Legislature(2013 - 2014)Anch LIO Conf Rm

01/07/2014 08:30 AM Senate EDUCATION

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08:32:40 AM Start
08:33:30 AM Informational Hearing - Discussions & Presentations On: "the Common Core and Alaska's Academic Standards"
04:38:15 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Time Change --
+ -- Location ANC Temporary LIO, 733 W.4th Ave. -- TELECONFERENCED
The meeting is scheduled from 8:30 am - 5:30 pm
Discussion and Presentations:
The Common Core and Alaska's Academic Standards
Invited testimony from the following:
The Council of Chief State School Officers
The Council of State Governments
Dr. Sandra Stotsky, Professor of Education Reform
University of Arkansas
Dr. James Milgram, Professor of Mathematics
Stanford University
The Alaska Department of Education and Early Dev.
The Alaska State Board of Education & Early Dev.
The University of Alaska
The Alaska Council of School Administrators
The Association of Alaska School Boards
--This meeting will be continued to January 8--
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for Detailed Agenda
**Streamed live on AKL.TV**
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
              SENATE EDUCATION STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                        January 7, 2014                                                                                         
                           8:32 a.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Senator Gary Stevens, Chair                                                                                                     
Senator Mike Dunleavy, Vice Chair                                                                                               
Senator Charlie Huggins                                                                                                         
Senator Berta Gardner                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bert Stedman                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
OTHER LEGISLATORS PRESENT                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Senator Hollis French                                                                                                           
Representative Lynn Gattis                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
INFORMATIONAL HEARING - DISCUSSIONS & PRESENTATIONS ON: "THE                                                                    
COMMON CORE and ALASKA'S ACADEMIC STANDARDS"                                                                                    
                                                                                                                              
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CHRIS MINNICH, Executive Director                                                                                               
Council of Chief State School Officers                                                                                          
Washington, D.C.                                                                                                                
POSITION STATEMENT: Presented an overview of the "History,                                                                    
Context & Current Implementation of Core Standards."                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
PAM GOINS, Director of Education Policy                                                                                         
Council of State Governments                                                                                                    
Lexington, Kentucky                                                                                                             
POSITION STATEMENT: Presented "Common Core State Standards: An                                                                
Overview of Policy Conditions in the States."                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
KATHLEEN PORTER-MAGEE, Senior Director                                                                                          
Thomas B. Fordham Institute                                                                                                     
Washington, D.C.                                                                                                                
POSITION STATEMENT: Presented "The State of State Standards."                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SANDRA STOTSKY, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus                                                                                       
University of Arkansas                                                                                                          
Department of Education Reform                                                                                                  
Brookline, Massachusetts                                                                                                        
POSITION  STATEMENT:  Addressed  concerns with  the  Common  Core                                                             
State Standards.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
JAMES MILGRAM, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus                                                                                        
Department of Mathematics                                                                                                       
Stanford University                                                                                                             
Stanford, California                                                                                                            
POSITION STATEMENT:  Presented "Comments on the  Common Core Math                                                             
Standards."                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MIKE HANLEY, Commissioner                                                                                                       
Alaska Department of Education & Early Development                                                                              
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  Presented "Why Alaska  Needs Internationally                                                             
Comparable (Benchmarked) English Language Arts Standards."                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SUSAN MCCAULEY, Ph.D., Director                                                                                                 
Teaching & Learning Support                                                                                                     
Alaska Department of Education & Early Development                                                                              
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT: Presented  "Development  &  Overview of  the                                                             
Alaska's Academic Standards."                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
JIM MERRINER, CHAIR                                                                                                             
Alaska State Board of Education & Early Development                                                                             
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:  Presented  "Mission  Statement  &  Adoption                                                             
Efforts of Alaska's Academic Standards."                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
DANA THOMAS, Ph.D., Vice President                                                                                              
Academic Affairs                                                                                                                
University of Alaska - Statewide System                                                                                         
Fairbanks, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION   STATEMENT:   Presented  "Vetting   Alaska's   Academic                                                             
Standards:  How  They Address  Remediation  and  the Gap  Between                                                               
Alaska's Secondary and Postsecondary Education Systems."                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
DIANE HIRSHBERG, Ph.D., Director                                                                                                
Center for Alaska Education Policy Research                                                                                     
Institute of Social and Economic Research                                                                                       
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT: Presented  "Results  of  the Alaska  Content                                                             
Standards Validity Study."                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
ED GRAFF, Superintendent                                                                                                        
Anchorage School District                                                                                                       
Anchorage, Alaska,                                                                                                              
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided information  about how the Anchorage                                                             
School District  is implementing the Common  Core State Standards                                                               
(CCSS).                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
DARLA JONES, Ph.D., Assistant Superintendent                                                                                    
Curriculum & Instruction                                                                                                        
Anchorage School District                                                                                                       
Anchorage, Alaska,                                                                                                              
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided information  about how the Anchorage                                                             
School District is implementing the Common Core State Standards.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
PETE LEWIS, Superintendent                                                                                                      
Fairbanks North Star Borough School District                                                                                    
Fairbanks, Alaska,                                                                                                              
POSITION  STATEMENT: Discussed  implementing the  Alaska Academic                                                             
Standards in the Fairbanks North Star Borough School District.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MELANIE HADAWAY, Coordinator                                                                                                    
Secondary Curriculum                                                                                                            
Fairbanks North Star Borough School District                                                                                    
Fairbanks, Alaska,                                                                                                              
POSITION  STATEMENT: Discussed  implementing the  Alaska Academic                                                             
Standards in the Fairbanks North Star Borough School District.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
PEGGY COWAN, Superintendent                                                                                                     
North Slope Borough School District                                                                                             
Barrow, Alaska,                                                                                                                 
POSITION  STATEMENT: Introduced  the North  Slope Borough  School                                                             
District presentation.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
LISA SKILES PARADY, Ph.D., Assistant Superintendent                                                                             
North Slope Borough School District                                                                                             
Barrow, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION   STATEMENT:   Presented   "Implementation   Efforts   &                                                             
Considerations at the District Level."                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SUNNI HILTS, President                                                                                                          
Association of Alaska School Boards                                                                                             
Seldovia, Alaska,                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT: Testified  about implementation  of the  new                                                             
Alaska Academic Standards.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
NORM WOOTEN, Member                                                                                                             
Kodiak Island School Board                                                                                                      
Kodiak, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION   STATEMENT:   Presented   "Implementation   Efforts   &                                                             
Considerations at the District Level."                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
8:32:40 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  GARY   STEVENS  called   the  Senate   Education  Standing                                                             
Committee meeting  to order at 8:32  a.m. Present at the  call to                                                               
order  were  Senators  Dunleavy,   Gardner,  Huggins,  and  Chair                                                               
Stevens.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
 ^Informational Hearing - Discussions & Presentations On: "The                                                              
          Common Core and Alaska's Academic Standards"                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
8:33:30 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  STEVENS   commented  on  federal  and   state  control  of                                                               
education as follows:                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     I think  we can  all agree  in Alaska  that we  want to                                                                    
     make sure that our students  are prepared to compete in                                                                    
     the world and compete in  the United States. We want to                                                                    
     have our students as prepared  as possible when they go                                                                    
     out into careers or into  college education. The second                                                                    
     thing that I  assume most Alaskans still  believe in is                                                                    
     local control. I served for  three years as a president                                                                    
     of  the local  school  board  at home  and  I know  how                                                                    
     important that is.  I know others have  served on local                                                                    
     school boards. We are  always having confrontation with                                                                    
     federalism  and the  issues of  what  rights belong  to                                                                    
     federal  government  and  what  rights  belong  to  the                                                                    
     state. I think generally there  is a belief here that a                                                                    
     lot  of the  rights that  we  had as  states have  been                                                                    
     taken away by the feds over  the years. We want to make                                                                    
     sure that  we control here  in the state of  Alaska our                                                                    
     education.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
8:34:30 AM                                                                                                                    
CHRIS MINNICH, Executive Director,  Council of Chief State School                                                               
Officers (CCSSO), Washington, DC, said  he will explain the basis                                                               
of the  Common Core State  Standards (CCSS) with  multiple states                                                               
working together.  He said CCSSO  is the  membership organization                                                               
for  commissioners  of education  across  the  United States.  He                                                               
noted that he was the CCSSO's  Director of Membership and led the                                                               
development  of  the  CCSS  prior   to  being  CCSSO's  Executive                                                               
Director. He divulged  that he was with the  Oregon Department of                                                               
Education where he led the  state's standards and assessment work                                                               
prior to being involved with CCSSO.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
8:35:49 AM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MINNICH explained  that CCSSO  is a  membership organization                                                               
and  noted  Commissioner Hanley  from  the  Alaska Department  of                                                               
Education and Early Development (DEED) is a member of CCSSO.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
He set forth  that it is important to talk  about the distinction                                                               
between  standards  and the  curriculum  that  is taught  to  get                                                               
students to the CCSS. For example,  a Common Core Standard is set                                                               
for  second  graders  to   successfully  estimate  a  measurement                                                               
equation and noted  that a teacher is not told  how to have their                                                               
students achieve  the CCSS;  it just  says by  the end  of second                                                               
grade  a student  needs to  achieve  the set  goal. The  latitude                                                               
given  to  teachers allows  for  regional  variances. In  English                                                               
Language Arts (ELA)  that a Common Core Standard  in second grade                                                               
asks students  to describe how  characters in a story  respond to                                                               
major events and challenges. It is  up to the teacher to find the                                                               
appropriate story that allows students  to achieve their CCSS. He                                                               
emphasized that no one in the  Common Core is told what they have                                                               
to teach; that is local control  and a very important part of the                                                               
Standards Movement.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
8:37:18 AM                                                                                                                    
He  explained why  the decision  was  made to  develop CCSS.  The                                                               
first conversations were initiated  with state superintendents in                                                               
2007 regarding  the possibility of  developing standards  for ELA                                                               
and  mathematics.  He  said  CCSSO was  committed  to  clear  and                                                               
rigorous primary and secondary  education (K-12) expectations for                                                               
all students. He noted Senator  Stevens pointed out that everyone                                                               
agrees with  the desire to have  all students compete on  a state                                                               
and national level after K-12.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
He  said CCSSO  noticed that  standards dramatically  varied from                                                               
state  to  state. Alaska's  standards  were  not at  the  highest                                                               
levels  across the  country  and every  state  needed to  upgrade                                                               
their  standards.  He  remarked that  all  state  superintendents                                                               
recognized the need to upgrade standards.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
He said a lot of time  and effort was required whenever standards                                                               
were revised.  Oregon spent  almost $2  million every  time their                                                               
standards  were upgraded  and  CCSSO felt  that  every state  was                                                               
individually  spending similar  amounts.  States  found out  that                                                               
different expectations were  being set and the  consensus was for                                                               
setting the CCSS  on a multi-state level. He  emphasized that the                                                               
key was focusing on what  the expectations should be, rather than                                                               
how the subject matter was taught.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH revealed that as  states developed new CCSS criteria,                                                               
advocacy groups and research institutions  criticized the lack of                                                               
quality  in  the  standards  and   the  lack  of  student  growth                                                               
achievement. States were criticized  for low graduation rates and                                                               
for graduating students  who were being remediated  at high rates                                                               
and who were not ready for college.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
8:39:02 AM                                                                                                                    
He said  the business  sector reminded  states that  schools were                                                               
not graduating  with the  knowledge and  skills aligned  with the                                                               
demands  of the  workforce.  It was  disheartening  for CCSSO  to                                                               
receive the  constant criticism while  they were working  hard to                                                               
improve education opportunities for students.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
He  noted that  one  telling criticism  that  states were  having                                                               
challenges was  with the  difference between  the results  in the                                                               
national  assessment  and the  results  on  the individual  state                                                               
assessments. The numbers in Alaska  mirrored what was going on in                                                               
the rest  of the country; but  in 2011, 74.8 percent  of students                                                               
passed the Alaska  State Math Test and 75 percent  in ELA. On the                                                               
National Assessment,  36 percent  passed the mathematics,  and 28                                                               
percent passed the ELA.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY asked  for the  specific name  of the  National                                                               
Assessment.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MINNICH   replied  the  National  Assessment   of  Education                                                               
Progress (NAEP).                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
8:39:57 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS welcomed Senator French to the committee meeting.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MINNICH explained  that the  differences between  the Alaska                                                               
Assessment Test and NAEP were hard  to justify and Alaska was not                                                               
