Understanding Common Core is about seeing a much larger picture
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I was sitting in my doctor's office and after he interpreted my latest blood sugar results we got into a conversation about his new work regime.
He told me that he really did not like inputting all the data into his examination room computer. He said, "the HMO keeps telling me that all of the business with data imputing will make his job easier, but he is troubled by the time it takes away from his standard check-up." Most importantly, he says that "he likes to make eye contact with patients and to discuss what his gut tells him rather than what the numbers tell him."
I said that sounds very familiar, and I told him about VAM testing based on standardized scores based on the Common Core Curriculum. It was like putting several Blues Clues together. We both decided that it was not about quality, it was about measuring digital units that could be used by "upper management" to evaluate job performance. Our shared Eureka moment was not very heartening.
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The Common Core deskills the teaching profession by turning the teaching into a delivery machine. Relationships with students are to be ignored and replaced by the mechanical delivery of scripted lessons in a particular sequence. In effect, the teacher craftsman will be forced to work on an assembly line.
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Understanding Common Core is about seeing a much larger picture. That picture is a collage of the strategic plans of most multinational corporations that are increasingly managed or heavily influenced by the CBS approach to business and labor relations. What the Tea Party erroneously views as the socialistic overreach of the Obama Administration is in reality the administration's acquiescence to the power of multi-nationals that are pushing the CBS imperative to deskill and destroy what is left of the American and global skilled white collar middle class.
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http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/living-in-dialogue/2014/02/paul_horton_why_the_common_cor.html
daleanime
(17,796 posts)SheilaT
(23,156 posts)I think the newest generation of them, such as my current primary care doc, have grown up with computers, and so are comfortable with constantly being on one. I do know that it takes away from some of the eye contact, but not that much. In the old days the doctor could be entirely focussed on looking at the chart and still not make eye contact.
But your essential point is a good one. It is almost always someone who has never done a particular job who sets up the standards by which that job should be done. I've seen that from the beginning of my working life, and I'm not sure it's changed at all.
tblue37
(65,328 posts)greatlaurel
(2,004 posts)Thanks for posting the link.
Smarmie Doofus
(14,498 posts)He wanted to know why I was back so soon. I told him I was robo-called three times by his (hospital affiliated) medical group, told that I was overdue and to make an appt.
A conversation disturbingly similar to the above ensued.
He told me come back in a year or when I'm sick. Whichever comes first. Screw the robo-calls.
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Hope you don't mind: I'm reposting to Ed Forum.
K and R
Teamster Jeff
(1,598 posts)😀👍