[h=1]Debunking Myths of the Common Core[/h]                   	 				 		
                                                                                                Development Process and Adoption                                         
                                                                  Myth: The standards tell teachers what to teach.     
                     Fact: The Common Core State Standards define 
what students need to know;  they do not define what teachers should teach or how students should  learn. The best understanding of what works in the classroom comes from  the teachers who are in them. The standards will actually help 
preserve  freedom for curriculum choice. These decisions are left to each state,  and local teachers, principals, superintendents and school boards will  continue to make important decisions about curriculum and how their  school systems operate.
                                         
                         Myth: The standards will be implemented through NCLB—signifying the federal government will be leading them.                      
                     Fact: The Common Core State  Standards Initiative is a state-led effort that is not part of No Child  Left Behind, and adoption of the standards is in no way mandatory.  States began the work to create clear, consistent standards before the  Recovery Act or the Elementary and Secondary Education Act blueprints  were released because this work is being driven by the needs of the  states, not the federal government.
                                         
                         Myth: These standards amount to a national curriculum for our schools.         
                     Fact: The Common Core State  Standards are not a national mandate or a national curriculum. They are a  clear set of shared goals and expectations for 
what knowledge and skills will help our students succeed.  Local teachers, principals, superintendents and others will decide how  the standards are to be met. Teachers will continue to devise lesson  plans and tailor instruction to the individual needs of the students in  their classrooms. States voluntarily chose whether or not to adopt the  standards and retain full authority for implementation, preventing the  possibility of a federal takeover. State leaders, accountable to their  constituents, can withdraw their states from the standards at any time.
                                         
                         Myth: The standards will cost more by requiring states to spend on training, tests, etc.                      
                     Fact: The Common Core State  Standards make economic sense. Improving the quality of education  delivered in American classrooms through higher standards has the  potential to lessen the next generation’s reliance on our ever-expanding  entitlement and corrections programs. Higher standards will prepare our  future workforce for the global economy, strengthening our nation’s  competitiveness. They will also save taxpayer money by reducing the need  for costly remediation in college. The cost of current tests that are  not aligned to college- and career-ready standards is high. Reducing  those costs will make money available for better tests.
                                         
                         Myth: The standards are an intrusion on student privacy rights and will allow student data to be inappropriately tracked.                      
                     Fact: As part of broader education  reform efforts, states have adopted data systems that allow educators  and parents to measure the progress of student achievement and growth  from year to year. Regardless of adopting the Common Core, 
states remain in control  of their students’ private information, just as they are now. The  federal government does not have access to individual student-level  data—just aggregate information by school on how kids are performing, a  result of No Child Left Behind’s focus on accountability. States must  remain vigilant in working with local school districts to continue  protecting student information.
                                         
                         Myth: The federal government will take over ownership of the Common Core State Standards Initiative. 
                                           Fact: The federal government will not govern the Common Core State Standards Initiative. The initiative 
was and will remain a state-led effort.
                                         
                         Myth: The federal government made states adopt the standards by threatening to withhold federal education dollars.                      
                     Fact: The federal government provided incentives through the 
optional  Race to the Top program for states to adopt bold education reforms,  including college- and career-ready standards and teacher evaluation  systems, but each state voluntarily made the decision to adopt the  Common Core and followed its own specific constitutional, legislative or  administrative processes to do so. A state’s decision to adopt these  standards played a very minor role in the Race to the Top competitive  scoring process (making up just 8 percent of an individual state’s score  under the federal application).
                                         
                                                       Quality and Content: General                                         
                                                                  Myth: Adopting common standards  will bring all states’ standards down to the lowest common denominator,  which means states with high standards, such as Massachusetts, will be  taking a step backward if they adopt the Common Core State  Standards.         
                     Fact: The standards are designed to build upon the 
most advanced  current thinking about preparing all students for success in college  and their careers. This will result in moving even the best state  standards to the next level. In fact, since this work began, there has  been an explicit agreement that no state would lower its standards. A  study by the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a conservative think tank,  showed that Common Core State Standards are superior to standards  currently in use in 39 states in math and 37 states in English. For 33  states, the new standards are superior in both math and reading. The  shared standards will increase accountability by providing transparent  data that allows for true comparisons across state lines. Additionally,  an analysis by ACT found that three-fourths of young men and women  entering college “were not adequately prepared academically for first  year college courses.” Therefore, current standards are not effectively  preparing our students to be college- and career-ready.
                                         
                         Myth: The standards are not internationally benchmarked.             
                     Fact: International benchmarking  played a significant role in the development of the standards. In fact,  the college- and career-ready standards include an appendix listing the  evidence that was consulted in drafting the standards, and the  international data consulted in the benchmarking process is included in  this appendix. More evidence from international sources is presented  together with the final draft.
                                         