the only  state receiving  criticism for  the disparity.  He said                                                               
CCSSO and  state governors felt  the need to take  action. States                                                               
were  asked to  sign-on  to  a memorandum-of-understanding  (MOU)                                                               
that would  allow CCSSO to  create a  set of standards  that were                                                               
higher than what was going on in states across the country.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
State education leaders found partners  in the National Governors                                                               
Association (NGA) and  CCSSO worked with NGA to  develop CCSS. He                                                               
said that states could choose whether  to adopt or not and nobody                                                               
was forcing any state to adopt CCSS.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY asked  to clarify  that  there was  no loss  of                                                               
federal money if a state did not adopt CCSS.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH answered that there was  no loss of federal money. He                                                               
said he  will address  the federal incentive  for extra  money if                                                               
CCSS was adopted.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
8:41:13 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked if the  No Child Left Behind (NCLB) waiver                                                               
process will be addressed.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH answered yes.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
He said  he will address how  CCSS was developed and  some of the                                                               
misunderstandings. The standards were developed  for and with the                                                               
states. There were five public  drafts with many more drafts that                                                               
were circulated  amongst state teachers and  state departments of                                                               
education. He  said CCSSO  was trying to  get the  best standards                                                               
amongst states and  among the world. He explained  that CCSSO was                                                               
relying  on  the  expertise of  teachers,  content  experts,  and                                                               
states. Feedback  was provided by the  business community, higher                                                               
education groups,  American College Testing (ACT)  group, and the                                                               
Scholastic Aptitude  Test (SAT) group.  He noted that  the intent                                                               
was  to  make   sure  that  CCSS  was   consistent  with  college                                                               
expectations.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
He said  he will address  the academic standards being  formed by                                                               
the  best   standards  in  the   states.  He  pointed   out  that                                                               
Massachusetts had very high standards  coming into CCSS. He noted                                                               
that Massachusetts  insisted that they  not be required  to adopt                                                               
lowered standards during the  CCSS writing process. Massachusetts                                                               
adopted CCSS and  the current standards are  higher than previous                                                               
standards.  He emphasized  that the  CCSS focus  has always  been                                                               
about  higher expectations  for kids.  He noted  that Alaska  has                                                               
taken CCSS and made the standards right for Alaska.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
8:43:04 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS remarked that the  difference between the standards                                                               
and the  curriculum is a  crucial issue. The committee's  goal is                                                               
to try  to diffuse some  of the criticism,  miscommunication, and                                                               
misunderstanding  about CCSS.  For example,  people have  claimed                                                               
that  the states  will  be teaching  their  children either  pro-                                                               
abortion or anti-abortion  and requiring papers to  be written on                                                               
the topics;  the assertion  was not  accurate. He  explained that                                                               
the  curriculum will  specify to  defend a  position on  an issue                                                               
where  there are  definitely two  sides. He  said the  curriculum                                                               
never says that a student has  to defend or oppose something that                                                               
is a moral or political issue.  He noted that a contentious issue                                                               
might come  into a classroom,  but it is  not an issue  that will                                                               
come through the curriculum.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MINNICH  commented  that  the  standard  in  Chair  Steven's                                                               
example would be to defend an  opinion and the CCSS would not say                                                               
what  the  opinion  is.  He  added that  the  teacher  or  school                                                               
district would  decide on  the topic. He  said the  curriculum is                                                               
what is taught to students  and the standards themselves are just                                                               
the expectations of students.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR GARDNER  asked if  there is any  direct link  between the                                                               
standards and a curriculum. She  explained that her understanding                                                               
is the CCSS are  just that and every state in  the union can have                                                               
their own curriculum without having to buy into anything.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH  answered correct. There  is always a link  where the                                                               
state has to  teach the standards, but a state  can have whatever                                                               
curriculum. He explained that it  was more appropriate in a state                                                               
like  Alaska  that requires  a  curriculum  to meet  the  state's                                                               
needs.  He  asserted  that  there  should  be  no  reason  why  a                                                               
curriculum would be specified. He  explained that the distinction                                                               
between  standards   and  curriculum  is  important.   A  lot  of                                                               
criticism has been based on  the assumption that teachers will be                                                               
told what  to teach or  forcing certain  things to happen  in the                                                               
classroom. He assured this was not happening in CCSS.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
8:45:48 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY asked  if there  is  recommended curriculum  by                                                               
some of the major textbook companies.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH  answered that  some states  do adopt  curriculum. He                                                               
noted that Alaska  does not adopt curriculum  and districts would                                                               
make the choice.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked if there  are some textbook companies that                                                               
are developing curriculum to support CCSS.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR.   MINNICH  answered   yes.  He   explained  that   developing                                                               
curriculum made sense because CCSS was going on in 46 states.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR GARDNER  asked if developing  curriculum was  a different                                                               
practice  by  the textbook  companies.  She  queried if  textbook                                                               
companies typically tailor their work to the greatest market.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH answered that textbook  publishers were usually using                                                               
Texas, California, and New York standards due to market size.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
8:47:55 AM                                                                                                                    
He  emphasized that  the  federal government  played  no role  in                                                               
developing CCSS. He pointed out that  he was in the middle of the                                                               
development  of  CCSS and  there  was  no  one from  the  federal                                                               
government during  the development phase. The  federal government                                                               
was  not involved  in any  of the  decision making  in developing                                                               
CCSS. The federal government did  encourage states to use CCSS by                                                               
awarding a  small number of points  for those using a  common set                                                               
of standards  in the Race to  the Top (RTTT) Program.  Alaska did                                                               
not  apply for  RTTT and  there  is no  meaningful incentive  for                                                               
Alaska to  do anything around  CCSS from the  federal government.                                                               
He added  that there is  no link to federal  Title I or  Title II                                                               
money  and the  federal government  is not  withholding money  if                                                               
states do not adopt CCSS.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
He said  ultimately CCSS should  be a  choice about what  is best                                                               
for  Alaska, and  Alaskans  should be  making  the decisions.  He                                                               
noted  that  he has  provided  testimony  in multiple  committees                                                               
where he has  repeatedly said CCSS is about what  is best for the                                                               
state and that was the idea  from the very beginning. He asserted                                                               
that  CCSSO's  only  goal  was  to  get  states  to  raise  their                                                               
standards  across the  country. He  said CCSSO  has been  able to                                                               
raise standards fairly successfully.  However, CCSS has created a                                                               
political  controversy  that CCSSO  is  hopeful  to see  its  way                                                               
through.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
He  announced  that he  would  address  the waiver  process  that                                                               
Senator Dunleavy  brought up. He  said there were two  options in                                                               
the  No Child  Left Behind  (NCLB) waiver  process. He  explained                                                               
that a state  could either adopt CCSS or  have their universities                                                               
validate  their standards.  He summarized  that there  were other                                                               
options  of how  a  state would  get an  NCLB  waiver other  than                                                               
adopting  CCSS.  Nowhere  in  federal  policy  does  the  federal                                                               
government refer to CCSS; it  is all college and career readiness                                                               
standards.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
He  noted  that  four  states  have  not  adopted  CCSS:  Alaska,                                                               
Nebraska,  Virginia, and  Texas.  All four  states have  upgraded                                                               
their  standards and  have  not used  CCSS as  the  final set  of                                                               
standards, but  the states have  gone through a process  that has                                                               
enabled them  to have  higher standards.  He reiterated  that the                                                               
CCSSO's goal  at the very  beginning was  to get states  to raise                                                               
their standards. He  said CCSSO is very pleased  with what Alaska                                                               
has done in the common core process.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked  to verify that there were  two methods by                                                               
which a state  could apply for the waiver process:  adopt CCSS in                                                               
totality or  have a state's  universities set  academic standards                                                               
to get into college.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH answered yes.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
8:49:51 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked to verify that Alaska went with Option 2.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH answered  that he was pretty sure Alaska  did go with                                                               
Option 2.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  STEVENS  noted  that  national  newspaper  headlines  have                                                               
stated  that  other  states  are  now backing  out  of  the  CCSS                                                               
process. He asked  Mr. Minnich to bring the committee  up to date                                                               
on the political scene regarding CCSS.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH answered that no  states have withdrawn from CCSS and                                                               
46 states  are using CCSS.  Most of  the pushback comes  from the                                                               
concern  with the  federal government  getting  too involved.  He                                                               
disclosed  to   the  committee  that   he  shared   the  "federal                                                               
government  involvement" concern  because CCSSO  represents state                                                               
commissioners.  State   commissioners,  as  a  whole,   are  very                                                               
concerned about  the federal government  having too  much control                                                               
over what is going on in  the states. State legislators will have                                                               
conversations  pertaining to  federal government  involvement. He                                                               
asserted that  whether or not  a state pulls  out of CCSS  is not                                                               
the  issue  to focus  on,  but  the  focus  should be  on  higher                                                               
standards  for students.  He noted  that there  are benefits  for                                                               
having the same standards because  shared textbooks and standards                                                               
will allow students in Alaska to  more easily get into college in                                                               
Washington  or Oregon;  however, that  does not  necessarily mean                                                               
that a  state cannot raise  its standards without using  CCSS and                                                               
that is what  Alaska has actually done. He  explained that Alaska                                                               
started with CCSS  and went through a feedback  process to enable                                                               
a solid set of standards.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
8:51:27 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR GARDNER asked when all  of the education commissioners or                                                               
their  delegates were  meeting during  the CCSS  process, if  any                                                               
states   found  the   process   or  the   whole   idea  of   CCSS                                                               
objectionable. She inquired if state  objections to CCSS occurred                                                               
during or after the process, whether or not a state signed on.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH  replied that  Texas and Alaska  were the  two states                                                               
that did  not sign on  originally; at  that point there  was some                                                               
concern  that  the  federal government  would  get  involved.  He                                                               
remarked that the  only state that was adamantly  opposed was the                                                               
state of Texas.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR GARDNER asked  to clarify that when Alaska  and Texas did                                                               
not sign originally,  the states did not participate  in the CCSS                                                               
discussions.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MINNICH  answered that  Alaska  and  Texas were  enabled  to                                                               
participate in the CCSS discussions;  the two states just did not                                                               
sign  the agreement.  He said  CCSSO  sent drafts  to the  Alaska                                                               
Commissioner's office; they did  several review sessions and gave                                                               
feedback from  Alaska's teachers  on the  CCSS. He  stressed that                                                               
Alaska  did  a  separate  process  of  review  for  their  Alaska                                                               
Academic Standards (AAS).                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
8:52:53 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  asked who determined  the methods for  the CCSS                                                               
waiver process.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MINNICH   replied  that  Arne  Duncan,   U.S.  Secretary  of                                                               
Education  did. He  commented that  the involvement  of Secretary                                                               
Duncan  has spurred  conclusions that  the federal  government is                                                               
involved in CCSS.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY responded that his  concern is the University of                                                               
Alaska  has determined  the state's  standards by  validating the                                                               
AAS.  He explained  that  CCSS  was the  template  and the  state                                                               
"Alaskanized" the ASS with the university system's approval.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MINNICH concurred  that Senator  Dunleavy's explanation  was                                                               
the process used.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY   asked  what  would  happen   if  the  state's                                                               
university system did not approve the AAS.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MINNICH   remarked  that  the  situation   Senator  Dunleavy                                                               
described has not  occurred. There would be a problem  if a state                                                               
has a  set of standards  in K-12  that is not  preparing students                                                               
for its university system.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY questioned  if the  AAS are  geared to  prepare                                                               
students for the university system.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH  countered that the standards  also prepared students                                                               
for careers. There  are a set of careers in  Alaska that are very                                                               
important  to  the  state's  economy;  those  particular  careers                                                               
should be part of the standards process.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
8:54:17 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  responded  that   the  assumption  is  if  the                                                               
standards are good  enough for the university,  the standards are                                                               
good enough for blue-collar or military careers.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.MINNICH  answered   that  he   did  not  agree   with  Senator                                                               
Dunleavy's  assessment.   He  explained  that  the   AAS  process                                                               
included more than  just the University of  Alaska. The Secretary                                                               
of Education required a connection to higher education.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY stated  that he  did  not want  to belabor  the                                                               
point  regarding Alaska's  university  involvement  with AAS.  He                                                               
noted  that the  Department  of Education  and Early  Development                                                               
(DEED) will have their opportunity to address the AAS process.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH  stated that Senator  Dunleavy is on the  right issue                                                               
of getting  standards that are  at the correct level  for careers                                                               
and higher education  in the state; CCSSO had the  same goal with                                                               
CCSS. He  explained that  Alaska did their  process and  made AAS                                                               
work for Alaska.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
He addressed state ownership of  standards. There have been a lot                                                               
of comments  regarding who owns  CCSS and the ability  for states                                                               
to do  what they  want with  CCSS. Alaska is  a great  example of                                                               
being able  to change the standards  if a state is  interested in                                                               
doing  so. There  are  no standards-police  who  check a  state's                                                               
standards. States are in full  control of their own standards and                                                               
use their  own process  to adopt CCSS.  He explained  that Alaska                                                               
