Common Social Studies Standards Considered
Written on May 18, 2011 – 2:22 pm | by Justin Fraser
If you’ve been reading EdWeek, you’ve certainly read about states’ dire fiscal circumstances, the adoption of common standards in math and English/language arts, and worries that subjects other than those are being marginalized by accountability pressure. Those strands come together in discussions being held this week about the possible development of common social studies standards.
In our story, we report that social studies specialists from 18 states are meeting with representatives of content-area groups in social studies disciplines. They’re talking about how states can bolster social studies so it claims the central place its advocates feel it deserves in the classroom. Those talks could end up serving simply as a forum for discussion and exchange of ideas, or they could produce guidelines or standards. It’s not clear yet. But these will be interesting conversations to monitor as they take shape.
Similar Posts:
- Federal-Intrusion Talk on Common Standards: A Win-Win?
- New Hampshire Weighs Bill to Undo Common-Standards Adoption
- Common-Standards Watch: With Kansas, It’s 39
- Criticism of Texas Social Studies Standards Overblown, Analyst Says
- Guiding Publishers on Curriculum for the Common Standards
Tags: Standards, Standards Considered