Lisa Guernsey
Senior Director, Birth to 12th Grade Policy; Co-Founder and Director, Learning Sciences Exchange
<ul><li>Encourage states, schools districts, and other institutions to better align teacher preparation practices and programs to teaching of college and career-ready standards.</li></ul> <div>Alignment, if done right, could be a boon for models like the PreK-3<sup>rd</sup> approach – in which teachers from pre-K through the third grades know exactly what students are learning in each grade, therefore avoiding redundancy and building on students’ knowledge. In a preK-3<sup>rd</sup> model, teachers are part of continual, professional-development programs that sync up with expectations for what children should learn in the classroom. Even more importantly, these teachers <i>across grade levels</i> are working as a team to ensure that what children learn one year can be harnessed and built upon in the next year, and so on.</div><div> </div><div>But is that what the administration means? It’s not yet clear.</div><div> </div><div>Late last year, <i>Early Ed Watch’s</i> Sara Mead wrote <a href="../../../../../../blogposts/2009/drafting_common_standards_whats_ahead_and_whats_missing-18466">a post that captured the uncertainty accompanying the development of common standards</a> by <a href="http://www.corestandards.org/">The Common Core State Standards Initiative</a>, the coalition that has been applauded by the Obama administration for bringing 48 states together to draft a set of standards that states could voluntarily adopt.</div><div> </div><div>As Mead pointed out, this initiative applies to the grades K-12, not <i>pre-</i>K-12. She also notes that the strength of the grade-by-grade standards – which have not yet been released by the Common Core coalition – will determine whether they lead to any real improvements in early education.</div><div> </div><div>To quote: “This will be especially important in the early grades, which are often <a href="http://www.newamerica.net/blog/early-ed-watch/2008/call-clarity-early-elementary-standards-3020">an area of particular weakness </a>in existing state standards. Many states’ early elementary standards are too vague to provide useful guidance to teachers and repeat the same standard over multiple grades (NOT helpful for alignment!). In a few states, the expectations for grades K-3 or K-2 are clustered into a single standard (even less helpful!).”</div><div> </div><div>Don’t forget, too, that there is still so much we don’t know about the administration’s proposal for ESEA:</div> <ul><li>Since we don’t know what the Common Core’s grade-by-grade standards will look like, we don’t know what this standards push means to kindergarten, or first grade, or second grade, etc.</li><li>We don’t know how “college-and-career ready” is being defined and if the Obama administration intends to meaningfully connect this to early education. We don’t know if preschool settings are on their mind when officials say “college and career ready."</li><li>We don’t know if Congress would even embrace these ideas enough to consider them or, more importantly, write them into law.</li></ul> <div>One thing that should be clear, however, is that college readiness is incumbent on helping children attain a strong foundation for learning from the very beginning. If “college and career ready” is going to become the term of art, it behooves us to remember that this journey depends on what happens from birth to age 18 – not just in those last few years of public schooling.</div><div> </div><div>P.S. Those of you here in Washington, D.C., may want to check out an <a href="http://www.educationsector.org/events/events_show.htm?doc_id=1172631">upcoming event </a>that will tackle some of these issues. On Thursday, March 11, 2010, from 9:00 to 11:30 a.m., the think tank Education Sector will host an event on ESEA to ask questions such as: “What will ‘college- and career-ready’ mean? How would such a mandate look in federal law, and how would it be implemented by local educators?” The event is the first in a series of "Race to Reauthorization" forums Education Sector is convening on reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.</div>