went  through a  process with  the  State Board  of Education  to                                                               
adopt their  standards. He  pointed out  that CCSS  adoption also                                                               
included  the option  to add  specific pieces.  He said  the CCSS                                                               
adoption did  not have a  binding commitment for the  states with                                                               
CCSSO, the National Governors Association  (NGA), or anyone else.                                                               
He  emphasized that  the  choice for  CCSS  adoption will  always                                                               
remain  the  choice of  the  state.  The  Alaska State  Board  of                                                               
Education has control of AAS.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
8:56:21 AM                                                                                                                    
He  said there  are benefits  of  being "common."  He noted  that                                                               
Senator  Gardner  brought up  the  issue  of textbooks.  He  said                                                               
instructional  materials  and  assessments developed  with  other                                                               
states would be beneficial to the  state of Alaska. One of CCSS's                                                               
ideas is to  try to get assessments that will  enable students to                                                               
be judged against national competition.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS asked  how CCSS started. He inquired  if CCSS began                                                               
with NGA.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH replied  that CCSS started in 2007 with  the state of                                                               
Florida. Florida's  education commissioner  noted an  interest in                                                               
rewriting the  state's standards  and asked  if any  other states                                                               
were  interested  in  joining  the  process  to  avoid  duplicate                                                               
efforts. He said CCSSO approached NGA  and a decision was made to                                                               
put out a  call to see which states would  want to write academic                                                               
standards  together.  He said  CCSS  projected  10 to  15  states                                                               
involved in  the CCSS process  and 48  states signed up  to write                                                               
CCSS. Texas  and Alaska were the  two states that did  not signup                                                               
initially.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
HE said the  next process involved getting  states to participate                                                               
in the writing of  CCSS. He related that 48 states  were a lot of                                                               
states to  try and  make happy during  the CCSS  writing process.                                                               
The  highest  quality  standards   were  used  from  states  like                                                               
Massachusetts  in  addition   to  internationally-based  academic                                                               
standards. The CCSS process was a  two and half year process from                                                               
the beginning to  end. He disclosed that CCSSO did  not think the                                                               
CCSS process  would be controversial  because states  had adopted                                                               
standards  all  along.  Oregon spent  about  $2  million  writing                                                               
standards during  his tenor with  the state. He pointed  out that                                                               
Oregon tried  to get news  media coverage during the  process and                                                               
nobody paid  attention. He remarked  that CCSS with 46  states is                                                               
receiving a lot  of media coverage. The original  impetus was the                                                               
idea  that the  U.S.  was falling  behind as  a  country and  the                                                               
states were having lower expectations than they probably should.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS welcomed Senator Hollis  French to participate with                                                               
the committee's proceedings.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR HUGGINS stated  that CCSS was the beginning  of the agent                                                               
of change.  He asked  Mr. Minnich  to describe  the cycle  of the                                                               
academic standards change.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
8:59:22 AM                                                                                                                    
MR. MINNICH  answered that the  new expectations really  are just                                                               
the  first step.  He asserted  that the  next stage  has to  be a                                                               
local  conversation with  school  districts, given  the time  and                                                               
space  to make  sure  that teachers  are  being trained,  lessons                                                               
being  taught are  being upgraded,  and  higher expectations  are                                                               
being assessed.  Assessments will  be harder with  fewer students                                                               
initially meeting  the new standards. Kentucky  just went through                                                               
the assessment  process in 2010  and a  big drop occurred  in the                                                               
first  year with  the number  of students  that were  meeting the                                                               
CCSS.  The second  year saw  an increase  in Kentucky's  students                                                               
meeting their standards.  He noted that the pattern  for a system                                                               
change will show  a small drop initially, followed  by growth and                                                               
achievement.  If Alaska's  teachers  are similar  to teachers  in                                                               
other states,  the state's teachers  really just want  clarity of                                                               
what the  academic standards  are with the  belief that  they can                                                               
get students  to the  standards. He  asserted that  teachers need                                                               
help to get students to meet the new standards.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR HUGGINS asked what happens  in the teacher training phase                                                               
with universities.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH replied  that one of the most important  things is to                                                               
make  the universities  understand  what the  new standards  are.                                                               
Universities have not  always been the best at  listening to what                                                               
was going on  across the country in K-12. He  remarked that CCSSO                                                               
is  pushing with  higher education  associations  to assist  with                                                               
changing the way  teachers are being educated.   Teachers have to                                                               
be  taught more  in  the  classroom by  spending  more time  with                                                               
student teaching, have hands-on experience,  and be taught how to                                                               
deal one-on-one  with parents and  students. He said  most places                                                               
have  somewhere  between  six  months   and  a  year  of  student                                                               
teaching,  CCSSO would  like  to  see much  more.  He added  that                                                               
teachers should also receive continued professional development.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:02:08 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  HUGGINS asked  about the  increased academic  standards'                                                               
timeline-cycle and when results will be realized.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH answered that Kentucky  saw results in two years with                                                               
more students meeting  the CCSS. Miracles should  not be expected                                                               
within two years  and the process should be thought  of more as a                                                               
cycle. Each  state has a different  timeline. He said he  did not                                                               
know  what  timeline  was  best  for Alaska  and  each  state  is                                                               
different. He  divulged that  he does  not want  his two-year-old                                                               
child to  get through high  school with the current  standards in                                                               
the  state of  Virginia. He  suggested that  the state  should be                                                               
thinking  about  a  three-to-four  year  transition  to  the  new                                                               
standards. Alaska's  Commissioner of Education  should ultimately                                                               
provide the committee with a timeline.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  HUGGINS asked  about the  relationship between  CCSS and                                                               
RTTT.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH  replied that Alaska did  not apply for RTTT.  In the                                                               
RTTT application  process, states  were given  a small  amount of                                                               
points for  participation in writing  a set of  common standards.                                                               
He said most of the states  that put in applications used CCSS as                                                               
evidence  to show  participation.  Funds provided  to states  for                                                               
participation  was  extra  money  and not  a  title  program.  He                                                               
reiterated that Alaska did not participate.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:04:13 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR HUGGINS said  the U.S. ranked 26th or  27th amongst other                                                               
nations in education. He added  that Alaska ranked in the forties                                                               
amongst other states.  He asked if regrouping is  possible if the                                                               
data  he  noted  was  taken   into  account  with  a  65  percent                                                               
achievement level in executing CCSS  along with teaching training                                                               
and other support necessities.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH  answered yes. He asserted  that standards themselves                                                               
are not going to teach kids;  teachers have to be helped to teach                                                               
kids.  He said  the CCSS  and AAS  set a  high bar  for students.                                                               
Dedication to getting students and  teachers to the higher levels                                                               
will   lead  to   regrouping  in   state  orders.   He  mentioned                                                               
Massachusetts as the  best example where high  standards were set                                                               
in the  early '90s and  the state was  not the highest  ranked in                                                               
the country  when the change  was made. Massachusetts  became the                                                               
number one  ranked state ten  years after their  standards change                                                               
with the state remaining ranked  as the highest. He explained the                                                               
importance of dedicating to the  CCSS and really being willing to                                                               
say the standards are the right  things for students when it gets                                                               
hard. Dedicating to higher standards  will be hard politically at                                                               
times.  He encouraged  the committee  to  think about  AAS as  an                                                               
important goal for students.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
9:06:04 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR   DUNLEAVY  noted   that  Mr.   Minnich  mentioned   that                                                               
internationally the U.S. should do  better. He asked if there was                                                               
any  study done  in terms  of  correlation between  CCSS and  the                                                               
Program for International Student Assessment (PISA).                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH replied that CCSSO looked at PISA.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS asked Mr. Minnich to explain PISA.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MINNICH answered  that PISA  is an  international assessment                                                               
given  by   the  Organization   for  Economic   Co-operation  and                                                               
Development  (OCED). He  said PISA's  recent  results ranked  the                                                               
U.S. in  the 20's. He explained  that PISA noted in  their recent                                                               
study that implementing CCSS should  result in growth by the U.S.                                                               
in PISA.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  noted Senator  Huggins addressed what  the next                                                               
steps were  with AAS  and Mr.  Minnich replied  that universities                                                               
have to change  teacher training. He set  forth that universities                                                               
were  the  very  group  that  validated  AAS.  He  asked  if  the                                                               
universities  were actually  changing  internally  to do  exactly                                                               
what was discussed.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MINNICH  answered  that   Senator  Dunleavy's  question  was                                                               
outside of  the scope of  his testimony. He encouraged  the state                                                               
to  think about  how it  is dealing  with higher  education as  a                                                               
separate issue, whether Alaska had  CCSS or not. He asserted that                                                               
higher education should be getting  better across the U.S. Higher                                                               
education has  to train teachers  better and be more  relevant to                                                               
what is  going on  in K-12 classrooms.  He remarked  that Senator                                                               
Dunleavy's  question  is   not  a  CCSS  issue,   but  should  be                                                               
considered a training issue for universities across the U.S.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY reiterated that  the university system validated                                                               
AAS. He  noted that the focus  is on all students  being prepared                                                               
to go into  college if they so choose. He  agreed that addressing                                                               
the  universities is  an internal  issue  for the  state to  deal                                                               
with.  He  asserted  that  the  university  systems  have  to  be                                                               
prepared for those incoming students.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH replied that Senator  Dunleavy is on to something and                                                               
the issue is really important. He  explained that he did not know                                                               
enough  about  Alaska's  university   system  to  answer  Senator                                                               
Dunleavy's question.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
9:09:04 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  GARDNER  stated  that  she had  attended  previous  CCSS                                                               
meetings through  the National  Conference of  State Legislatures                                                               
(NCSL) and the Education Commission  of the States (ECS). The key                                                               
emphasis from the  meetings in improving student  outcomes is not                                                               
only high standards, but also  really effective teachers. Part of                                                               
the effectiveness  of teachers  is to have  more time  as student                                                               
teachers  and  a more  rigorous  course  load for  teachers.  She                                                               
mentioned  Kentucky as  an example  of a  state that  implemented                                                               
CCSS and  made progress  in two  or three  years. She  asked what                                                               
role  effective   teacher  training  has  in   Kentucky's  making                                                               
progress. She  called attention to  previous testimony  where the                                                               
state  of Maryland  presented their  systematic way  of mentoring                                                               
new  teachers and  supporting building-by-building  in supporting                                                               
new teachers.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MINNICH identified  Maryland,  Massachusetts, Kentucky,  and                                                               
Tennessee as  states that have  a systematic way of  bringing new                                                               
teachers into the system. There are  states where a person gets a                                                               
sense that  teachers just get  thrown into the classroom  in year                                                               
one and  learn as  they go.  States have  really changed  the way                                                               
they are  doing things. He  noted that  CCSSO did a  report about                                                               
teacher  training and  made ten  recommendations to  states about                                                               
what they should be doing.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS asked if Mr. Minnich had any closing comments.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH replied  that he appreciated the detail  level of the                                                               
questions posed to him. He  noted that the committee members have                                                               
done their  homework. He summarized  that his goal was  to simply                                                               
try to get  some facts on the table about  the process CCSSO went                                                               
through in developing CCSS. He  explained that the committee will                                                               
hear from  opposition in the  day's meeting and noted  that there                                                               
are issues  worth debating.  He asked the  committee to  focus on                                                               
the  issue  of  how  to   get  students  to  the  CCSS.  Upcoming                                                               
presentations by the school districts  in Alaska will show that a                                                               
good job is being done in implementing AAS.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:11:43 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR HUGGINS  asked Mr. Minnich  to address  student drop-outs                                                               
and the net effect when college-oriented standards are moved.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH  replied that  drop-outs are  a national  plague. The                                                               
career-side  of the  conversation is  really important  and there                                                               
has  to be  relevance for  students who  drop out.  He emphasized                                                               
that  drop-outs  have to  have  a  reason  to  come back  to  the                                                               
classroom.  He   said  curriculum   is  important  and   not  the                                                               
standards. Kids are  starting to see how what is  being taught in                                                               
classrooms is connected directly  to a job. Career-tech education                                                               
is one  of the major ways  to solve the drop-out  conversation so                                                               
that the non-college student after high school has options.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:13:13 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  STEVENS   thanked  Mr.  Minnich  for   his  testimony.  He                                                               
commented that he had received  calls regarding the perception of                                                               
"stacking the  deck" and only  presenting one side of  the Common                                                               
Core  issue. He  asserted  that  his intention  has  been to  get                                                               
comments  from  all  sides  of  every issue.  There  will  be  an                                                               
opportunity at  tomorrow's committee meeting for  anyone to speak                                                               
with  the intent  that everyone  has had  an opportunity  to give                                                               
their opinion and their take of what is going on.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:14:08 AM                                                                                                                    
At ease from 9:14 a.m. to 9:18 a.m.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
9:18:36 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS called the committee back to order.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
PAM  GOINS,  Director  of  Education  Policy,  Council  of  State                                                               
Governments  (CSG),  Lexington,  Kentucky, said  she  would  talk                                                               
about the  legislative role in CCSS  adoption and implementation.                                                               
She explained that  she would provide background on  what CSG has                                                               
seen across the  country with state legislatures.  She noted that                                                               
she  was  a   director  of  CSG's  "Center   for  Innovation  and                                                               
