested in a presidential run鈥攁s well as a looming legal fight over tests aligned with the standards, Louisiana has so far kept the common core on the books.

Even for Oklahoma, which decisively dumped the common core by reverting to its prior content standards in June, shifting to new standards has posed problems. The state school board, which adopted the common core in 2010, has twice delayed approving an official plan for replacing it, after groups representing local school boards and administrators raised concerns about the process.

Oklahoma鈥檚 new standards, which must be approved by the legislature by August 2016, could end up looking very similar to, or completely different from, the common core鈥攐r be something in between.

Friends of the common standards are less than thrilled with the political angst surrounding them. But they also argue that part of the common core鈥檚 mission鈥攖o push states to adopt more rigorous standards as a general matter鈥攊s working as intended.

鈥淭he ideas behind the standards are holding, whether or not there鈥檚 a debate about the specifics in the standards,鈥 said Chris Minnich, the executive director of the Council of Chief State School Officers, which oversaw the common core鈥檚 development along with the National Governors Association.

Another possible variation is on display in Indiana, where the common core was largely retained by the state in the new standards it adopted in April, even after officially repealing its 2010 adoption of the common core.

That continuity has angered opponents of the common core within the state and elsewhere. Indiana鈥檚 path could illustrate the difficulty for anti-common-core activists of truly rooting out the standards during such a process, even when there is ostensible political support for doing so.

Independent Choices

Some opponents of the common standards say their real concern is not primarily what鈥檚 in them, but whether states now make decisions that aren鈥檛 tainted, in critics鈥 view, by pro-common-core financial incentives offered by the federal government in the Obama administration鈥檚 Race to the Top grant competitions and waivers from the No Child Left Behind Act. To that extent, the opponents see marked progress.

鈥淚f a state really thinks common core is the best thing to do, then they should adopt it. I don鈥檛 want them to adopt it because they want to get federal money, or want to get a federal waiver,鈥 said Neal McCluskey, the associate director of the Center for 91制片厂视频al Freedom at the Cato Institute, a Washington think tank.

Mr. McCluskey said Mr. Minnich鈥檚 espousal of a general push for higher standards is, in fact, an implicit concession that the common core is taking more hits than supporters anticipated it would a few years ago.

And Mr. McCluskey said that he expects opposition to the common core to continue, and to spike at the start of 2015, when many state legislatures start new sessions.

Political Distancing

In July, two Republican state leaders distanced themselves from the common core in distinct ways.

In Utah, Gov. Gary Herbert tasked the state attorney general with reviewing the standards鈥 connections to the federal government.

And Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin called for the legislature to repeal the common core in 2015, although at least one state GOP lawmaker with power over K-12 policy has criticized the announcement.

But pushback will also be driven by parents and school district officials who reject merely cosmetic overhauls of the common core and demand something better, said Sandra Stotsky, a professor emerita of education reform at the University of Arkansas鈥 Department of 91制片厂视频 Reform in Fayetteville, Ark. She oversaw the development of academic standards in Massachusetts from 1999 to 2003 and is a critic of the common core鈥檚 quality.

Ms. Stotsky said that common-core opponents are now smart enough to reject Indiana鈥檚 approach of largely repackaging the standards. But she said these opponents, in turn, have to push for officials to specify precisely where new standards under development are an improvement.

鈥淚f you want to have a common-core floor, label the floor as a floor, and then show us the furniture; ... you鈥檝e got to show us what鈥檚 above the floor,鈥 Ms. Stotsky said.

Common-core advocates should be happy about states that drop the common core in name only, Mr. McShane of the American Enterprise Institute said. But they still should worry about whether the standards have been wrapped in too much 鈥渕essianic language鈥 about their transformative power, he said, as well as about the number of states that stick to the common core in all the important ways.

鈥淢aybe that鈥檚 actually a good thing for the common core that only states that really want to do the common core do it,鈥 Mr. McShane said.

A version of this article appeared in the August 06, 2014 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week

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