As states continue to draw lines in the sand about whether or not they have adopted the Common Core State Standards, there鈥檚 some evidence the new benchmarks have crept into classrooms in all states鈥攎ainly through instructional materials.
Four states鈥擜laska, Nebraska, Texas, and Virginia鈥攈ave firmly refused to adopt the standards since they were unveiled five years ago, and yet there are examples in each place of schools and districts using common-core-aligned curricula.
In fact, some curriculum providers say as many as 1 in 12 users of their common-core-aligned materials hail from states that either never adopted or have repealed adoption of the standards.
Educators鈥 reasons for using common-core-aligned materials vary: Some say such materials are simply the most well-vetted and widely available at this point, and that they line up nicely with their own states鈥 standards. 鈥淔rom the classroom perspective, you鈥檙e not thinking about is this a common-core lesson or is this not, you鈥檙e thinking about is this a good example of what I want my kids to know and be able to do,鈥 said Sarah Maffei, who teaches at KIPP Shine Prep in Houston. 鈥淪o you鈥檙e reaching out for resources anywhere, and there are more [common-core] resources available because it鈥檚 been so widely adopted.鈥
Some teachers, including those in Omaha, Neb., are using common-core materials because that鈥檚 what their district provided. And for some educators, it鈥檚 a matter of advocacy鈥攁 way of getting the standards they鈥檇 hoped their state would adopt in front of their students.
SOURCE: 澳门跑狗论坛
鈥淲hen I pull supplementary materials, most of the times they are common core,鈥 said Cama Charlet, a 3rd grade teacher in Omaha. She pushed to bring the common standards to her state, though the state did not end up adopting them. 鈥淭hat critical thinking has become a core piece of my instruction.鈥
Lessons Spreading
According to BetterLesson, an online lesson-sharing site founded by Teach For America alumnus Alex Grodd that provides common-core materials, about 8 percent of its U.S. traffic is from people in states that never adopted the common-core standards. (Those four states make up about 13 percent of the national public school enrollment.) About 5 percent of its users overall are from the non-adoption state of Texas.
Student Achievement Partners, a professional-development group founded by the lead writers of the common core, says the states that never adopted the standards account for about 2 to 3 percent of U.S. traffic on its website, which offers common-core resources.
Including Indiana and Oklahoma, both of which repealed the standards last year, non-common-core states account for nearly 5 percent of traffic.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think people are coming to [our materials] specifically because they鈥檙e common core,鈥 said Lisa Goldschmidt, the digital director for Student Achievement Partners. 鈥淲hen they decide to use them, it鈥檚 because they offer things that make sense to teachers.鈥
The publishing companies Pearson, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, and McGraw Hill declined to offer comments or data for this story. However, there鈥檚 evidence that commercial publishers are selling common-core materials in non-adoption states as well.
Last year, Omaha public schools in Nebraska began using Go Math!, a common-core-aligned curriculum published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, the Omaha World-Herald reported. The district did not return a request for comment by deadline.
Ms. Charlet said her suburban Omaha district is also deciding between two curricula鈥擥o Math! and another Houghton Mifflin Harcourt curriculum called Math Expressions鈥攖hat are advertised to be in alignment with the common-core standards. A review of those two curricula and others by the nonprofit EdReports.org found that they were not in alignment with the common standards. However, that review process has since faced criticism.
Ms. Charlet sees the use of common-core materials as a good thing. 鈥淩egardless of whether we鈥檝e adopted or not, the materials being created are for common-core states,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut that benefits us as a non-common-core state.鈥
In fact, Nebraska recently drafted a set of new K-12 mathematics standards that have many similarities to the common standards, including a list of 鈥渕athematical processes鈥 that look a lot like the common core鈥檚 鈥淪tandards for Mathematical Practice.鈥
鈥淧olitically, we like to label things common core and non-common core,鈥 Ms. Charlet said. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e elevating our instruction, deepening student learning. I think everybody鈥檚 doing that, whether you鈥檙e common core or not common core.鈥
Lynne Munson, the executive director of Washington-based Great Minds, which publishes the common-core-aligned Eureka Math curriculum, pointed to schools and districts in all four of the non-adoption states that have downloaded her company鈥檚 free common-core materials.