Transformation  Education."  She  said  CSG allows  for  a  great                                                               
opportunity and perspective to bring  all three branches together                                                               
to address CCSS conversations:  states' departments of education,                                                               
states' boards  of education, and states'  legislators. She noted                                                               
that she is  a parent of a fifth grader  and explained that CSG's                                                               
location in Lexington, Kentucky, allows  her to watch the state's                                                               
progression  with adoption  and  implementation of  CCSS. It  has                                                               
been  very   interesting  to  see   what  is  happening   in  the                                                               
classrooms,  talk  with teachers  to  learn  about CCSS,  address                                                               
teachers' professional development, and  to see assessment scores                                                               
change to the new CCSS, from a parent's perspective.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MS. GOINS stated  that she will share what is  happening with the                                                               
legislature. She  noted that  the committee  has heard  about the                                                               
emphasis on  "college and career readiness."  However, CSG really                                                               
wants to say "college workforce  and life readiness" because that                                                               
is  critical and  demands more  from students  than ever  before.                                                               
Remedial  courses continue  to be  necessary before  students can                                                               
take credit-bearing  courses once  they enter college  and higher                                                               
education.  Also,  CSG  continues   to  hear  from  business  and                                                               
industry  that   they  cannot  find   employees  who   can  think                                                               
critically, communicate,  problem solve, collaborate, and  have a                                                               
basic  ability to  read and  write effectively.  The same  skills                                                               
noted  by  business  and  industry are  missing  in  the  college                                                               
classrooms. She said CCSS will  better prepare all students to be                                                               
successful in college and careers  through deeper, more rigorous,                                                               
and  clearer expectations  for the  learner. CCSS  will emphasize                                                               
more  complex content  and the  development of  real-world skills                                                               
with  authentic  purpose.  CCSS   will  ultimately  lead  to  job                                                               
creation, economic development, and prosperity for the state.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
She  continued  that  AAS will  allow  teachers,  administrators,                                                               
students, and parents  to use a common language  by preparing the                                                               
best  educational environment  for the  state's students.  Beyond                                                               
the  in-state  commonality, Alaska  also  has  an opportunity  to                                                               
learn what  is happening  around the country  and share  the good                                                               
work  happening in  Alaska. The  world opens  up for  a classroom                                                               
teacher when they  can obtain lesson plans,  textbooks, and other                                                               
materials to customize instruction for their students.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:21:35 AM                                                                                                                    
MS. GOINS addressed  the policymaker's role in  the CCSS adoption                                                               
process.  She pointed  out that  41  states lean  to their  state                                                               
boards  of  education  or  boards of  regents.  The  chief  state                                                               
officers  have been  given  the authority  to  authorize CCSS  in                                                               
North  Dakota,   New  Mexico,   and  Wisconsin.   American  Samoa                                                               
authorizes CCSS  by executive order  through their  governor. She                                                               
remarked  that  the  legislature  plays  a  key  role  in  Idaho,                                                               
Kentucky,  Maine, and  Minnesota.  She noted  that  the state  of                                                               
Washington   only  adopted   the  English   Language  Art   (ELA)                                                               
standards.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
She remarked  that there seems  to be some  growing misconception                                                               
about what  an academic  standard really  is. Mr.  Minnich talked                                                               
about the  purpose of the  CCSS statements and  expectations. She                                                               
detailed that  CCSS are not  curriculum or  curriculum materials,                                                               
but rather  a rigorous roadmap  of what students should  know and                                                               
be able to do at each grade level.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
She said standards are not  new to states; the standards movement                                                               
happened years  ago. The  national movement  to utilize  a common                                                               
set of  standards is  new and  the focus now  is on  creating and                                                               
preparing students for  college, work force, and  life. She noted                                                               
that the  committee heard  that academic  standards alone  do not                                                               
take  a  student to  the  next  level.  It takes  a  well-rounded                                                               
curriculum,  classroom  materials, professional  development  for                                                               
teachers,  formative  and  summative  assessments,  and  a  large                                                               
cultural  shift in  the school  to  guide students  to their  own                                                               
self-directed learning using a teacher as their guide.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:23:19 AM                                                                                                                    
She  reviewed Kentucky's  process,  noting  the state's  landmark                                                               
legislation happened before CCSS ever  came to be. Governor Steve                                                               
Beshear signed Senate Bill (KY-SB) 1  into law in March 2009. She                                                               
said  KY-SB  1 was  a  foundational  piece of  legislation  which                                                               
really   changed   and   transformed  Kentucky's   entire   state                                                               
educational system;  it focuses  on college and  career readiness                                                               
in  addition to  degree  completion. She  revealed  that KY-SB  1                                                               
mandated  the Department  of Education,  the Board  of Education,                                                               
and the  Council on Postsecondary  Education to come  together as                                                               
three previously  separated agencies  and develop a  unified plan                                                               
to reduce  college remediation  rates by at  least 50  percent by                                                               
2014. KY-SB  1 also  requires an  increase in  college completion                                                               
rates of  those students who  were in developmental  and remedial                                                               
education  by 3  percent annually  from 2009  to 2014.  She noted                                                               
that KY-SB  1 adoption  served as a  critical foundation  to move                                                               
forward when CCSS were adopted at a later date.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
9:24:28 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS asked  if Kentucky is on track  to accomplish their                                                               
goals by 2014.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS.  GOINS replied  that  the  numbers look  really  good and  an                                                               
annual progression has been achieved.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR GARDNER asked if Kentucky  provided additional funding to                                                               
school  districts to  reach  for  their goals  or  if the  school                                                               
districts were expected  to make the changes at  the same funding                                                               
levels.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS.  GOINS  responded  that there  were  some  appropriations  in                                                               
Kentucky's budget to assist the  local school districts. She said                                                               
Kentucky House  Bill (KY-HB)  37 on  the Districts  of Innovation                                                               
comes with  some funding  as well.  Districts can  apply to  be a                                                               
District of  Innovation to  ask for  forgiveness from  some state                                                               
board requirements  in addition to some  statutory and regulatory                                                               
requirements.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR GARDNER  asked to clarify  that in the effort  to achieve                                                               
the new  goals, districts in  Kentucky are asking  for exemptions                                                               
from some standards and regulatory requirements.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. GOINS said that was correct.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR GARDNER replied that  districts' obtaining exemptions was                                                               
very interesting.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. GOINS explained that Kentucky  has 175 school districts and 4                                                               
districts  have been  approved to  be a  District of  Innovation.                                                               
Those districts are  doing remarkable and some  of the following:                                                               
dual enrollment - transporting students  from school to the local                                                               
college or  community college while  they have internet  on their                                                               
school bus to do some  other high school work; proficiency; based                                                               
and competency-based learning with  problems; and taking teachers                                                               
from higher  performing schools into lower  performing schools in                                                               
the Louisville  School District. School districts  actually apply                                                               
to  the State  Board  of  Education and  ask  to  be exempt  from                                                               
certain  regulatory and  statutory requirements  of the  state. A                                                               
great deal of oversight comes  from the commissioner at the state                                                               
level.  She said  the District  of Innovation  program is  in its                                                               
second years and test scores will  provide a status update as the                                                               
program moves forward.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:26:47 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  GARDNER  addressed  Kentucky's  strategy  to  move  high                                                               
performing teachers to low performing  schools. She asked how the                                                               
high  performing  teachers  were  moved,  if  the  transfers  are                                                               
involuntary, and whether teachers  are provided with an incentive                                                               
to transfer.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. GOINS replied  that the school districts  sought teachers who                                                               
are  high  performing  and  have great  test  scores  from  their                                                               
students. She  explained that high performing  teachers are asked                                                               
to  mentor  other teachers  directly  in  the classroom,  as  co-                                                               
teachers  in classrooms,  or with  the use  of the  internet with                                                               
video calls.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
She  continued  with  more  examples  of  what  is  happening  to                                                               
Kentucky  with the  unified plan  that  KY-SB 1  put into  place.                                                               
There is a huge emphasis  on advanced placement and opportunities                                                               
for increased dual-credit.  Science, Technology, Engineering, and                                                               
Mathematics   (STEM)  is   a  huge   focus  as   Kentucky  boosts                                                               
opportunities for students and teachers  pushing towards the STEM                                                               
fields.  She noted  that there  are  also targeted  interventions                                                               
happening for those students who are  not on track for college or                                                               
career-readiness.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:28:24 AM                                                                                                                    
She  addressed the  state  of Washington  and  noted the  state's                                                               
legislature  being  a part  of  the  implementation and  adoption                                                               
process. The  Washington State Legislature  provisionally adopted                                                               
CCSS in  2010 and gave some  very direct feedback to  the state's                                                               
Department  of Education  during the  adoption process.  Cost and                                                               
benefit  analysis  occurred  with Washington's  policymakers  and                                                               
stakeholders. The  Washington State Legislature  formally adopted                                                               
CCSS the following year and the  state is on a good projection to                                                               
continue  their efforts.  Washington  provided a  lot of  support                                                               
during the three-year transition  process for special populations                                                               
that  included students  with disabilities  and English  Language                                                               
Learners.  She  said CCSS  for  Washington,  in the  present  and                                                               
future, entails  looking at  bringing leadership  teams together,                                                               
providing  new assessments,  and keeping  the statewide  steering                                                               
committee together to address CCSS success.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:30:00 AM                                                                                                                    
MS.  GOINS  addressed  Maine  and   noted  CCSS  adoption  was  a                                                               
legislative act.  She said Maine  knew that more than  50 percent                                                               
of their students were entering  community colleges with the need                                                               
to take developmental remedial courses  without the ability to go                                                               
straight in to a credit  bearing course. Maine put their emphasis                                                               
on  college,  career,  and  civic   life.  Maine's  business  and                                                               
industry  was  very vocal  on  its  inability to  employ  skilled                                                               
people. The Maine  Legislature put CCSS in place in  2011 and the                                                               
event became  known as "Maine's  Learning Revolt  Standards." She                                                               
noted that more  and more states are  emphasizing state standards                                                               
in CCSS as Alaska has done.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
She addressed  what is happening  in legislatures.  She explained                                                               
that  there was  a  flurry of  activity in  2010  as states  were                                                               
adopting CCSS.  Legislatures in  many states  asked for  the CCSS                                                               
process  to  slow down  and  allow  for legislative  involvement.                                                               
Legislatures were  not aware of  what the standards were  or what                                                               
action the states  had taken. However, after  more education took                                                               
place with  policymakers, the  legislative action  really started                                                               
to heat up.  Although the majority of states rely  on their state                                                               
boards  of education,  there are  far reaching  implications that                                                               
the legislature needs to be  aware of: state assessments, teacher                                                               
evaluation  systems,  accountability,  funding for  local  school                                                               
districts,  and  appropriations.  The   legislature  is  a  vital                                                               
stakeholder in academic  standards. Alaska's legislature oversees                                                               
the  educational   systems  from  early  learning   to  K-12  and                                                               
postsecondary  education.  She  asserted that  the  legislature's                                                               
role in  understanding the standards  that impact and  align with                                                               
the state's educational goals in strategic planning is critical.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
She  said  in 2012  there  were  approximately 120  unique  bills                                                               
related to  CCSS, but that number  surged to almost 300  in 2013.                                                               
She noted examples  of bills that were enacted  by western states                                                               
as follows:                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     In California,  through Assembly  Bill 86, there  was a                                                                    
     one-time  appropriation  of  $1.25 billion  and  it  is                                                                    
     specifically to  help the local education  agencies and                                                                    
     the implementation of the  Common Core, new investments                                                                    
     in   professional  development   technology.  Also   in                                                                    
     California, the [State Schools]  Chief must monitor the                                                                    
     quality  of  the  standards based  curriculum  that  is                                                                    
     being  implemented   and  then  they  put   a  specific                                                                    
     emphasis on  English Language  Learners as  well. There                                                                    
     was another $1.1 million  in California appropriated to                                                                    
     improve  the  teaching  quality   related  to  the  new                                                                    
     standards.   In  Colorado,   Senate  Bill   87  was   a                                                                    
     supplemental   appropriation  to   the  Department   of                                                                    
     Education  to create  the  Colorado Student  Assessment                                                                    
     Program aligned  to the Common  Core; so they  took the                                                                    
     role  to  say  these  new standards  must  be  directly                                                                    
     aligned to the  Common Core. In Hawaii,  House Bill 200                                                                    
     funded  the  Department  of Education  to  implement  a                                                                    
     pilot-program designed  to help the state  meet the new                                                                    
     standards.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
9:33:37 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS welcomed Representative Lynn Gattis to the                                                                        
committee meeting. He noted that Representative Gattis is the                                                                   
Chairperson of the House Education Committee.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. GOINS continued to note unique CCSS related bills in western                                                                
states as follows:                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     Idaho  Senate  Bill 1200  was  funding  for the  Public                                                                    
     Schools  Educational  Support   Program  and  this  was                                                                    
     nearly $1.6  billion put into  the fund for  the fiscal                                                                    
     year   2014,   and   $3.8  million   specifically   for                                                                    
     professional  development in  training on  Idaho's Core                                                                    
     Standards.  In Nevada  we saw  a couple  of bills,  one                                                                    
     requiring the P-16 Council to  determine whether or not                                                                    
