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<div class="">August 21, 2013</div>
<h1>The Common Core and the Common Good</h1>
<h6 class="">By
<span>
<a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists/charles_m_blow/index.html" rel="author" title="More Articles by CHARLES M. BLOW"><span>CHARLES M. BLOW</span></a></span></h6>
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<p>
America, we have a problem. </p>
<p>
Our educational system is not keeping up with that of many other
industrialized countries, even as the job market becomes more global and
international competition for jobs becomes steeper. </p>
<p>
We have gone from the leader to a laggard. </p>
<p>
According to the <a href="http://broadeducation.org/about/crisis_stats.html">Broad Foundation</a>,
an educational reform group, “American students rank 25th in math, 17th
in science and 14th in reading compared to students in 27
industrialized countries.” </p>
<p>
And we have gone from No. 1 in high school graduation to 22nd among industrialized countries, according to <a href="http://www.oecd.org/edu/highlights.pdf">a report</a> last year by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. </p>
<p>
That same report found that fewer than half of our students finished
college. This ranked us 14th among O.E.C.D. countries, below the
O.E.C.D. average. In 1995 we were among the Top 5. </p>
<p>
Some rightly point to the high levels of poverty in our public schools
to adjust for our lagging performance, but poverty — and affluence —
can’t explain all the results away. </p>
<p>
As Amanda Ripley, an investigative journalist, explains in her <a href="http://www.amazon.com/The-Smartest-Kids-World-ebook/dp/B0061NT61Y#reader_B0061NT61Y">new book</a>,
“The Smartest Kids in the World and How They Got That Way,” American
students are not performing at the same level of their peers
internationally. </p>
<p>
She writes: “American kids are better off, on average, than the typical
child in Japan, New Zealand, or South Korea, yet they knew far less math
than those children. Our most privileged teenagers had highly educated
parents and attended the richest school in the world, yet they ranked
18th in math compared to their privileged peers around the world,
scoring well below affluent kinds in New Zealand, Belgium, France and
Korea, among other places. The typical child in Beverly Hills performed
below average, compared to all kids in Canada.” </p>
<p>
A report this month by the company that administers ACT, the college
admissions test, found that only a fourth of those tested were ready for
college. And that was among motivated students who want to go to
college, from all sorts of schools, not just public school students.
</p>
<p>
Any way you slice it, we’re not where we want or need to be. </p>
<p>
One strategy of changing our direction as a nation is the adoption of
Common Core State Standards, meant to teach children the skills they
need to be successful in college and careers — skills like critical
thinking and deep analysis. </p>
<p>
These are things that Americans recognize that our schools need to teach. According to a <a href="http://www.gallup.com/poll/164060/americans-say-schools-teach-soft-skills.aspx">Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup poll</a>
released Wednesday, 80 percent of Americans strongly agree that schools
should teach critical thinking skills, 78 percent agree that they
should teach communication skills, 57 percent agree that they should
teach students how to collaborate and 51 percent believe that they
should help build student’s character. </p>
<p>
The Obama administration strongly supports the Common Core, and the American Federation of Teachers <a href="http://www.uft.org/op-eds/common-core-wake-call">endorses it</a>. The president of the United Federation of Teachers says that most teachers agree it should be implemented. And, according to <a target="_" href="http://CoreStandands.org">CoreStandands.org</a>,
“45 states, the District of Columbia, four territories and the
Department of Defense Education Activities have adopted the Common Core
State Standards.” </p>
<p>
This seemed like a sure thing. The problem is that, in some states,
Common Core testing has been implemented before teachers, or the public
for that matter, have been instructed in how to teach students using the
new standards. </p>
<p>
This means that, when students score poorly on the more rigorous Common
Core-based tests, it threatens to cause a backlash among parents, who
increasingly see testing as the problem, not the solution. </p>
<p>
That Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup poll also found that most Americans had not
heard of the Common Core. Only 22 percent thought increased testing
helped school performance, and most rejected the use of student test
scores to evaluate teachers. </p>
<p>
Because we insist on prioritizing testing over teaching — punishments
over preparation — we run the risk of turning Americans off one of the
few educational strategies in recent memory that most people say we
need. </p>
<p>
That’s so American. </p>
<p>
We have to decide as a country — politicians and parents, corporations
and communities — that high-performance education is not only valuable
to our sense of self, but essential to our future prosperity. Today’s
students are tomorrow’s workers and leaders and innovators and
entrepreneurs. </p>
<p>
In all the discussions I have with educational leaders and reformers on
improving our educational outcomes, there seems to be some level of
agreement — though obviously not full agreement — on strategies that
work: attracting, supporting and keeping the best teachers and investing
in their development; providing “wrap-around” services for poor and
struggling students; making schools safe, welcoming, fun places with
recess and art and music and nutritious food; and strongly promoting
parental engagement. </p>
<p>
And we need a national standard for what the kind of education that we
want our children to receive. Our educational system has become so
tangled in experiments and exams and excuses that we’ve drifted away
from the basis of what makes education great: learning to think
critically and solve problems. </p>
<p>
We have drifted away from the fundamentals of what makes a great
teacher: the ability to light a fire in a child, to develop in him or
her a level of intellectual curiosity, the grit to persevere and the
capacity to expand. Great teachers help to activate a small thing that
breeds great minds: thirst. </p>
<p>
The Common Core is meant to help bolster those forms of learning and teaching. </p>
<p>
The Common Core is for the common good, if only we can get our act together and properly implement it. </p>
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<p style="text-align:center">•</p>
<p>I invite you to join me on <a href="http://www.facebook.com/CharlesMBlow">Facebook</a> and follow me on <a href="http://twitter.com/CharlesMBlow">Twitter</a>, or e-mail me at <a href="mailto:chblow@nytimes.com">chblow@nytimes.com</a>. </p>
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