Schools

Michigan Common Core Standards Under Debate

Michigan Department of Education official says Senate vote today could prohibit schools from implementing Common Core State Standards.

Reported by Jessica Schrader and Nate Stemen

New education benchmarks currently being implemented in Michigan schools are under debate as the state legislature takes steps this week to block funding that would fully implement the standards.

The Common Core Standards, which the State Board of Education unanimously adopted in June 2010, is a set of rigorous, college and career-ready curriculum standards for students that 46 states across the nation have also adopted to bring consistency in education.But some believe the benchmarks could lead to a federal takeover of Michigan's educational system by taking power away from the legislature and local school districts, according to an article in the Detroit Free Press.

On Tuesday, the state House of Representatives approved a measure as part of the overall budget that prohibits the Michigan Department of Education from spending funds on implementing the Common Core Standards for math or English, MLive.com reports.

The legislation is backed by Rep. Tom McMillin, a Republican from Rochester Hills. He told Patch on Wednesday that he would like to “take a pause, at least” to evaluate the Common Core Standards mandate.

McMillin said he is opposed to the idea of Common Core Standards, but is more concerned about the mandate.

“I think it’s a big mistake to let the National Governor’s Association in Washington decide what’s going to be taught in our schools,” he said.

Still, he said, schools that have taken steps to implement the standards should be free to adopt them if they feel it fits the curriculum—without the mandate. 

But Martin Ackley, director of Office of Public and Governmental Affairs at the Michigan Department of Education, said in response to McMillin's comments that it is not just a "pause."

"There is nothing in the language above that indicates that this is a “pause,” as Rep. McMillin would like people to believe. This is an outright prohibition (“shall not”), with no guarantee that the prohibition will be lifted," he said in a statement released Wednesday. 

"Local school districts have been working for three years, and spent hundreds of hours in planning and implementing the high-quality Common Core State Standards for their students to be career- and college-ready. This provision in the bill will leave school boards, administrators, teachers, and parents with no clear direction on how they continue planning their locally-developed curricula to meet the state standards," he wrote.

Carla Harting, superintendent of Wyandotte Public Schools, does not support McMillin's efforts, and feels the Common Core Standards are good for students.

"I felt that the common core standards gave a more level playing field," Harting said. "Everybody was going to be held to the same standards."

Harting added, she is concerned about the district's vulnerability for penalties brought on by not completing state standards, while legislators make a decision on Common Core Standards.

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