     their  teachers in  the schools  are understanding  and                                                                    
     teaching the  curriculum required  by the  Common Core.                                                                    
     Also,  the State  Chief has  to  select a  standardized                                                                    
     curriculum-based college  entrance exam to  replace the                                                                    
     High School  Proficiency Test, which also  requires the                                                                    
     State Board to  determine the course of  the study that                                                                    
     is aligned  to the  Common Core  subject areas.  In New                                                                    
     Mexico, House  Bill 2 gave  a special  appropriation to                                                                    
     the  State Education  Agency for  the development  of a                                                                    
     statewide  formative  Common Core  related  assessment;                                                                    
     they   also  gave   $365,000  for   the  purchase   and                                                                    
     development  of new  information technology  to support                                                                    
     implementation  and  assessment  of  college  readiness                                                                    
     standards in a varied  diverse and culturally difficult                                                                    
     geographic region  of New Mexico.  As you will  hear as                                                                    
     the   day  goes   on  today   and  tomorrow   with  the                                                                    
     assessments  and  the  use  of  technology  in  digital                                                                    
     learning,  New  Mexico  put this  funding  directly  to                                                                    
     boost the  use of  technology, the broadband  width, in                                                                    
     ensuring  students had  access to  that technology.  In                                                                    
     North Dakota,  they are aligning  statewide achievement                                                                    
     tests with the Common Core.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:35:48 AM                                                                                                                    
     In  Oregon, they  established  the  Network of  Quality                                                                    
     Teaching  and  Learning,  which specifically  looks  at                                                                    
     teacher quality, student achievement,  and how they are                                                                    
     implementing  the  Common  Core.   In  Utah,  they  are                                                                    
     looking at  their LEA's or their  local school district                                                                    
     and  their  charter  schools  as  well,  to  administer                                                                    
     college readiness assessments  and admission tests that                                                                    
     includes  language arts,  math,  and science  standards                                                                    
     that are  most commonly  accepted by  most universities                                                                    
     in the  state. Washington extended their  2012 deadline                                                                    
     for the  State Chief to  issue an estimate of  the cost                                                                    
     for implementing the  Common Core and in  doing so they                                                                    
     must  get  public  input  and  feedback  regarding  the                                                                    
     recommendation to enhance those standards.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
9:36:40 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  STEVENS  asked  about  the   state  of  Washington's  cost                                                               
estimate.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS.  GOINS replied  that she  has not  seen the  final report  of                                                               
exactly what amount Washington came up with.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
She  said Wyoming  also looked  at extending  a timeline  that is                                                               
legislature-established for  phase 1 of their  new accountability                                                               
system, which has  a direct correlation to  implementation of the                                                               
Common Core.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
She asserted  that Alaska's legislature certainly  knows that the                                                               
Common Core  implementation has budget implications,  but the key                                                               
is  that the  legislature shows  support for  implementation with                                                               
fidelity. One  of the key  opportunities with the Common  Core is                                                               
to have a  common set of high expectations for  all students; but                                                               
they must  be implemented with  fidelity. She advised  the Alaska                                                               
Legislature to look at redirecting  funds to districts to support                                                               
implementation  and  to  review  available  funding  streams  for                                                               
teacher professional development. Alaska  is already training its                                                               
teachers,  looking at  the  professional development  components,                                                               
and how the  Department of Education's is  involved. She remarked                                                               
that  Alaska possesses  vast Common  Core opportunities  to learn                                                               
and share with neighboring states.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
9:38:15 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS  said Alaska  is going through  a lot  of difficult                                                               
times fiscally  and noted that  the House has established  a task                                                               
force to  try to find ways  to reduce the costs  of education. He                                                               
explained that the  task force set forth that the  state needs to                                                               
look  at a  reduction of  monies going  into education.  He asked                                                               
Representative Gattis if his assessment was fair.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE GATTIS replied that  Chair Stevens' assessment was                                                               
not fair. She explained that  the task force's preliminary report                                                               
indicated that Alaska  needs to find newer and  different ways of                                                               
thinking.  Alaska has  an education  system that  the legislature                                                               
created over time. She asserted  that if the legislature does not                                                               
change the  education system,  then the state  will be  forced to                                                               
fund the system.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS replied  that the point is  Alaska's legislature is                                                               
taking  a look  at the  cost of  education and  at the  same time                                                               
addressing  budget implications  regarding  the  Common Core.  He                                                               
asked Ms. Goins for her comments on his statement.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
9:39:23 AM                                                                                                                    
MS. GOINS replied  that Alaska is already spending  the money for                                                               
teacher  training  and  professional development.  She  said  the                                                               
state should look at its  education funding streams coming in and                                                               
opportunities for  school districts to apply  for funding through                                                               
different opportunities.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  asked  if  Ms.   Goins  is  finding  that  the                                                               
universities are  changing their approaches to  anything. He said                                                               
it sounds like  the state is starting to  lineup two historically                                                               
different systems. He  asserted that the K-12  system is becoming                                                               
a  feeder-program  for universities  or  the  "minor league"  for                                                               
universities  when the  two groups  have  disparate missions.  He                                                               
said the  argument in  the past  is that  Alaska's kids  were not                                                               
prepared  for  the  university;   but  there  are  two  different                                                               
missions. He asked if Ms.  Goins is finding that the universities                                                               
are changing their approach to  things. He noted that Alaska used                                                               
to have  a community college  concept that really does  not exist                                                               
anymore.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. GOINS  replied that converting higher  education institutions                                                               
has been  a slow process.  Universities initially felt  that they                                                               
were not part of the conversation  with the Common Core. She said                                                               
universities  are now  given the  message that  the CCSS  process                                                               
requires their participation.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  noted  that   the  university  just  validated                                                               
Alaska's standards.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS.  GOINS  replied  that  she  was  talking  nationally  in  the                                                               
conversation  as  a whole.  Just  as  the legislature  felt  very                                                               
frequently  that   they  were   not  a   part  of   that  initial                                                               
conversation as the  standards were being developed,  the same is                                                               
true from  higher education.  Universities are  certainly onboard                                                               
with  the  Common  Core  with  the  understanding  that  CCSS  is                                                               
critical  for  graduating  K-12 students  that  are  college  and                                                               
career-ready.  She  remarked  that  the aspiration  for  a  quick                                                               
turnaround has  not occurred and  the change process is  going to                                                               
be  a   slower-moving  process  for  higher   education  systems.                                                               
Universities  are  certainly  looking  at  the  Common  Core  and                                                               
analyzing  requirements for  training  teachers. She  said it  is                                                               
critical that  higher education  institutions, state  boards, and                                                               
licensors come  together and talk  about how teachers need  to be                                                               
trained as they enter the classrooms.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
9:41:58 AM                                                                                                                    
She  said the  Council of  State Governments  (CSG) was  asked to                                                               
compile   a  policy-framework   for  deeper   learning,  critical                                                               
thinking,  and   an  inquiry-based   approach  by   students.  In                                                               
addition, CSG  was asked to  identify what the  state legislative                                                               
role  is. She  explained that  a  national group  of experts  was                                                               
assembled comprised of legislators,  state chiefs, state board of                                                               
education members,  and local implementers. CSG  asked the expert                                                               
group to identify  what to say to  legislators regarding college,                                                               
career, workforce,  and life readiness. Recommendations  from the                                                               
expert group fall around five major policy areas:                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
   1. Curriculum and instruction                                                                                                
   2. Teacher professional development                                                                                          
   3. Teacher and leader effectiveness                                                                                          
   4. The use of time                                                                                                           
   5. Assessments and accountability                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MS. GOINS  explained that  the recommendations  are a  roadmap of                                                               
opportunities  for state  legislatures to  consider as  they have                                                               
academic  standards  conversations  in  transforming  educational                                                               
systems.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:43:29 AM                                                                                                                    
She said she  would leave the committee with  some questions. She                                                               
explained  that in  many  states the  boards  and departments  of                                                               
education  lead  the  way on  local  school  districts'  academic                                                               
standards. However,  the state  legislatures have  to be  a major                                                               
player  in  the  standards  conversation.  She  reviewed  guiding                                                               
questions  she used  when talking  with  Commissioner Hanley  and                                                               
individuals from preschool to higher education as follows:                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
   · How can we look at state licensure requirement?                                                                            
   · How can  we ensure  that our educators  can demonstrate                                                                    
     mastery of  the Common Core for  that initial licensure                                                                    
     as well as renewal?                                                                                                        
   · How can postsecondary change  their courses and program                                                                    
     approval  standards so  that  pre-service teachers  are                                                                    
     showing  competency in  standards,  ensuring that  they                                                                    
     can deliver the instruction in the classroom?                                                                              
   · How  can your  funding  provide some  support for  more                                                                    
     rigorous  teacher evaluation  systems that  include the                                                                    
     Common Core?                                                                                                               
   · What   about    revealing,   amending,    or   changing                                                                    
     professional  development?  Again,  this  is  something                                                                    
     that goes on school year  by school year that making it                                                                    
     much more  focused on your academic  standard; how that                                                                    
     connects to  the curriculum, the  curriculum materials,                                                                    
     and the instructional strategies.                                                                                          
   · How  do   you  evaluate   the  effectiveness   of  that                                                                    
     professional development?                                                                                                  
   · Can you  consolidate any of  your services here  in the                                                                    
     state  to free  up some  of those  monies we  were just                                                                    
     talking about?                                                                                                             
   · Can you purchase more collectively?                                                                                        
   · Can you  look more  as a state  to offer  resources for                                                                    
     CCSS implementation and professional development?                                                                          
   · How   can  you   possibly   incentivize  local   school                                                                    
     districts to share or consolidate their services?                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:45:12 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  specified that  Alaska  did  not adopt  Common                                                               
Core.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS.  GOINS replied  that Alaska  has AAS  and college  and career                                                               
readiness standards.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  stated that Alaska  is going to  substitute AAS                                                               
for CCSS.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. GOINS  answered correct. She  explained that the  Common Core                                                               
is that  high expectation set  of standards for all  students and                                                               
Alaska has done that with AAS.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS replied the Alaska State Standards.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY recommended a new acronym.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  GOINS addressed  policy  enaction  for the  use  of time  as                                                               
follows:                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     We are  seeing so much more  problem-based learning and                                                                    
     competency-based  learning for  students that  requires                                                                    
     now learning both inside and  outside of the classroom.                                                                    
     So, can  you take  a look  at opportunities  to provide                                                                    
     credit for  students that are  not necessarily  a "seat                                                                    
     time" or a Carnegie Unit?  How can you be flexible with                                                                    
     your  schedules, calendars,  and  class  sizes? All  of                                                                    
     these  things  can  come together  for  improving  your                                                                    
     budget outcomes  as well. And  then, as I  talked about                                                                    
     Kentucky in  their "innovation zones," are  you willing                                                                    
     to  do that  here  in Alaska  to look  at  some of  the                                                                    
     districts  to implement  your state  standards in  more                                                                    
     transformative ways?  Finally, how do you  engage other                                                                    
     key stakeholders?  Certainly today is one  way of doing                                                                    
     that,   but   engaging   the   stakeholders   in   this                                                                    
     discussion.  Your  academic  standards will  always  be                                                                    
     here for your  students. I applaud you  for raising the                                                                    
     expectations  for all  of your  students. We  can be  a                                                                    
     resource to  you at CSG  and I would certainly  be glad                                                                    
     to do so.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
9:47:12 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  GARDNER said  the  meeting is  about  trying to  improve                                                               
educational outcomes  for all kids across  Alaska and nationwide,                                                               
too.  She noted  hearing a  lot of  previous testimony  about the                                                               
importance of  early childhood education and  pre-K programs. She                                                               
said she  was surprised  that there  was no  mention, whatsoever,                                                               
about  pre-K during  discussions  about policymakers,  leadership                                                               
roles, and system assessments. She  asked if not mentioning pre-K                                                               
is intentional.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS.   GOINS   replied  that   not   mentioning   pre-K  was   not                                                               
intentionally left  off of  the table  because early  learning is                                                               
critical, whether  it be in  a childcare setting, head  start, or                                                               
pre-school  formal  programs.  She  said  pre-K  is  critical  to                                                               
prepare  students for  kindergarten  and beyond.  She noted  that                                                               
CSG's initial CCSS focus for  state legislatures was on K-12. She                                                               
said CSG  understands that the  conversation has to  also address                                                               
pre-school,  early  learning,  as   well  as  postsecondary.  She                                                               
explained that her presentation to  the committee was a result of                                                               
