HereForTheBeer: I wonder how much of this stems from the fact that these folks went through a bunch of schooling and internship-time (hopefully) to give them the basics of teaching methodology from which they can then create their own style of teaching, and now CC might be instead turning teaching into a rote process where they are losing the freedom / opportunity to use their creativity in the classroom. At that point, they become instructors instead of teachers.
From my own experience, academic programs for teacher training are leaning towards the teacher adopting a role of facilitator, as opposed to authoritarian; give the students multiple ways to engage the material, so that they can internalize and learn it on their terms, in ways that are the most meaningful and impactful to
them. Mentor teachers that take on student teachers for their practice teaching sessions often encourage their student teachers to develop their own style, being true to their own individual personalities, learning styles and interests. Well, that's how it happens at the best of times, of course.
The problem is that this runs at odds with the notion of having highly rigid standards that must be adhered to, with standardized testing that's just as rigid.
HereForTheBeer: That has to be frustrating. And further, that teaching to CC (and testing) takes so much time that there isn't much flexibility left.
That's one of the biggest problems I've seen; so much time and energy is devoted to teaching to the test, that it's incredibly hard to cover the rest of the material that needs to covered. The stress coming out of that time constraint alone can be overwhelming, especially for new teachers.
HereForTheBeer: But I can see the point of CC: create baseline teaching and measurement methods to help put all schools on a more equal footing, and also to make it easier to determine which schools are doing well and which aren't. Which isn't that dissimilar to what NCLB tried to do, at least from a very basic view of both programs.
I don't know if CC can take into account those external factors or if it's that test results rule all. And I worry that putting all of our eggs into the CC basket means that we'll miss out on some local experimentation that could lead to better results.
From what I understand (and you can correct me if I'm mistaken) a big problem came out of the fact that CC was seen by a lot of people as Yet Another Power Grab by the eeevil Federal Government, to take control of education out of State hands. As a result, the implementation of CC became a mess because it was highly fragmented and inconsistent from state to state.
HereForTheBeer: Problem is we're talking about teaching kids with an enormous variety of backgrounds, not looking at production numbers at five different factories making the exact same widgets from the exact same raw materials.
Yes, and it sadly seems to be cheaper and more politically expedient for the higher-ups to do so. Having classrooms that don't feel like factories enforcing homogeneity means hiring more teachers, more education assistants, and more special education teachers, as well as smaller class sizes. That needs a level of bi-partisanship and fiscal/socio-political commitment that I don't think I'll be seeing in the US anytime soon. But I hope I'm wrong on that.