                         Myth: The standards include controversial science curriculum content.                        
                     Fact: Contrary to purported myths  about the Common Core, these standards encompass only English language  arts and mathematics, focusing on improving needed critical-thinking and  analytic skills. State and local officials will continue to make  important curriculum decisions when it comes to teaching history or  specific issues such as evolution and “intelligent design,” in line with  what is right for their students and communities.
                                         
                                                       Quality and Content: English Language Arts                                         
                                                                  Myth: The standards suggest teaching The Grapes of Wrath
 to second-graders.             
                       Fact: The English language arts  standards suggest The Grapes of Wrath as a text that would be  appropriate for ninth- or 10th-grade readers. Evidence shows that the  complexity of texts students are reading today does not match what is  demanded in college and the workplace, creating a gap between what high  school students can do and what they need to be able to do. The Common  Core State Standards create a staircase of increasing text complexity,  so that students are expected to both develop their skills and apply  them to more and more complex texts.
                                         
                         Myth: The standards are just  vague descriptions of skills; they don’t include a reading list or any  other similar reference to content.
                                           Fact: The standards do include  sample texts that demonstrate the level of text complexity appropriate  for the grade level and compatible with the learning demands set out in  the standards. The exemplars of high-quality texts at each grade level  provide a rich set of possibilities and have been very well received.  This gives teachers the flexibility to make their own decisions about  what texts to use—while providing an excellent reference point when  selecting their texts.
                                         
                         Myth: English teachers will be asked to teach science and social studies reading materials.                               
                       Fact: With the Common Core English  language arts standards, English teachers will still teach their  students literature as well as literary nonfiction. However, because  college and career readiness overwhelmingly focuses on complex texts  outside of literature, these standards also ensure students are being  prepared to read, write and research across the curriculum, including in  history and science. These goals can be achieved by ensuring that  teachers in other disciplines are also focusing on reading and writing  to build knowledge within their subject areas.
                                         
                         Myth: The readings assigned in  the English standards are 50 percent “informational” texts instead of  great literature and classics. The result is that the Common Core  standards are very political.                       
                     Fact: Common Core State Standards 
continue to provide a heavy focus—at least 50 percent—on the reading and comprehension of great literature classics, such as 
The Grapes of Wrath, 
To Kill a Mockingbird and 
Pride and Prejudice.
                   Students will be required to read more  “informational” texts, which means reading original works, but which  texts are read is left up to the teacher—just as it is today. Examples  of informational texts are: Alexis de Tocqueville’s 
Democracy in America,  President Ronald Reagan’s address to students at Moscow State  University, and the Declaration of Independence. Other examples of  informational texts are maps, charts, graphs and infographics.
                   The increased focus on information and original  texts is to prepare students for college and real-world reading and  writing requirements. For example, 80 percent of the reading and writing  done in the workplace requires workers to read material, analyze the  material using critical-thinking skills, and articulately write or  verbally respond to the material.
                                                                 
                         Quality and Content: Math                                         
                                                                  Myth: The standards do not  prepare or require students to learn algebra in the eighth grade, as  many states’ current standards do.                   
                                           Fact: The standards do accommodate  and prepare students for Algebra 1 in eighth grade, by including the  prerequisites for this course in grades K‐7. Students who master the K‐7  material will be able to take Algebra 1 in eighth grade. At the same  time, other grade 8 standards are also included; these include rigorous  algebra and will transition students effectively into a full Algebra 1  course.
                                         
                         Myth: Key math topics are missing or appear in the wrong grade.      
                                           Fact: The mathematical progressions presented in the Common Core are coherent and based on evidence.
                   Part of the problem with having 50 different sets  of state standards is that, today, different states cover different  topics at different grade levels. Coming to a consensus guarantees that  in any given state, some topics will have to be moved up or down in the  grade-level sequence. This is unavoidable. What is important to keep in  mind is that the progression in the Common Core State Standards is 
mathematically coherent and leads to college and career readiness at an internationally competitive level.
                                         
                         Myth: The standards only include skills and do not address the importance of content knowledge in math.    
                                           Fact: In mathematics, the  standards lay a solid foundation in whole numbers, addition,  subtraction, multiplication, division, fractions and decimals. Taken  together, these elements support a student’s ability to learn and apply  more-demanding math concepts and procedures. The middle school and high  school standards call on students to practice applying mathematical ways  of thinking to real-world issues and challenges; they prepare students  to think and reason mathematically. The standards set a rigorous  definition of college and career readiness, not by piling topic upon  topic, but by demanding that students develop a depth of understanding  and ability to apply mathematics to novel situations, as college  students and employees regularly do.