CSG's focus group looking at K-12 education.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
9:48:28 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  HUGGINS asked  if there  were  representatives from  the                                                               
University of Alaska (UA) at the committee meeting.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  STEVENS replied  that UA  representatives will  be present                                                               
during the afternoon meetings, as well as online.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  HUGGINS  noted  that  input  from  UA  is  an  important                                                               
component.  He remarked  that Alaska's  stakeholders  need to  be                                                               
advised  on academic  standards at  the same  time. Alaska  has a                                                               
history  where accreditation  was unfortunately  lost for  one of                                                               
the state's teacher  producing bases. The state  went through the                                                               
"agent of change"  and the practice exam and  the requirement for                                                               
a five-year education. He asserted  that the state was back where                                                               
it started  with a four-year  education requirement. He  said the                                                               
state has migrated back to where it began.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
He called  attention to Senator Dunleavy's  remarks regarding the                                                               
Alberta Model  for learning. He  asked if  Ms. Goins had  taken a                                                               
look at the Alberta Model.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
9:49:38 AM                                                                                                                    
MS. GOINS  answered that  she was not  familiar with  the Alberta                                                               
Model.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS  commented that  he appreciates  Senator Dunleavy's                                                               
comments about the change that  occurred in Alaska's universities                                                               
by  doing away  with the  community college  system. He  remarked                                                               
that  the   community  college  system  probably   plays  a  very                                                               
important  role in  Kentucky's ability  to provide  students with                                                               
classes  when they  are  in high  school so  that  they can  earn                                                               
credit at college.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS. GOINS  answered yes. She explained  that Kentucky's community                                                               
colleges  play an  important role  for students,  as well  as for                                                               
businesses. She  noted that businesses  were doing much  more in-                                                               
sourcing with community colleges to train their own employees.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS thanked Ms. Goins.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:50:30 AM                                                                                                                    
At ease from 9:50 a.m. to 10:02 a.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
10:02:19 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR STEVENS called the committee meeting back to order.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
KATHLEEN  PORTER-MAGEE,   Senior  Director,  Thomas   B.  Fordham                                                               
Institute  (TBFF),  Washington,  DC,  explained that  TBFF  is  a                                                               
"right  leaning"  education  policy  think tank.  She  noted  her                                                               
background  in policy  work, in  addition  to rigorous  standards                                                               
implementation,   in   urban,   Catholic,  and   public   charter                                                               
classrooms,   both  as   a  teacher   and  also   as  a   network                                                               
administrator.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. PORTER-MAGEE explained  that she would address  both the CCSS                                                               
and the AAS that  were in place prior to 2012.  She said her hope                                                               
is to explain why the CCSS  is clearer and more rigorous than the                                                               
vast majority of state standards and  why it is superior to those                                                               
that Alaska replaced  in 2012. She detailed the CCSS  and the AAS                                                               
as follows:                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     For  nearly two  decades, state  standards have  been a                                                                    
     cornerstone  of  our  modern  education  system.  State                                                                    
     governments  have  long  set minimum  expectations  for                                                                    
     each grade  level or  grade band  across all  grades, K                                                                    
     through  12.  These  are  meant   to  ensure  that  all                                                                    
     students, regardless  of race or  socioeconomic status,                                                                    
     are held to  the same rigorous standards.  And there is                                                                    
     ample   evidence   that,  without   clear   objectives,                                                                    
     teachers will often unconsciously  raise or lower their                                                                    
     own   expectations   based   on   the   abilities   and                                                                    
     backgrounds of  the students in  front of  them, rather                                                                    
     than based  on what  will help  ensure students  are on                                                                    
     path towards college or the workforce.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Yet, we  have known for  a long  time that, in  far too                                                                    
     many  states,  including  Alaska,  the  existing  state                                                                    
     standards set  the bar far  too low, leaving  a content                                                                    
     and expectations gap between schools and classrooms.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
10:05:17 AM                                                                                                                   
     But, are  the Common  Core the  right solution  to this                                                                    
     problem?  In  order  to   answer  that  question,  it's                                                                    
     important to understand five facts:                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
          1.  The  Common Core  effort  is,  and has  always                                                                    
          been, a  state-led effort  to improve  the quality                                                                    
          and  rigor of  K-12 academic  standards, of  which                                                                    
          Alaska leaders  were initially  full participants,                                                                    
          and which  is why  Alaska was able  to opt  out of                                                                    
          the CCSS without penalty.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
          2.   The   Common   Core   State   Standards   are                                                                    
          significantly stronger  than the  Alaska standards                                                                    
          that were in place prior to 2012.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
          3.  Common Core  English  standards emphasize  the                                                                    
          importance   of  reading   rigorous,  high-quality                                                                    
          literature in  English class, plus  non-fiction in                                                                    
          history, science, and other courses.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
          4. The  Common Core math standards  prioritize the                                                                    
          most important  math content at each  grade level,                                                                    
          including  a  heavy  dose   of  'math  facts'  and                                                                    
          arithmetic in the early grades.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
          5.  Whether Alaska  choses to  adopt or  adapt the                                                                    
          Common  Core or  not, educators  will retain  full                                                                    
          control   over    curriculum,   instruction,   and                                                                    
          pedagogy where it belongs - at the local level.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
10:06:20 AM                                                                                                                   
     Let's  dive   deeper  into   rigor  of   the  standards                                                                    
     themselves. If I leave you  with nothing else, I really                                                                    
     hope that I am successful  in underlining this critical                                                                    
     point:  the Common  Core is  significantly clearer  and                                                                    
     more rigorous  than the Alaska  ELA and  math standards                                                                    
     that were in place prior to 2012.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     We at the Fordham  Institute have been evaluating state                                                                    
     standards for more than 15  years. In 2010, we released                                                                    
     a comprehensive  review of the clarity  and specificity                                                                    
     and  content and  rigor of  every state's  existing ELA                                                                    
     and math standards, along with  our final evaluation of                                                                    
     the  Common Core.  In that  analysis,  the Common  Core                                                                    
     earned a  B-plus from  our ELA  experts and  an A-minus                                                                    
     from  our   math  experts.  In  the   same  evaluation,                                                                    
     Alaska's ELA  and math  standards earned  an 'F'  and a                                                                    
     'D' respectively.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     Even still though, when the  final version of the CCCSS                                                                    
     were released in 2010, the  standards were not meant to                                                                    
     serve as the totality  of the state's expectations, but                                                                    
     instead to  define the 'core'  - the essential  ELA and                                                                    
     math  knowledge and  skills that  students  need to  be                                                                    
     college and career ready.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     As leaders  of the  CCSS Initiative  made clear  at the                                                                    
     time,  states   who  adopted   the  Common   Core  were                                                                    
     encouraged  to customize  the standards  to meet  their                                                                    
     state's unique needs  by adding state-specific features                                                                    
     that  build  upon this  Core;  also  to strengthen  the                                                                    
     standards so  that the expectations  meet the  needs of                                                                    
     the  students  and  teachers in  their  state.  Several                                                                    
     states have done precisely  that. In Massachusetts, for                                                                    
     instance,  the   State  Board  of  Education   asked  a                                                                    
     committee of educators,  including English teachers and                                                                    
     university professors,  to review  the Common  Core and                                                                    
     compare   them   to    the   Massachusetts   Curriculum                                                                    
     Framework, which  was widely considered to  be the best                                                                    
     in the  nation. That committee  unanimously recommended                                                                    
     Common Core adoption because its  members felt that the                                                                    
     Common  Core 'is  unequivocal  in  its insistence  upon                                                                    
     academic rigor  and high expectations for  all students                                                                    
     K-12.'                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     But their support came  with some recommendations. They                                                                    
     did  not, for  instance, want  to lose  Massachusetts's                                                                    
     strong  standards for  pre-kindergarten,  nor did  they                                                                    
     want  to  lose  the  guidance that  was  found  in  the                                                                    
     state's list  of exemplar texts.  To address  those and                                                                    
     other  concerns, the  State  Board  of Education  voted                                                                    
     (also unanimously)  to adopt the Common  Core, but with                                                                    
     several  strategic  additions.   The  Board  added  the                                                                    
     Massachusetts  pre-K  standards;  they  added  specific                                                                    
     standards,  including several  that included  important                                                                    
     genre-specific content in ELA;  and they included their                                                                    
     own list of exemplar texts.  That means that today, the                                                                    
     Massachusetts  Common  Core  standards  look  different                                                                    
     than those  that guide teaching  and learning  in other                                                                    
     states.  It  also  means  that  Massachusetts  did  not                                                                    
     simply  replace  its  previous  strong  standards  with                                                                    
     something less rigorous.  It took the best  of both and                                                                    
     created something even stronger  that kept them, in the                                                                    
     words  of Commissioner  Mitchell Chester,  'Right where                                                                    
     [they] should  be, at  the table  with other  states to                                                                    
     collaborate on innovative  curricular and instructional                                                                    
     strategies  that will  benefit  students and  educators                                                                    
     for years to come.'                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:09:09 AM                                                                                                                   
     There are benefits from the  'commonness' of the Common                                                                    
     Core that  should be  acknowledged. Teachers  in Common                                                                    
     Core  states have  access to  a far  greater number  of                                                                    
     curricular  and instructional  resources, many  of them                                                                    
     free, than  states in  non-Common Core  states. Indeed,                                                                    
     because publishers,  both large and small,  have access                                                                    
     to a  larger market for Common  Core-aligned materials,                                                                    
     the possibly of innovation  is far greater, whereas, in                                                                    
     the  past, educators  were subject  to the  whims of  a                                                                    
     smaller number  of textbook creators  who were  able to                                                                    
     define quality  and control the  market. In  the Common                                                                    
     Core era,  their monopoly has been  challenged. And the                                                                    
     result is  teacher access  to a  far greater  number of                                                                    
     resources that  can meet  the needs  of a  more diverse                                                                    
     set of  learners. In addition, Common  Core states have                                                                    
     had the  opportunity to  collaborate with  other states                                                                    
     on assessment development  and professional development                                                                    
     in a way  not possible for states who  have not adopted                                                                    
     the Common Core.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     Of  course, the  benefits  of the  'commonness' of  the                                                                    
     Common Core are less important  than the quality of the                                                                    
     standards themselves.  But on this point  again, let me                                                                    
     be clear, the Common Core  are among the clearest, most                                                                    
     rigorous standards  of any K-12 ELA  and math standards                                                                    
     in  the  nation  or   the  English-speaking  world.  By                                                                    
     choosing to  leverage the Common  Core and add  to them                                                                    
     the best  of Alaska's previous standards,  you have the                                                                    
     opportunity  to create  a set  of  standards that  will                                                                    
     rival  the best  in the  world.  That is  a goal  worth                                                                    
     shooting for  and something that would  position Alaska                                                                    
     students where  they need  to be  in terms  of national                                                                    
     and international competitiveness.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:10:24 AM                                                                                                                   
     As  I mentioned  earlier, we  at the  Fordham Institute                                                                    
     have been  evaluating state standards for  more than 15                                                                    
     years. In  2010, we released a  comprehensive review of                                                                    
     the clarity  and specificity and  content and  rigor of                                                                    
     every  state's existing  ELA and  math standards  along                                                                    
     with our  evaluation of the  final draft of  the Common                                                                    
     Core. In  that analysis,  the Common  Core earned  a B-                                                                    
     plus from our ELA experts  and an A-minus from our math                                                                    
     experts.  Even Sandra  Stotsky,  one  of Common  Core's                                                                    
     fiercest  critics,  has  acknowledged  that,  for  most                                                                    
     states,  going backwards  makes  little sense,  'States                                                                    
     are unlikely  to want to  return to the  standards they                                                                    
     once  had;' because  they would  be rightly  accused of                                                                    
     returning to 'non-rigorous' standards.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     When  judged against  international  standards for  ELA                                                                    
     and math,  the Common Core fares  equally well. Between                                                                    
     2009  and 2010,  we at  the Fordham  Institute reviewed                                                                    
     the  quality   of  the   standards  that   provide  the                                                                    
     foundation  for  several   national  and  international                                                                    
     assessments:  the [National  Assessment of  Educational                                                                    
     Progress]  (NAEP),   the  [Program   for  International                                                                    
     Student   Assessment]   (PISA),    and   [Progress   in                                                                    
     International  Reading  Literacy   Study]  (PIRLS).  In                                                                    
     these  comparisons, the  Common  Core outperformed  all                                                                    
     three.  In   short,  these   standards  are   not  just                                                                    
     internationally  competitive; they  are among  the best                                                                    
     in the world.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
10:11:35 AM                                                                                                                   
     In spite of this evidence  of rigor of the Common Core,                                                                    
     critics  have spread  countless  myths  about what  the                                                                    
     standards ask, who  is behind them, and  what they mean                                                                    
     for  our teachers  and students.  For  the purposes  of                                                                    
