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In recent years several reports on standards development have established
standards for standards, that is, guidelines for developing
standards and criteria for judging their quality. These include the review
criteria identified in Promises to Keep, the American Federation
of Teachers Criteria for High Quality Standards, published
in Making Standards Matter (1995), and the Principles for
Education Standards developed by the Business Task Force on Student
Standards and published in The Challenge of Change (1995). New
Standards drew from the criteria and principles advocated in these documents
in establishing the standards we have tried to achieve in
these performance standards.
Standards should establish high standards for all students.
The New Standards partnership resolved to abolish the practice of expecting
less from poor and minority children and children whose first language
is not English. These performance standards are intended to help bring
all students to high levels of performance.
Much of the onus for making this goal a reality rests on the ways the
standards are implemented. The New Standards partners adopted a Social
Compact, which says in part, Specifically, we pledge to do everything
in our power to ensure all students a fair shot at reaching the new performance
standards
This means they will be taught a curriculum that will prepare
them for the assessments, that their teachers will have the preparation
to enable them to teach it well, and there will be
the resources
the students and their teachers need to succeed. These performance
standards are built upon the assumptions expressed in that pledge.
There are ways in which the design of the standards themselves can also
contribute to the goal of bringing all students to high levels of performance,
especially by being clear about what is expected. We have worked to make
the expectations included in these performance standards as clear as possible.
For some standards it has been possible to do this in the performance
descriptions. For example, the Reading standard for Language Arts includes
the expectation for students to read widely and to read quality materials.
And, instead of simply exhorting them to do this, we have given more explicit
direction by specifying that students should be expected to read at least
twenty-five books each year and that those books should be of the quality
and complexity illustrated in the sample reading list provided for each
grade level. In the Mathematics standards, we have gone beyond simply
listing scientific investigation among our expectations for students.
We set out just what we mean by scientific investigation and what things
we expect students to be able to do in their investigations. In addition,
by providing numerous examples we have indicated the level of difficulty
of the investigations students are expected to undertake.
The inclusion of work samples and commentaries to illustrate the meaning
of the standards is intended to help make the standards clearer. Most
of the standards are hard to define precisely in words alone. In the Writing
standard in Language Arts, for example, the work samples show the expected
qualities of writing for the various kinds of writing required and the
commentaries explain how these qualities are demonstrated in the work
samples. The work samples and commentaries are an integral part of the
performance standards. They give concrete meaning to the words in the
performance descriptions and show the level of performance expected by
the standards.
The work samples will help teachers, students, and parents to picture
work that meets standards and to establish goals to reach for. Students
need to know what work that meets standards looks like if they are to
strive to produce work of the same quality. Students also need to see
themselves reflected in the work samples if they are to believe that they,
too, are capable of producing such work. The work samples included in
this volume not only illustrate the meaning of the standards but also
reflect the diverse backgrounds and experiences of the students studying
in New York Citys public schools.
Standards should be rigorous and world class.
Is what we expect of our students as rigorous and demanding as what is
expected of young people in other countriesespecially those countries
whose young people consistently perform as well as or better than ours?
That is the question we are trying to answer when we talk about developing
world class standards.
Through successive drafts of these performance standards, we compared
our work with the national and local curricula of other countries, with
textbooks, assessments, and examinations from other countries and, where
possible, with work produced by students in other countries. Ultimately,
it is the work students produce that will show us whether claims for world
class standards can be supported.
We produced a Consultation Draft, which we shared with researchers
in other countries. We asked them to review the Consultation Draft
in terms of their own countrys standards and in light of what is
considered world class in their field. Included among these countries
were Australia, Belgium, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, England
and Wales, Finland, France, Germany, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand,
Norway, Poland, Scotland, Singapore, Sweden, and Switzerland. We asked
these reviewers to tell us whether each standard was at least as demanding
as its counterparts abroad and whether the set of standards represented
an appropriately thorough coverage of the subject areas. We also shared
the Consultation Draft with recognized experts in the field of
international comparisons of education, each of whom is familiar with
the education systems of several countries.
Our reviewers provided a wealth of constructive responses to the Consultation
Draft. Most confined their responses to the English Language Arts,
Mathematics, and Science standards, though several commended the inclusion
of standards for Applied Learning. The reviewers supported the approach
we adopted to concretize the performance standards through
the inclusion of work samples. Similar approaches are being used in some
other countries, notably England and Wales and Australia. Some of the
reviewers were tentative in their response to the question of whether
these performance standards are at least as demanding as their counterparts,
noting the difficulty of drawing comparisons in the absence of assessment
information, but did offer comparative comments in terms of the areas
covered by the standards. Some reviewers provided a detailed analysis
of the performance descriptions together with the work samples and commentaries
in terms of the expectations of students at comparable grade levels in
other countries.