Several school systems purchased the Eureka math materials as well, including Lynchburg City Schools in Virginia and KIPP Houston schools, which are part of the nationwide charter network.
Alaska鈥檚 Bering Strait schools, a remote 1,700-student district that serves 15 villages in the northwest part of the state, also bought pre-K through 8th grade Eureka materials.
And of the 18 professional development institutes the publishing company is holding this summer to help teachers implement Eureka Math, two are in non-common-core states鈥攐ne in Houston, another in Charleston, S.C. South Carolina repealed adoption of the standards last year.
Vetted Materials
One of the most widely used online repositories of free materials that are cropped up with the advent of the common core is EngageNY. The website鈥檚 K-12 resources, developed and housed by New York state, have been downloaded 20 million times鈥攁nd about half of the downloads came from New York. Even so, 83,000 downloads, or 0.4 percent, originated in Texas.
鈥淚 think teachers in the common-core space or the non-common-core space, they鈥檙e reaching out for good resources whatever that may be,鈥 said Ms. Maffei.
Ms. Goldschmidt of Student Achievement Partners agreed that teachers are more concerned with quality than they are with which standards a lesson was written for. 鈥淲e鈥檝e had lots of conversations with teachers about how they go about finding resources on the Internet,鈥 she said. Often, 鈥渢eachers will go to Google and type in 鈥榞rade 4 fractions worksheet.鈥 They鈥檒l find a grade 4 fractions worksheet and have it be common-core aligned, and if it鈥檚 good they鈥檒l use it.鈥
Another lesson-sharing site, ReadWriteThink, a joint project of the International Literacy Association and the National Council of Teachers of English, allows users to view a lesson鈥檚 alignment to either the common core or to their own state standards鈥攊ndicating just how much overlap there can be.
鈥淎s long as you can defend that you鈥檙e teaching your state鈥檚 standards鈥攜ou鈥檙e just aligning it to the more in-depth problem-solving approach to thinking鈥擨 don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 any downside鈥 to using common-core materials, said Ms. Maffei, who is a BetterLesson master teacher and developed a year鈥檚 worth of common-core lessons for that site.
About 2 percent of traffic to another common-core-specific website, Illustrative Mathematics, which was developed in part by William G. McCallum, a lead writer of the common-core math standards, comes from states that never adopted the standards. Half of that traffic is from Texas.
Both Eureka and BetterLesson said a significant portion of their Texas users are coming from Houston. That may be because the KIPP charter network, which has 22 schools in Houston, is encouraging the use of common-core-aligned curricula. The KIPP Houston schools are using a math curriculum that is based on Eureka, with some modifications so that it also aligns with the Texas state standards. While charter schools do have some autonomy, they鈥檙e still required to follow state standards and take the same standardized tests as the public schools.
KIPP Users
According to Ms. Maffei, working in a charter network has made it easier to openly implement common-core materials in her state. 鈥淚 think if I was in a [noncharter] public school, I absolutely would have pushback,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ecause of the environment I teach in, and because so many schools in our network are in common-core states, [other teachers and administrators] are supportive.鈥
But teachers in all schools are looking for vetted materials, Ms. Maffei said. 鈥淚 think more teachers than are probably publicizing it are using these resources,鈥 she said.
And considering some curricula and lesson-sharing sites are more overt with the common-core branding than others, it鈥檚 possible some teachers are unknowingly downloading and using such resources.
鈥淓veryone kind of uses some, sometimes without fully realizing the materials are common core,鈥 said Ms. Charlet. 鈥淲e just don鈥檛 use those words openly [in Nebraska]. ... We鈥檙e dancing around it.鈥