     today's conversation,  let me address four  of the most                                                                    
     prominent  critiques to  demonstrate how  these attacks                                                                    
     don't hold up under scrutiny.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     First, many critics mistakenly  believe that the Common                                                                    
     Core   inappropriately   prioritize   nonfiction   over                                                                    
     literature in  language arts classrooms.  This argument                                                                    
     rests     on     two     dubious     assumptions     or                                                                    
     misrepresentations. First, many  have either misread or                                                                    
     deliberately misrepresent a  two-paragraph section that                                                                    
     appears on  page 5  of the  introduction to  the Common                                                                    
     Core. That  introduction suggests that  teachers should                                                                    
     'Follow  NAEP's  lead  in   balancing  the  reading  of                                                                    
     literature  with the  reading  of informational  texts,                                                                    
     including  texts  in history/social  studies,  science,                                                                    
     and  technical subjects.'  Following NAEP's  lead would                                                                    
     mean  that fourth,  eighth, and  twelfth graders  would                                                                    
     spend   50,  55,   and  70   percent   of  their   time                                                                    
     (respectively) reading informational text.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     Some have led people  to believe that these percentages                                                                    
     are  meant to  direct learning  exclusively in  English                                                                    
     classrooms; but they are not.  In fact, the Common Core                                                                    
     immediately  clarifies  that 'The  percentages  reflect                                                                    
     the sum  of student  reading, not  just reading  in ELA                                                                    
     settings.  Teachers  of  senior  English  classes,  for                                                                    
     example,  are  not required  to  devote  70 percent  of                                                                    
     reading  to  informational  texts.'  What  high  school                                                                    
     seniors read  in history and science  class would count                                                                    
     as well.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     That means  that the only  place where the  Common Core                                                                    
     explicitly mentions the amount  of time teachers should                                                                    
     spend  on literary  versus  nonliterary  reading is  to                                                                    
     clarify  that  literary   study  should  dominate  text                                                                    
     selection in literature classrooms.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     To be  clear, though, the  Common Core does ask  for an                                                                    
     increase in  the amount of  time and  attention devoted                                                                    
     to  informational  texts  and to  literary  nonfiction,                                                                    
     both  in literature  class and  in  science and  social                                                                    
     studies.  But  this  is  merely  a  correction  to  the                                                                    
     distressingly  small   percentage  of   time  currently                                                                    
     devoted to reading  the appropriately complex; content-                                                                    
     rich informational  texts that  students need  to build                                                                    
     vocabulary   and   deepen    comprehension.   This   is                                                                    
     especially  important in  the  elementary grades  where                                                                    
     students  have   almost  no  access  to   rigorous  and                                                                    
     interesting informational texts.  In fact, research has                                                                    
     suggested  that  has few  as  10  percent of  books  in                                                                    
     lower-elementary      classroom      libraries      are                                                                    
     informational, and  that first graders spend  as little                                                                    
     as 3.6 minutes each  day interacting with informational                                                                    
     text. That  puts them behind their  international peers                                                                    
     and does  not equip them  with the skills they  need to                                                                    
     succeed  in a  21st  century  information economy.  Yet                                                                    
     reading informational texts,  particularly in the early                                                                    
     grades, is  a well-documented way to  increase academic                                                                    
     and domain-specific vocabulary,  two necessary elements                                                                    
     of  reading   comprehension.  This  is   precisely  why                                                                    
     education leaders  like E.D.  Hirsch are  supportive of                                                                    
     the Common  Core; because the standards,  if faithfully                                                                    
     implemented, have  the potential  to bring  content and                                                                    
     rigor back to the curriculum.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
10:14:24 AM                                                                                                                   
     But  the fear  that  informational  texts will  somehow                                                                    
     supplant  literary  study  in Common  Core  classrooms,                                                                    
     rather than supplement it,  is unfounded. The standards                                                                    
     devote  two entire  appendices  to  helping to  clarify                                                                    
     text complexity and to  outlining 'exemplar' texts that                                                                    
     meet the standards'  complexity requirements. And those                                                                    
     exemplar  texts  address  a  variety  of  genres;  they                                                                    
     include works written by  literary giants like Thoreau,                                                                    
     Chaucer,   Shakespeare,  Harper   Lee,  and   Nathaniel                                                                    
     Hawthorne.  The  small  numbers of  advanced  technical                                                                    
     documents  included in  these  lists, while  important,                                                                    
     are dwarfed  by the volume  of great authors  and works                                                                    
     of literature  and literary nonfiction that  the Common                                                                    
     Core holds up as exemplary.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     In  other words,  while some  suggest  that the  Common                                                                    
     Core  will lead  to the  end of  great literature,  the                                                                    
     reality is  that, for the  past several  decades, we've                                                                    
     seen  erosion in  the quality  and complexity  of texts                                                                    
     being  assigned in  schools. This  dumbing down  of the                                                                    
     curriculum  comes  at a  time  when  our students  need                                                                    
     rigorous preparation  the most.  The Common  Core seeks                                                                    
     to  right that  wrong  by refocusing  our attention  on                                                                    
     reading  texts that  are worth  reading, and  doing the                                                                    
     kind  of  higher-order   literary  analysis  that  will                                                                    
     prepare students for college-level work.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
10:15:26 AM                                                                                                                   
     A second common myth is  that the Common Core standards                                                                  
     promote  low-level mathematical  skills,  or that  they                                                                    
     prioritize  mathematical  'practices' or  'fuzzy  math'                                                                    
     over critical  content. Again, a  close reading  of the                                                                    
     standards reveals the opposite is true.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     The  Common Core  math  standards prioritize  essential                                                                    
     content and  allow the time  and space needed  for deep                                                                    
     mastery  of that  content. In  the  early grades,  this                                                                    
     means  that arithmetic  is  heavily  weighted and  that                                                                    
     students  are  asked  to learn  to  automaticity  their                                                                    
     basic math  facts; and  that they  are asked  to master                                                                    
     the standard  algorithms. This is content  they need to                                                                    
     know-cold in order  to be prepared for  the upper level                                                                    
     math work  they will do  in high school and  beyond. If                                                                    
     there is one thing we  know with certainty is that math                                                                    
     is cumulative.  You can only  move on to  more advanced                                                                    
     content  until   you  have  fully   mastered  essential                                                                    
     prerequisite knowledge and skills.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     Third,  some  critics  complain that  the  Common  Core                                                                  
     don't require  Algebra in  the eighth  grade, something                                                                    
     that many  think is essential  to prepare  students for                                                                    
     advanced math in high school.  The reality, however, is                                                                    
     that  the  Kindergarten  through seventh  grade  Common                                                                    
     Core standards include all  of the prerequisite content                                                                    
     students will need  to have learned to  be prepared for                                                                    
     Algebra  I in  the eighth  grade. And  that means  that                                                                    
     it's the  states, districts, and/or schools  who decide                                                                    
     for themselves course and graduation requirements.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:16:40 AM                                                                                                                   
     Finally, some  argue that adoption of  the Common Core-                                                                    
     or  any  K-12  academic   standards  will  usurp  local                                                                    
     control  over   curriculum  and  instruction.   On  the                                                                    
     contrary,  by setting  standards, rather  than adopting                                                                    
     statewide  curricula,   state  education   leaders  are                                                                    
     ensuring  that  local  district,  school,  and  teacher                                                                    
     leaders remain  in control of  the decisions  that most                                                                    
     directly  impact the  students they  serve. On  the ELA                                                                    
     side, this  means that local  leaders and  teachers can                                                                    
     and will choose the texts  students will read. It means                                                                    
     that parents, teachers, and leaders  still need to work                                                                    
     together to define  the 'content-rich curriculum' their                                                                    
     children should be learning.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     Standards set  a minimum bar,  a floor, not  a ceiling.                                                                    
     They are designed only to  help define student outcomes                                                                    
     to help  ensure that all students  have the opportunity                                                                    
     to  learn  the  content  they  need  to  succeed.  But,                                                                    
     educators  still drive  curriculum and  instruction and                                                                    
     leaders still make critical school-level decisions.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:17:28 AM                                                                                                                   
     In the  end, Common  Core is a  classroom-level reform.                                                                    
     It  is  meant  to  refocus  planning,  curriculum,  and                                                                    
     instruction on  the things that matter  most to reading                                                                    
     comprehension:  books that  are worth  reading; content                                                                    
     that is  worth learning;  and reading and  writing that                                                                    
     is tied  directly to both.  Whether the promise  of the                                                                    
     Common Core is realized  depends on whether leaders are                                                                    
     able to look  past the politics into  the classroom and                                                                    
     make decisions  that are  in the  best interest  of the                                                                    
     students we all hope to serve.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
10:17:56 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR STEVENS noted  the importance to address the  CCSS myths in                                                               
detail. He  inquired about the  issue of local control  and asked                                                               
if there  are many Alaska things  the state would need  to add to                                                               
its  curriculum  that  other  states would  not.  He  noted  that                                                               
Massachusetts has a little different curriculum.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. PORTER-MAGEE  replied that  there are  a number  of different                                                               
things that are not included in  the CCSS that a state might make                                                               
the  decision  to add.  She  cited  the  pre-K standards  as  one                                                               
example.  CCSS covers  K-12 and  does not  include standards  for                                                               
pre-K.  Massachusetts   made  the   decision  to   include  pre-K                                                               
standards because  the state had  them in  the past and  felt the                                                               
inclusion  was critical.  The Fordham  Institute's evaluation  of                                                               
Alaska's  previous  standards  found  that the  state  had  pre-K                                                               
standards that  were strong. She  said pre-K would be  an example                                                               
of  a standard  that Alaska  leaders might  want to  keep in  the                                                               
transition to new standards.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
She noted  another example  is a state  specific reading  list or                                                               
exemplar text list.  She explained that CCSS  contains Appendix B                                                               
that  has some  examples of  the quality  and complexity  of text                                                               
that teachers  might assign  at each grade  level. Appendix  B is                                                               
not  part  of the  CCSS;  it  is  just  offered as  an  addendum.                                                               
Massachusetts decided to adopt  their Massachusetts Reading List,                                                               
rather adopting  Appendix B. Other  states might choose  to adopt                                                               
their own reading list so that  local authors are selected in the                                                               
text exemplars that used schools.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
She noted  that there  has been some  controversy in  some states                                                               
where  previous   state  standards  may  have   required  cursive                                                               
writing; that is in no  way incompatible with the requirements of                                                               
CCSS and  a state may choose  to leave in state  specific college                                                               
and  career-ready standards.  She  reiterated that  Massachusetts                                                               
and California  chose to retain  their state  specific standards.                                                               
She  asserted  that there  are  a  number  of things  that  state                                                               
leaders might choose to prioritize and leave in their CCSS.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
10:20:43 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR  STEVENS  thanked Ms.  Porter-Magee.  He  remarked that  he                                                               
liked Ms. Porter-Magee's comment  about minimum-bar floor and not                                                               
a ceiling; often CCSS is looked at backwards.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
10:21:17 AM                                                                                                                   
At ease from 10:21 a.m. to 10:29 a.m.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:29:44 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR STEVENS called the committee back to order.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
DR. SANDRA  STOTSKY, Professor Emeritus, University  of Arkansas,                                                               
Department  of Education  Reform, Brookline,  MA, addressed  "Why                                                               
Alaska  Needs  Internationally Comparable  (Benchmarked)  English                                                               
Language  Arts  (ELA)  Standards."  She said  the  most  relevant                                                               
aspects  of her  experience  include being  the Senior  Associate                                                               
Commissioner  in the  Massachusetts Department  of Education  and                                                               
helping to develop  all the state's standards in  K-12, a citizen                                                               
appointment  for the  Massachusetts Board  of Education,  and the                                                               
Common Core's Validation Committee.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
DR. STOTSKY  provided the committee  with the  following prepared                                                               
statement and paraphrased as follows:                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     Thank you for the opportunity  to give testimony to the                                                                    
     Alaska  State  Senate  Education  Committee  on  Common                                                                    
     Core's  ELA  standards  and Alaska's  current  Academic                                                                    
     Standards  for  ELA. I  begin  with  remarks on  Common                                                                    
     Core's  Validation Committee,  on which  I served  from                                                                    
     2009-2010. I  then offer comments on  Common Core's and                                                                    
     Alaska's  current  ELA  standards. They  appear  to  be                                                                    
     identical,  so  comments  on  Common  Core's  standards                                                                    
     apply  to  Alaska's current  standards  as  well. As  I                                                                    
     talk, I  will give examples relating  to the vocabulary                                                                    
     standards  and  reading   standards  for  literary  and                                                                    
     informational   texts  because   these  are   the  most                                                                    
     damaging   of  these   ELA   standards.   I  end   with                                                                    
     recommendations.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     Common Core's K-12 standards,  it is regularly claimed,                                                                    
     emerged from  a state-led process in  which experts and                                                                    
     educators  were well  represented. But  the people  who                                                                    
     wrote  the standards  did  not  represent the  relevant                                                                    
     stakeholders.   Nor  were   they  qualified   to  draft                                                                    
     standards intended to  'transform instruction for every                                                                    