The reviews confirmed the conclusion we had drawn from our earlier analyses
of the curricula, textbooks, and examinations of other countries: while
the structure of curricula differs from country to country, the expectations
contained in the New Standards Performance Standards represent
a thorough coverage of the subject areas. No reviewer identified a case
of significant omission. In some cases, reviewers noted that the range
of expectations may be greater in the New Standards Performance
Standards than in other countries expectations for their students;
for example, few countries expect young people to integrate their learning
to the extent required by the standards for investigation in New Standards
Mathematics. At the same time, a study prepared for the Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development reports that many countries are
moving towards expecting students to engage in practical work of the kind
required by the New Standards Science standards (Black and Atkin, 1996).
The reviews also suggested that these performance standards contain expectations
that are at least as rigorous as, and are in some cases more rigorous
than, the demands made of students in other countries. None of the reviewers
identified standards for which the expectations expressed in the standards
were less demanding than those for students in other countries.
We will continue to monitor the rigor and coverage of the New Standards
Performance Standards and assessments in relation to the expectations
of students in other countries. In addition to the continued collection
and review of materials from other countries, our efforts will include
a review of the New Standards Performance Standards by the
Third International Mathematics and Science Study, collaboration with
the Council for Basic Educations plan to collect samples of student
work from around the world, continued review of the American Federation
of Teachers series, Defining World Class Standards, and collaborative
efforts with visiting scholars at the Learning Research and Development
Center.
Standards should be useful, developing what is needed
for citizenship, employment, and life-long learning.
We believe that the core disciplines provide the strongest foundation
for learning what is needed for citizenship, employment, and life-long
learning. Thus, we have established explicit standards in the core areas
of Language Arts, Mathematics, and Science. But there is more. In particular,
it is critical for young people to achieve high standards in Applied Learningthe
fourth area for which we developed performance standards.
Applied Learning focuses on the capabilities people need to be productive
members of society, as individuals who apply the knowledge gained in school
and elsewhere to analyze problems and propose solutions, to communicate
effectively and coordinate action with others, and to use the tools of
the information age workplace. These are capabilities that were highlighted
in Learning A Living, a report of the Secretarys Commission
on Achieving Necessary Skills (SCANS, 1992).
Applied Learning is not about job skills for students who
are judged incapable of or indifferent to the challenges and opportunities
of academic learning. Applied Learning refers to the abilities all young
people will need, both in the workplace and in their role as citizens.
They are the thinking and reasoning abilities demanded by colleges and
by the growing number of high performance workplaces that expect people
at every level of the organization to take responsibility for the quality
of products and services. Some of these abilities are familiar; they have
long been recognized goals of schooling, though they have not necessarily
been translated clearly into expectations for student performance. Others
break new ground; they are the kinds of abilities we now understand will
be needed by everyone in the near future. All are skills attuned to the
real world of responsible citizenship and of dignified work that values
and cultivates mind and spirit.
Many reviewers of drafts of these performance standards noted the absence
of standards for the core area of social studies, including history, geography,
and civics. At the time we began our work, national content standards
for those areas were only in the early stages of development; we resolved
to focus our resources on the four areas we have worked on. As consensus
builds around content standards in this additional area, we will examine
the possibilities for expanding the New Standards system to include it.
Standards should be important and focused,
parsimonious while including those elements that represent the most important
knowledge and skills within the discipline.
As anyone who has been involved in a standards development effort knows,
it is easier to add to standards than it is to limit what they cover.
It is especially easier to resolve disagreements about the most important
things to cover by including everything than it is to resolve the disagreements
themselves. We have tried not to take the easier route. We adopted the
principle of parsimony as a goal and have tried to practice it. At the
same time, we have been concerned not to confuse parsimony with brevity.
The performance descriptions are intended to make explicit what it is
that students should know and the ways they should be able to demonstrate
the knowledge and skills they have acquired. For example, the standards
relating to conceptual understanding in Mathematics spell out the expectations
of students in some detail.
The approach we adopted distinguishes between standards as a means of
organizing the knowledge and skills of a subject area and as a reference
point for assessment, on the one hand, and the curriculum designed to
enable students to achieve the standards, on the other. The standards
are intended to focus attention on what is important but not to imply
that the standards themselves should provide the organizing structure
for the curriculum. In Applied Learning, for example, we have established
a separate standard for learning and self-management tools and techniques.
This does not imply that tools and techniques for learning and self-management
should be taught in isolation from other elements of Applied Learning.
In fact, all of the work samples included in this volume to illustrate
parts of the Learning and Self-management Tools and Techniques standard
also illustrate other parts of the Applied Learning standards. Our intention
in defining a separate standard for learning and self management tools
and techniques is to make it clear that the work students do should be
designed to help them achieve the Learning and Self-management standard.
Aspects of this standard such as students ability to manage their
own work resources and evaluate their own work should not only be among
the things assessed but should also be a focus for explicit reporting
of student achievement.
Standards should be manageable given the
constraints of time.
