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geefloyd46

(1,939 posts)
Mon Oct 29, 2012, 10:47 AM Oct 2012

Snookered by Bill Gates and the U. S. Department of Education - Dailycensored.com | Dailycensored.co

Attention people who care about children in Alabama, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Vermont, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming.

You’ve been snookered.

The truth of the matter is that we’ve all been snookered by the U. S. Department of Education, working in cahoots with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, but the release of the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium sample assessment items makes the flimflam obvious to people in the above states. Their leaders gave promissory notes to the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium.

U. S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan says the new assessments will be “an absolute game changer in public education.” Translation: They’ll rob you blind, ruin your curriculum, and turn your children into test-taking drudges.

On Oct. 24, 2012, the Vermont State Department of Education issued an enthusiastic press release trumpeting these sample test items. Acting as an echo chamber for the U. S. Department of Education, Vermont Education Commissioner Armando Vilaseca says, “These sample items will provide Vermont teachers with an early look into the rigor and complexity students will see on the Smarter Balanced assessments.”

It’s sad to see an ed commissioner who actually has a lot of experience working in schools act as a megaphone to power, but certainly it’s no surprise that the U. S. Secretary of Education, a man with no teacher experience, employs exclamation points to voice his enthusiasm for the new tests. After all, Arne Duncan is the one who handed out $361 million taxpayer dollars to the testing consortia: Smarter Balanced and PARCC. There are two to avoid accusations of politicos forcing a National Test on public education.

By the way, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, who financed the development of the Common Core as a delivery system for these tests and many millions to outfits ranging from the PTA to ASCD to promote it, kicked in another $743,331 “to support capacity building” at Smarter Balanced.

State Departments of Education across the country echo Vermont in urging teachers to use these Smarter Balanced test items “to begin planning the shifts in instruction that will be required to help students meet the demands of the new assessments.” Bring on ugly, brain-numbing skill drill worksheets on apostrophe use.

Linda Darling Hammond, professor of education at Stanford University (which is well rewarded by the Gates Foundation) as well as senior research advisor for Smarter Balanced, said this: Performance tasks ask students to research and analyze information, weigh evidence, and solve problems relevant to the real world, allowing students to demonstrate their knowledge and skills in an authentic way. The Smarter Balanced assessment system uses performance tasks to measure skills valued by higher education and the workplace–critical thinking, problem solving, and communication–that are not adequately assessed by most statewide assessments today.

Indeed. I read the released items in English Language Arts/Literacy, and I wanted to vomit.

Smarter Balanced showed their capacity for coming up with new, innovative assessments by hiring CTB/McGraw-Hill to deliver 10,000 test items–bland passages with no authors and no voice–and lots of items requiring copy-editing skills. Now I know why these Smarter Balanced released items look so familiar: CTB/McGraw-Hill has been selling this stuff since 1926.

I wrote the Smarter Balanced Help Desk, asking why they offered students so many items with no authors and no voice. They replied, “Authors write the items. For passages, internal authors write some of them and others require external permissions.” They invited me to ask any other questions I might have.

The “authors” are work-for-hire freelancers who aren’t allowed to exhibit personality. These Smarter Balanced items don’t qualify as fiction or non-fiction; they are simply test tommyrot. Putting such artificial passages on tests sends a terrible message to teachers, provoking the use of tons of workbook paragraphs–to get kids ready for an ugly test.

In addition to the antiquated copy-editing chores, Smarter Balanced ignores research on how children acquire new vocabulary and asks testees to use context clues to figure out the meaning of words. I summarized the research refuting this notion in a book chapter: Context Clues: Cure-All or Claptrap? Research shows that when students read for pleasure they experience multiple encounters with new words–and it’s those multiple encounters that result in significant vocabulary growth.

Twenty-five states have signed on to this boondoggle.

Fuller piece: http://laborspains.blogspot.com/2012/10/snookered-by-bill-gates-and-u-s.html

Originally piece: http://www.dailycensored.com/2012/10/28/snookered-by-bill-gates-and-the-u-s-department-of-education/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Dailycensored+%28Daily+Censored%29

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Snookered by Bill Gates and the U. S. Department of Education - Dailycensored.com | Dailycensored.co (Original Post) geefloyd46 Oct 2012 OP
Yet another good reason to take the Microsoft out of Microsoft NBC jenw2 Oct 2012 #1
or take Microsoft out of the schools and go open source yurbud Oct 2012 #3
Exactly! jenw2 Oct 2012 #5
it would also be a way to separate the real fiscal "hawks" from the crony capitalists yurbud Oct 2012 #6
Absolutely agreed. geefloyd46 Oct 2012 #2
Look: any time you start "measuring" kids and stuffing them in pigeonholes, bemildred Oct 2012 #4
 

jenw2

(374 posts)
1. Yet another good reason to take the Microsoft out of Microsoft NBC
Mon Oct 29, 2012, 10:53 AM
Oct 2012

I can't wait until it becomes more balanced as their influence decreases.

 

jenw2

(374 posts)
5. Exactly!
Tue Oct 30, 2012, 02:26 PM
Oct 2012

Microsoft makes the most productive and polished software, but it's just too expensive. I'd rather have that money put to teacher salaries than in BillG's pockets. You could make the argument that since real businesses don't use open source that the kids shouldn't since it doesn't prepare them for the real world, but the money argument overrules that one.

yurbud

(39,405 posts)
6. it would also be a way to separate the real fiscal "hawks" from the crony capitalists
Wed Oct 31, 2012, 12:13 PM
Oct 2012

because it would show that bird is mythical.

geefloyd46

(1,939 posts)
2. Absolutely agreed.
Mon Oct 29, 2012, 11:04 AM
Oct 2012

In America everything is for sale, including their kids education. The race for riches is running right through the education budget. It's like the new gold rush with government money being the ultimate goal to be re-distributed by our education barons. Education is becoming just another commodity.

bemildred

(90,061 posts)
4. Look: any time you start "measuring" kids and stuffing them in pigeonholes,
Mon Oct 29, 2012, 05:29 PM
Oct 2012

YOU ARE DISCRIMINATING AGAINST THEM.

Schools is not a factory, kids are not widgets, they are not supposed to all be alike, that is a stupid idea.

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