Beyond Multiple Choice: Teaching and Assessing under the Common Core

Beyond Multiple Choice: Teaching and Assessing under the Common Core
From left to right: Samuel Meisels, Daniel Montgomery, and Christopher Koch CRS/file
Beyond Multiple Choice: Teaching and Assessing under the Common Core
From left to right: Samuel Meisels, Daniel Montgomery, and Christopher Koch CRS/file

Beyond Multiple Choice: Teaching and Assessing under the Common Core

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Adopted last year by Illinois and 43 other states, the Common Core State Standards are an ambitious effort to raise the bar of K-12 student achievement to one that is on par with the best education systems in the world. Illinois is part of a 26-state consortium that is developing a new testing system for implementation in 2014–15. It is expected to show that students statewide have a lot further to go than ISAT exams have suggested.

The new CPS administration has embraced the Common Core as a reform centerpiece and plans to implement the new standards district-wide in 2012–13, one year earlier than required. A related reform goal is to create an integrated preschool-to-12 system so that teaching and learning move steadily from the start toward college and career readiness. The sweeping overhaul of the central and field offices is aimed at that goal.

Many educators are enthusiastic about how the new Common Core standards promote deep learning and critical thinking across multiple grades. Others worry about how the new demands for accelerated learning will affect the early grades and connect to the Illinois Early Learning Standards for PreK. Realizing the full promise of the new standards in every classroom for every student will be a daunting undertaking.

In our 2011 Chicago School Policy Forum Series, key leaders will discuss where the standards came from, how they will be measured, and what they could mean for educators, parents, schools, districts, and other stakeholders. This lecture features Chris Koch, Illinois state school superintendent, who will speak to teaching and assessing under the Common Core standards. Sam Meisels, president of the Erikson Institute, and Dan Montgomery, president of the Illinois Federation of Teachers will respond to Koch’s talk.

Recorded Tuesday, November 8, 2011 at the Union League Club of Chicago.