Friday, September 11, 2015

Teachers on the Common Core

Miriam Hall has a nice blog called Schooled. She has been reporting on what teachers think of the Common Core. She has gathered some thoughtful reflections about how they have encountered the Common Core, how it has changed their work (for the better), and the biggest misconceptions.

There is a consistent theme running through their comments: 

There's a conflation of the standards and standardized testing...what they're really pushing back against is an increase in standardized testing, which is not in the Common Core at all. Common Core is a set of standards.

I think that people are confused...It’s a completely different thing than the set of standards.

In its heart it's just trying to elevate the standards across the U.S. I don't think the government's trying to take over our lives and rule who we are through the world of education...That said, I'd be remiss to not talk about the testing. And the testing is the worst thing ever.

Common Core...is based off of the same math principles that have allowed people to be successful at math for a long time. It's just actually expecting students to understand underlying principles.

The Common Core standards are what teachers are required to teach and what students should be able to do independently. The standardized tests are supposed to evaluate the Common Core standards. When people are protesting against standardized tests, I 100 percent support that.

I think the biggest issue that causes the political hullabaloo about the Common Core is that people think that testing mechanisms are the Common Core.


Read more here and here.

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Feel bad at math?

Here is one reason why. Chase Felker writes:

It seems that the origin of math phobia is not the content of math itself; it cannot rest solely on someone’s inability to sit through logic puzzles, because people exercise careful abstract reasoning in every other field without the same sort of fear. Instead, I think the form is largely to blame. All of high school math is basically a one-way linear staircase that leads to calculus. If you fall off at any point, you’re doomed.

read more>>>

Monday, August 31, 2015

The Potluck is On!


            When:   Friday, Sept. 11
                           5:30 - 8:30 PM, or beyond
           Where:   5235 S. 75th St.
What to bring: This is a guided potluck. Sign up here


Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Scheduling Glitch

The Dept. apologizes for the problem in scheduling overlap with TEAC 808 and SPED 801A. This will be resolved by the end of the week and you will be notified of any alteration of the Tuesday schedule. Never worry about the MAet; there has never been a problem that we could not resolve.

Have a great Wed and Thurs at school!

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

FYI

Sometimes there is confusion, but you should NOT attend the Fall Professional Development Day on the UNL campus August 24. That is for those who are doing their full-time student teaching in the fall.  There will be one for you in the spring 2016.

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