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October 6, 2011

Review of the National Research Council's Framework for K-12 Science Education

Paul Gross, Forward by Chester E. Finn, Jr., and Kathleen Porter-Magee:

Science will soon join the short list of K-12 subjects for which American states, districts, and schools will have the option of using new, multi-state (aka, "national") academic standards rather than standards developed by individual states. One can reasonably surmise that new assessments aligned with those standards will follow in due course, as will curricula, professional development, textbooks, and much more.

Is this a good thing for American students and teachers--and for the nation's future? It depends, of course, on whether the new standards (and ensuing assessments, etc.) are better than those that states have been devising and deploying on their own. Today, every state has its own unique version of K-12 science standards. A year or so from now, however, many of them are apt to be deciding whether to replace their individual standards with the new multi-state standards that a (privately funded) consortium of organizations (led by Achieve, Inc.) recently began to draft.

Posted by Jim Zellmer at October 6, 2011 1:36 AM
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