Education standardization: Essential or harmful? — from gettingsmart.com by Marie Bjerede
Education standardization: Essential or harmful? — from gettingsmart.com by Marie Bjerede
From DSC:
High-stakes testing: Is it removing the enjoyment ot teaching….and learning? I reflected on that question after I saw the item below:
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From DSC:
I wonder:
Mind the (Skills) Gap –– from HBR by William D. Eggers, John Hagel and Owen Sanderson
Excerpt:
A bachelor’s degree used to provide enough basic training to last a career. Yet today, the skills college graduates acquire during college have an expected shelf life of only five years according to extensive work we’ve done in conjunction with Deloitte’s Shift Index. The key takeaway? The lessons learned in school can become outdated long before student loans are paid off.
And it’s not only white-collar, college-driven careers that will suffer rapid skills obsolescence. Think of how new metering systems and motion sensors suddenly require highly technical skills from contractors, plumbers and electricians. Or how welders working on wind turbines now need specialized degrees and the ability to read CAD blueprints or LEED certification requirements.
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Common-Core writers craft curriculum criteria — from edweek.org by Catherine Gewertz
Excerpt:
New guidelines on crafting curriculum materials for the common standards in English/language arts are reigniting debate about how to ensure a marketplace of good instructional materials for the new standards without crossing the line into telling teachers how to teach.
Also see: