The relationship between Core Curriculum and college preparedness

Most educational experts agree that common core curriculum is not the solution to closing the achievement gap. Too bad politicians are the ones with a final say.

Common Core Curriculum is meant to be an equalizing force

But states with historically lower quality education systems are just falling farther behind.

With proficiency levels plummeting

In West Virginia: 35% failed exit exam for highschool

In Oklahoma: 33% failed

Algebra in the 8th grade is perhaps the biggest stumbling block

With 43% of New Mexico students falling below proficient

And 39% of Tennessee students

While core curriculum has improved performance in states with traditionally good educational systems, all of the unimproved states beg the questions…

Is core curriculum a one-size-fits all pathway governed by abstract government content?

Three main arguments for core curriculum

Students will learn more if their learning targets are set higher

Students will learn more if the passing grade for state tests are set higher

And students will learn more if lesson plans and textbooks are all made more complex and rigorous

or is it the great equalizing force?

History of Common Core

Historically, a dual educational system included vocational and college-bound tracks. Core curriculum is meant to bridge the gap between these tracks.

The conundrum: By forcing a standard (and harder) curriculum on all students, many students fall even farther behind, get discouraged and ultimately drop out.

Case study: Algebra

Common core teaches algebra in the 8th grade

During a plateau in childhood brain development

Making it much harder to deal with and retain new concepts

Rationale:students with algebra have more options when they graduate, and the earlier one takes algebra, the more advanced courses they can take before college.

In real life: Algebra at too early of an age turns kids off to math, and often becomes a cited reason for dropping out, ultimately leaving kids with less options.

Perspective: in the real world, how many times will an employer ask you for a proof of the quadratic equation?

Is the system really working?…Higher Education

Only 1% of the 1.7 million bachelor’s degrees awarded last year were in math

Coupled with the fact that only 58% of those that enter higher education graduate

Meaning only .0058 of those who enter college will successfully graduate as math majors

(That’s 58 out of every 10,000 matriculating students)

Think about it: with the well documented negative effects of forcing math at too early of a developmental stage, we could be weeding out the next Pulitzer prize winner, famed historian, or innovator by turning them off to school.

Children are emotionally vulnerable, and learn in many, many ways, but the only question in policymakers mind is how to keep up with other nations educational systems.