This criterion follows very closely on the last one, but focuses particularly
on making sure that standards are doable. One of the important
features of our standards development effort was the high level of interaction
among the people working on the different subject areas. We viewed the
standards for the four areas as a set at each grade level. This orientation
allowed us to limit the incidence of duplication across subject areas
and to recognize and use opportunities for forging stronger connections
among subject areas through the work that students do. A key to ensuring
the standards are manageable is making the most of opportunities for student
work to do double and even triple duty in relation
to the standards. All of the work samples included in this volume demonstrate
the way a single project can generate work that allows students to work
towards meeting expectations in relation to several standards within Applied
Learning. Furthermore, several of the project samples show how a single
project can allow students to work towards achievement of standards in
relation to standards in more than one subject area. (See, for example,
School Store, ,Historical
Magazines Project,, Caring
for Your Campus Lawn.")
Standards should be adaptable, permitting flexibility in implementation
needed for local control, state and regional variation, and differing
individual interests and cultural traditions.
These standards are intended for use in widely differing settings. One
approach to tackling the need for flexibility to accommodate local control
and differing cultural traditions and individual interests is to make
the standards general and to leave the job of translating the standards
into more specific statements to the people who will use them. We have
not adopted that approach. Performance standards need to be specific enough
to guide the assessment of students achievement of the expectations
established by the standards; we have tried to make them specific enough
to do so. We have also tried to achieve the degree of specificity necessary
to do this without unduly limiting the kinds of flexibility outlined above.
Most of the standards are expressed in a way that leaves plenty of room
for local decisions about the actual tasks and activities through which
the standards may be achieved.
However, the specificity needed for standards intended to guide an assessment
system does place some limits on flexibility. To tackle these apparently
contradictory demands on the standards, we have adopted the notion of
substitution. This means that when users of these standards
identify elements in the standards that are inconsistent with decisions
made at the local level, they can substitute their own. An example of
this is the Reading standard in Language Arts. This standard includes
the requirement that students should read the equivalent of twenty-five
books each year and specifies that they should read material of the quality
and complexity illustrated in the sample reading lists. We have included
the reading lists so as to be clear about the quality of reading material
we are talking about at each grade level. And these lists were revised
for the New York City edition to reflect the kinds of quality material
that are a familiar part of reading in New York Citys public schools.
But we do not claim that the titles on this list are the only ones that
would be appropriate. Thus, districts and schools that have established
their own reading lists and are satisfied with them can replace the lists
provided with their own. There is, however, one important proviso: substitution
only works when what is substituted is comparable with the material it
replaces both in terms of the quality and the quantity of expectation.
Standards should be clear and usable.
Making standards sufficiently clear so that parents, teachers, and students
can understand what they mean and what the standards require of them is
essential to the purpose for establishing standards in the first place.
It is also a challenge because, while all of these groups need to understand
what the standards are, the kinds of information they need are different.
The most obvious difference is between the way in which the standards
need to be presented to elementary school students so that they know what
they should be striving to achieve and the way in which those same standards
need to be presented to teachers so that they can help their students
get there. If the standards were written only in a form that elementary
school students could access, we would have to leave out information teachers
need to do their job.
This version of the standards is written primarily for teachers. It includes
technical language about the substance of the standards and terms that
educators use to describe differences in the quality of work students
produce. It could be described as a technical document. That does not
mean that parents and students should not have access to it. We have tried
to make the standards clear and to avoid jargon, but the standards do
include language that may be difficult for students to comprehend and
more detail than some parents may want to deal with. Efforts to make the
standards more accessible to audiences other than teachers need to take
these differences into account.
Standards should be reflective of broad consensus, resulting from an iterative
process of comment, feedback, and revision including educators and the
general public.
These performance standards were the result of progressive revisions to
drafts over a period of eighteen months. Early drafts were revised in
response to comment and feedback from reviewers nominated by the New Standards
partners and the New Standards advisory committees for each of the subject
areas, as well as other educators.
The Consultation Draft, published in November 1995, was circulated
widely for comment. Some 1,500 individuals and organizations were invited
to review the draft. The reviewers included nominees of professional associations
representing a wide range of interests in education, subject experts in
the relevant fields, experienced teachers, business and industry groups,
and community organizations. In addition, we held a series of face-to-face
consultations to obtain responses and suggestions. These included detailed
discussions with members of key groups and organizations and a series
of meetings at which we invited people with relevant experience and expertise
to provide detailed critique of the Consultation Draft. We also
received numerous responses from people who purchased the Consultation
Draft and who took the trouble to complete and return the response
form that was included with each copy.
The revision of the performance standards was further informed by a series
of independently-conducted focus group meetings with parents and other
members of the community in several regions of the country, and with teachers
who were using the Consultation Draft.
The reviewers provided very supportive and constructive commentary on
the Consultation Draft, both at the broad level of presentation
and formatting of the performance standards, and at the detailed level
of suggestions for refinements to the performance descriptions for some
of the standards. These comments significantly influenced the revisions
made to the standards in the preparation of the publication in finished
form.
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