— The project is led by Eric Hirsch, formerly of the New Teacher Center, and Maria Klawe, the president of Harvey Mudd College. They say they hope districts will turn to their ratings to guide purchases. “Hopefully with great materials, great teachers and great standards, we will be able to move the needle on student achievement,” Hirsch said. Incoming NEA President Lily Eskelsen Garcia supports the effort; she says curriculum ratings could improve Common Core implementation “by shining a light” on quality materials.
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Friday, August 15, 2014
CONSUMER REPORTS’ FOR THE COMMON CORE
A ‘CONSUMER REPORTS’ FOR THE COMMON CORE: A new nonprofit
funded with $3 million from the Gates Foundation and the Helmsley Charitable
Trust launches today with plans to review textbooks and other instructional
material for fidelity to the Common Core. EdReports.org will start by bringing
in teams of classroom teachers to evaluate K-8 math materials. The curricula
will be judged by how well it matches the Common Core and assesses student
learning and by whether it offers teachers guidance in reaching children at all
levels.The group will post its ratings online and invite response from the
publishers. Up first: Pearson’s enVision Math, McGraw-Hill’s Everyday Math,
Houghton Mifflin’s Go Math and more than a dozen other widely used curricula.
EdReports will turn to high-school math and language arts in future years.
— The project is led by Eric Hirsch, formerly of the New Teacher Center, and Maria Klawe, the president of Harvey Mudd College. They say they hope districts will turn to their ratings to guide purchases. “Hopefully with great materials, great teachers and great standards, we will be able to move the needle on student achievement,” Hirsch said. Incoming NEA President Lily Eskelsen Garcia supports the effort; she says curriculum ratings could improve Common Core implementation “by shining a light” on quality materials.
— The project is led by Eric Hirsch, formerly of the New Teacher Center, and Maria Klawe, the president of Harvey Mudd College. They say they hope districts will turn to their ratings to guide purchases. “Hopefully with great materials, great teachers and great standards, we will be able to move the needle on student achievement,” Hirsch said. Incoming NEA President Lily Eskelsen Garcia supports the effort; she says curriculum ratings could improve Common Core implementation “by shining a light” on quality materials.
Labels:
Common Core,
Relish
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