A just released survey on school standards by the LSU Public
Policy Research Lab confirms the result of an earlier survey of Louisiana
voters that public opinion is turning solidly against Common Core. The LSU
survey points out that Louisiana voters are generally not opposed to common standards,
but they are increasingly against the Common Core standards. This most recent poll
finds that approximately 51% of all voters now oppose Common Core with a
significant number of persons still undecided. But that leaves only 39% of
voters favoring the Common Core standards. This is certainly not good
news for those groups that have spent so many millions trying to sell the
Common Core to educators and the general public. The problem is that most of that selling was pure Madison Avenue and not really based on the actual application of the CCSS.
Compare the above results with a completely different survey
conducted two weeks ago by Marble Port Polling. As this blog reported in a March 17th post, this survey found that 54% of voters opposed Common Core. That survey only found only 17% of voters
favoring Common Core. I believe the difference in the two polls can easily be explained by the way the questions were put to the respondents. The LSU poll produced more varied results because they presented the idea of standards in a more nuanced fashion.
These two surveys, even though they approach the standards subject in different ways still generally agree, that the voting public has turned rather dramatically against Common Core. Only a year ago, most Louisiana voters had no idea what the Common Core was all about and most voters were undecided on the issue. Support for the CCSS has eroded greatly now that parents have had a chance to see how the standards actually affect children when they are applied in the classroom. My opinion is that if the standards were truly effective and educationally sound, public opinion would have turned in favor as everyone got a chance to see how well they worked. I can assure my readers of this political reality: The opponents of Common Core in Louisiana are much more dedicated to their cause and will fight much harder to remove CCSS than those who support it. There is much more money on the Support CCSS side but eventually politicians listen more to the voters that are truly passionate in their stand because those are the folks that can un-elect you!
These two surveys, even though they approach the standards subject in different ways still generally agree, that the voting public has turned rather dramatically against Common Core. Only a year ago, most Louisiana voters had no idea what the Common Core was all about and most voters were undecided on the issue. Support for the CCSS has eroded greatly now that parents have had a chance to see how the standards actually affect children when they are applied in the classroom. My opinion is that if the standards were truly effective and educationally sound, public opinion would have turned in favor as everyone got a chance to see how well they worked. I can assure my readers of this political reality: The opponents of Common Core in Louisiana are much more dedicated to their cause and will fight much harder to remove CCSS than those who support it. There is much more money on the Support CCSS side but eventually politicians listen more to the voters that are truly passionate in their stand because those are the folks that can un-elect you!
The LSU survey finds that Republicans (62%) are more opposed
to Common Core than Democrats. 57% of
Democrats still support Common Core, but even that support is also eroding as
parents learn more about the actual application of the standards. For example, New York state is two years
ahead of Louisiana in testing the standards.
New York is using a higher passing score than Louisiana by setting
the minimum passing score at the proficient level, which is at level 4 on a 5
point rating scale. Louisiana, according to John White will start by setting he
passing score at the basic level (a score of 3 out of 5) and gradually raise
the expected score to the proficient level over a period of 10 years.
70% of all students in New York failed the test in the first
year and about 67% failed in the second year. Supporters had predicted that
scores would go up as teachers and students learned how to apply the standards
better. But now it turns out that the slight improvement in scores in the second
year was due to removal of a few of the most difficult and confusing questions.
It looks like there was no real gain in performance, only a corresponding
watering down of the test. My readers will remember that Louisiana test score results are routinely manipulated also. (John White hails from New York)
Here is another interesting revelation of the New York
testing. High poverty students, English as a Second Language students and all at-risk students did significantly worse on the new Common Core aligned
tests. Remember when David Coleman and other Common Core supporters claimed that
the miracle CCSS would reduce the achievement gap? It is clear that the CCSS has greatly increased the achievement gap instead!
All of these developments predict further erosion of support
for the CCSS as the public learns more and more about how they actually work in
real schools. This once again demonstrates that we should not be using our
children as guinea pigs to test the wacky theories of the so called education reformers.