Florida

Putting Education Reform To The Test

Topics

Your Essential Guide To The Common Core

Background

6-17 StudentsWorking

John O'Connor / StateImpact Florida

Common Core is math, language arts and literacy standards fully adopted by 44 states and the District of Columbia.

The standards outline what students should know at the end of each grade.

Minnesota state adopted one of the sets of standards but not the other. And Indiana adopted Common Core, but then repealed the standards.

The new standards will likely mean new textbooks and classroom materials. Florida has adopted a new statewide test, developed by the American Institutes for Research. Other states have chosen to use exams from the multi-state groups Smarter Balanced and Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers.

The standards set expectations for student achievement at each grade level. They also require students to show they understand what theyā€™ve learned.

The goal is more students graduate ready for college or a career. The standards emphasize reading and requiring students to defend their work with evidence.

The Florida Department of Education added calculus, cursive writing and made a handful of other changes to the standards in 2014. They renamed them the Florida Standards, but the standards do not substantially differ from Common Core.

Florida is phasing in the new standards over several years. Full implementation is scheduled for the 2014-15 academic year.

Got questions about the Common Core? Visit our Core Questions page for information on how to get them answered.

COMMON CORE TIMELINE

1983 A commission established by President Reagan publishes ā€œA Nation at Risk.ā€ The report calls for setting standards for what students should know and be able to do and marks the starting point of ā€œstandards-basedā€ education reform. The movement calls for setting standards for what students should learn and monitoring whether they are learning through standardized tests. In the following years, states move to adopt standards, pushed along by federal legislation. Teachers groups also publish model standards of their own.

1994 A series of Clinton administration-backed laws (Goals 2000: Educate America Act and the Improving Americaā€™s Schools Act) requires states to set standards and set up corresponding tests.

1996 At the 1996 National Education Summit, governors and business leaders pledge to work together to raise standards and achievement in public schools. Achieve, a nonprofit, nonpartisan group which will become instrumental in the creation of the Common Core, is founded.

2001 President Bush signs the No Child Left Behind Act which strengthens requirements for the kinds of standards states must set and requires states to test students in specific grades and subjects. However, states are still free to set their own standards and create their own tests.

2008 The National Governors Association, state education commissioners and other groups begin organizing development of common standards in math and English language arts for grades K-12.

2009 Governors and state education commissioners from 48 states plus the District of Columbia commit to developing the Common Core standards. Only Alaska and Texas do not join the effort.

February, 2010 Kentucky adopts the Common Core standards before theyā€™ve been publicly released, making it the first state to adopt them.

March 10, 2010 First draft of the standards are released to the public for comment.

June 2, 2010 Final Common Core standards released for states to adopt or reject.

August 2, 2010 California adopts Common Core standards on the day federal officials set as deadline for states to apply for federal funds through the Race to the Top program. In the competition, states get extra points for having adopted the common core standards.

November 4, 2011 Montana becomes the 46th (and final) state to adopt the Common Core standards. Alaska, Nebraska, Texas and Virginia are the four that did not; Minnesota did not adopt the math standards but did adopt core standards for English language arts.

2011-12 School Year Development of new standardized tests tied to the Common Core standards begins. The effort is led by two consortiums of states, known as PARCC and Smarter Balanced, which share $360 million in federal grants to develop the new tests.

2012-13 School Year PARCC and Smarter Balanced begin pilot testing of new standardized tests.

2013-14 School Year Field testing continues for new standardized tests.

2014-15 School Year All participating states begin using new standardized tests for math and English language arts. The tests replace tests that had previously been in use in each state.

Latest Posts

Bandwidth, Computers, Classroom Space All A Challenge In Online Testing

Having enough high-speed Internet and computers are problems as Florida school districts transition to online testing tied to new math and language arts standards. But testing rules have made classroom space and logistics a challenge as well. Pensacola News Journal reporter Michael Scott Davidson outlines some of the issues in Santa Rosa County schools: Wyrosdick […]

The Florida Tests Which Will Remain After The Switch To Common Standards

The final bell begins tolling today for the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test. Florida schools are scheduled to complete the switch to new K-12 math and language arts standards based on Common Core this fall. New standards will require a new test. So Florida is switching to math and language arts exams produced by the American […]

Checking In On Education Bills As Florida Legislature Reaches Halfway Point

The 2014 Florida legislative session reached the halfway point last week, so we thought we’d check in on some of the big education bills. The Budget The House, Senate and Gov. Rick Scott mostly agree on education spending based on their proposed budgets. Both the House and the Senate approved roughly $75 billion budgets last […]

New York Parents Organize Movement Against Common Core Tests

The civil disobedience taking place during New York’s statewide testing season may offer a preview of what’s to come when Florida unveils new Common Core-tied tests next year. This is the second year New York has used a home-grown test to assess its Common Core standards. The protests started last year and seem to be […]

Despite Common Core, Columnist Says GOP Should Still Consider Jeb Bush

Republicans should give former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush a chance if he decides to run for president in 2016 — despite his support of Common Core education standards — George Will writes in The Washington Post: He will not, however, have the nomination handed to him on a silver salver. And the nomination fight would […]

Why Police Support Common Core Standards In Florida

Floridaā€™s Common Core standards have a new group of supporters: law enforcement. The national anti-crime group Fight Crime: Invest in KidsĀ released a position paperĀ in favor of Floridaā€™s new standards for English language arts and math. The group argues that assessments and higher standards can prevent crime. Hereā€™s the paperā€™s summary of the connection: ā€œFloridaā€™s law […]

New Florida Writing Test Will Use Computers To Grade Student Essays

A computer program will grade student essays on the writing portion of the standardized test set to replace the FCAT, according to bid documents released by the Florida Department of Education. The essays will be scored by a human and a computer, but the computer score will only matter if the score is significantly different […]

Checking The Claims In The New Ad About Florida Schools

Editor’s note: This post has been updated to clarify claims about Advanced Placement tests. This week, the Foundation for Excellence in Education began running a television ad in the Tampa Bay market touting Florida school progress. The ad serves two purposes: it argues Florida schools are improving, and that improvement is due to annual statewide […]

Florida Still Has Lengthy To-Do List For Federal Grant

The U.S. Department of Education says Florida trails other states in meeting the requirements of its $700 million federal Race to the Top grant, Education Week reports. From the story: Yet even with billions of dollars and the political cover that came with winning a grant, the annual reports show that states still struggle mightily […]

Bush Foundation Promoting Common Education Standards Online, On Air

The education foundation founded by former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush has launched a new web site and advertising campaign to support the Common Core math and language arts standards facing criticism in many states. The campaign by the Foundation For Excellence in Education is called “Learn More. Go Further.” The web site features videos of […]

About StateImpact

StateImpact seeks to inform and engage local communities with broadcast and online news focused on how state government decisions affect your lives.
Learn More »

Economy
Education