General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: How would you answer this test question? From a 1st grade Common Core test. [View all]Sancho
(9,178 posts)It's not due to the new standards and high-stakes testing!!!
Most of the improvements are probably because...
-Teacher education, accreditation of teacher programs, and requirements were ramped up starting in the 1970's.
-Many more teachers earned advanced degrees and got more inservice training in the late 20th century.
-The baby-boomers represent a large number of very experienced teachers.
-States started looking seriously at class size and even passed laws and policies limiting large classes.
-New materials and technology are actually improving the teaching process.
-Health care expansion, free lunch, Head Start, state wide preschool, special education, federal programs (Right to Read, IDEA, etc.), and public school accreditation have had a positive impact on schools since Johnson.
-There have been nice advances in diagnostic testing
-Schools added specialists like psychologists, counselors, dietitians, social workers, etc. starting in the 60's.
The main issues that are setting us back are high stakes testing, charter schools using resources, VAM models that attack teachers, states underfunding schools, and crazy political administrations.