     child.' And  the Validation Committee that  was created                                                                    
     to put the  seal of approval on the  drafters' work was                                                                    
     useless if  not misleading, both in  its membership and                                                                    
     in the procedures they had to follow.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
She specified  that the Validation  Committee was supposed  to be                                                               
the committee  that would make  sure that whatever  was developed                                                               
would  be   internationally  benchmarked,  research   based,  and                                                               
rigorous. She  asserted that the  Validation Committee  could not                                                               
in  any way  fulfill its  obligations  to ensure  those kinds  of                                                               
qualities.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
DR. STOTSKY  continued with who  was on the  Validation Committee                                                               
and paraphrased from her prepared statement as follows:                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     In  the absence  of official  information to  date from                                                                    
     the  two  private  organizations themselves,  it  seems                                                                    
     likely  that Achieve,  Inc.  and  the Gates  Foundation                                                                    
     selected  most  of  the  key  personnel  to  write  the                                                                    
     college-readiness  standards. Almost  all the  members,                                                                    
     it turned out,  were on the staff of  Achieve, Inc. and                                                                    
     three  other   test/curriculum  development  companies:                                                                    
     American  College Testing  (ACT),  America's Choice  (a                                                                    
     for-profit project of the  National Center on Education                                                                    
     and  the Economy  (NCEE), and  the College  Board (CB).                                                                    
     Not only did the  Standards Development Work Group fail                                                                    
     to  include any  high school  mathematics teachers,  it                                                                    
     failed  to  include  any  English  professors  or  high                                                                    
     school  English  teachers.  How could  legitimate  high                                                                    
     school "college-readiness" standards  in either subject                                                                    
     be  created without  the very  two groups  of educators                                                                    
     who know the most about  what students should and could                                                                    
     be    learning    in    secondary    mathematics    and                                                                    
     English/reading classes? Because the  24 members of the                                                                    
     Standards  Development Work  Group  labored in  secret,                                                                    
     without   open   meetings,  sunshine-law   minutes   of                                                                    
     meetings, or  accessible public comment.  Their reasons                                                                    
     for making the decisions they did are lost to history.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
10:33:31 AM                                                                                                                   
     The  absence of  relevant  professional credentials  in                                                                    
     the  two grade-level  standards-writing teams  helps to                                                                    
     explain  the  flaws  in  these  standards.  The  "lead"                                                                    
     writers  for  the   grade-level  ELA  standards,  David                                                                    
     Coleman and  Susan Pimentel,  had never  taught reading                                                                    
     or English  in K-12  or at  the college  level. Neither                                                                    
     has  a doctorate  in English,  nor has  either of  them                                                                    
     ever  published serious  work  on  K-12 curriculum  and                                                                    
     instruction.  Neither  has  a reputation  for  literary                                                                    
     scholarship or research in education.  At the time they                                                                    
     were appointed, they were  virtually unknown to English                                                                    
     educators  and higher  education  faculty in  rhetoric,                                                                    
     speech, composition, or literary study.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Two  of  the   lead  grade-level  standards-writers  in                                                                    
     mathematics had  relevant academic credentials  for the                                                                    
     subject.  Jason  Zimba  was   a  physics  professor  at                                                                    
     Bennington College at the  time, while William McCallum                                                                    
     was  (and  remains)  a  mathematics  professor  at  the                                                                    
     University of  Arizona. The only member  of this three-                                                                    
     person team  with teaching  experience, Phil  Daro, had                                                                    
     majored in English as an  undergraduate; he was also on                                                                    
     the  staff  of  NCEE.  None   of  the  three  had  ever                                                                    
     developed K-12 mathematics standards before.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     Who recommended  these people as  standards-writers and                                                                    
     why,  we  still  do  not  know. No  one  in  the  media                                                                    
     commented  on their  lack of  credentials for  the task                                                                    
     they had  been assigned.  Indeed, no  one in  the media                                                                    
     showed the slightest interest  in the qualifications of                                                                    
     the  grade-level standards-writers.  Nor did  the media                                                                    
     comment  on the  low  level of  college readiness  they                                                                    
     worked out.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Mr.  Zimba is  reported in  the official  minutes of  a                                                                    
     public  meeting the  Massachusetts Board  of Elementary                                                                    
     and Secondary  Education in March 2010  as saying: 'The                                                                    
     concept of college readiness is minimal and focuses on                                                                     
     non-selective colleges.' The video  tape of the meeting                                                                    
     provides  the context  for this  statement¹. Mr.  Zimba                                                                    
     exemplified  this statement  in many  ways, e.g.,  'The                                                                    
     minimally  college-ready  student   is  a  student  who                                                                    
     passed  Algebra II.'  And [Common  Core's document  is]                                                                    
     'Not only  not for  STEM, it's  also not  for selective                                                                    
     colleges.'                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     In contrast,  Mr. Coleman and  Ms. Pimentel  have never                                                                    
     explained  in  public  how  they  defined  college  and                                                                    
     career  readiness in  ELA or  how they  would exemplify                                                                    
     its  practical meaning  with respect  to  the level  of                                                                    
     reading  difficulty or  specific  texts students  would                                                                    
     have to  demonstrate they understand. While  Appendix B                                                                    
     in  the Common  Core  ELA document  offers  a range  of                                                                    
     titles  in grades  11/12  indicating  the 'quality  and                                                                    
     complexity' of  texts that students  should be  able to                                                                    
     read,  the titles  span such  a wide  range of  reading                                                                    
     levels in grades 11/12 that  it is not clear what level                                                                    
     constitutes 'college  and career readiness.'  Titles in                                                                    
     grades  11/12 include  Dreaming  in Cuban,  with a  low                                                                    
     middle  school reading  level  according  to a  widely-                                                                    
     known readability  formula titled  ATOS for  Books, and                                                                    
     Thomas Paine's Common Sense.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     Who  were  members  of the  Validation  Committee?  The                                                                    
     federal  government could  have  funded an  independent                                                                    
     group  of   experts  to  evaluate  the   soundness  and                                                                    
     validity  of the  standards  it  was incentivizing  the                                                                    
     states to  adopt, but  it did not  do so.  Instead, NGA                                                                    
     and CCSSO  created their own Validation  Committee (VC)                                                                    
     in 2009 of  28 members to exercise  this function. Some                                                                    
     were  ex  officio,  others   were  recommended  by  the                                                                    
     governor or commissioner of  education of an individual                                                                    
     state. No more is  known officially about the rationale                                                                    
     for the individuals  chosen for the VC.  Similar to the                                                                    
     composition  of the  Standards  Development Work  Group                                                                    
     and  the  standards-writing  teams,  the  VC  contained                                                                    
     almost  no  academic  experts on  ELA  and  mathematics                                                                    
     standards;   most   were    education   professors   or                                                                    
     associated  with  testing   companies,  from  here  and                                                                    
     abroad. There  was only one mathematician  on the VC-R.                                                                    
     James  Milgram-although  there  were  many  mathematics                                                                    
     educators on it (people  with doctorates in mathematics                                                                    
     education, appointments in  an education school, and/or                                                                    
     who  worked chiefly  in teacher  education). I  was the                                                                    
     only nationally  recognized expert on  English language                                                                    
     arts standards  by virtue of  my work  in Massachusetts                                                                    
     and for  Achieve, Inc.'s American Diploma  Project high                                                                    
     school   exit  standards   for   ELA  and   back-mapped                                                                    
     standards for earlier grade levels.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     What  was  the  purpose of  the  Validation  Committee?                                                                    
     Culmination  of  participation  on  the  committee  was                                                                    
     reduced to signing  or not signing a letter  by the end                                                                    
     of  May  2010   asserting  that  the  not-yet-finalized                                                                    
     standards were:                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
          1.  Reflective  of  the  core  knowledge  and                                                                         
          skills in  ELA and mathematics  that students                                                                         
          need to be college and career-ready.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
          2.  Appropriate in  terms of  their level  of                                                                         
          clarity and specificity.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
          3.  Comparable to  the expectations  of other                                                                         
          leading nations.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
          4.   Informed   by  available   research   or                                                                         
          evidence.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
          5. The result of  processes that reflect best                                                                         
          practices for standards development.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
          6.  A solid  starting point  for adoption  of                                                                         
          cross-state common core standards.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
          7. A sound basis  for eventual development of                                                                         
          standards-based assessments.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     Professor Milgram  and I were  two of the  four members                                                                    
     of the  VC who did  not sign  off on the  standards. So                                                                    
     far  as we  could determine,  the Validation  Committee                                                                    
     was intended to function as  a rubber stamp in spite of                                                                    
     the  charge  to  validate the  standards.  Despite  our                                                                    
     repeated requests,  we did not  get the names  of high-                                                                    
     achieving  countries  whose   standards  were  used  as                                                                    
     benchmarks  for  Common  Core's because  Common  Core's                                                                    
     standards  were   (intentionally)  not  internationally                                                                    
     benchmarked (or  made comparable to the  most demanding                                                                    
     sets  of standards  elsewhere).  It did  not offer  any                                                                    
     research  evidence  to  support its  omission  of  high                                                                    
     school mathematics  standards leading to  STEM careers,                                                                    
     its  stress on  writing over  reading, its  division of                                                                    
     reading  instructional  texts  into  'information'  and                                                                    
     'literature,'  its  experimental approach  to  teaching                                                                    
     Euclidean geometry,  its deferral of the  completion of                                                                    
     Algebra I  to grade  9 or  10, or  its claim  about the                                                                    
     value  of  informational  reading  instruction  in  the                                                                    
     English  classes.  It  couldn't  because  there  is  no                                                                    
     evidence to support Common Core's  revision of the K-12                                                                    
     curriculum.  Nor did  Common Core  offer evidence  that                                                                    
     its  standards  meet  entrance  requirements  for  most                                                                    
     colleges   and   universities   in  this   country   or                                                                    
     elsewhere-or for a high school  diploma in many states.                                                                    
     The lack  of an  authentic validation of  Common Core's                                                                    
     so-called  college-readiness standards  (that is,  by a                                                                    
     committee   consisting   largely  of   discipline-based                                                                    
     higher  education   experts  who   teach  undergraduate                                                                    
     mathematics   or  English/humanities   courses)  before                                                                    
     state  boards or  commissioners of  education voted  to                                                                    
     adopt  these  standards  suggests their  votes  had  no                                                                    
     legal basis.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
10:40:14 AM                                                                                                                   
     General Comments:                                                                                                          
      1. Most of Common Core's college-readiness and grade-                                                                     
     level reading  standards are content-free  skills. Most                                                                  
     of  the statements  that are  presented as  vocabulary,                                                                    
     reading, and literature  standards (where content would                                                                    
     be indicated if  it is indicated anywhere)  point to no                                                                    
     particular   level   of  reading   difficulty,   little                                                                    
     cultural  knowledge, and  few intellectual  objectives.                                                                    
     These  statements  are  best  described  as  skills  or                                                                    
     strategies  when  they can  be  understood  at all  and                                                                    
     therefore  cannot be  described as  rigorous standards.                                                                    
     Here is  one example. The Anchor  Standard is: 'Analyze                                                                    
     how and why individuals,  events, and ideas develop and                                                                    
     interact over the  course of a text.'  The grades 11/12                                                                    
     standard   'clarifying'   this  Anchor   Standard   is:                                                                    
     'Analyze a complex  set of ideas or  sequence of events                                                                    
     and  explains  how   specific  individuals,  ideas,  or                                                                    
     events  interact and  develop  over the  course of  the                                                                    
     text.' This  is clearly  a free-floating skill  and can                                                                    
     be applied to anything from  'The Three Little Pigs' to                                                                    
     Moby Dick.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     Skills  training  alone  doesn't prepare  students  for                                                                    
     college.  They need  a fund  of content  knowledge. But                                                                    
     Common   Core's  ELA   standards   (and  its   literacy                                                                    
     standards  for  other  subjects)  do  not  specify  the                                                                    
     literary/historical knowledge  that students  need. The                                                                    
     document  provides no  list of  recommended authors  or                                                                    
     works, just  examples of 'quality and  complexity.' The                                                                    
     standards  require  no  British literature  aside  from                                                                    
     Shakespeare. They  require no authors from  the ancient                                                                    
     world or  selected pieces from the  Bible as literature                                                                    
     so  that students  can learn  about their  influence on                                                                    
     English and  American literature.  They do  not require                                                                    
     study of  the history of the  English language. Without                                                                    
     requirements in these areas,  students are not prepared                                                                    
     for  college   coursework  or   a  career   (or  active                                                                    
     citizenship) in an English-speaking country.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
10:41:30 AM                                                                                                                   
     2.  Common Core's  ELA  standards  stress writing  more                                                                    
     than reading  at every grade level-to  the detriment of                                                                    
     every  subject  in  the   curriculum.  There  are  more                                                                  
     writing than  reading standards  at almost  every grade                                                                    
     level in Common Core, a  serious imbalance. This is the                                                                    
     opposite of what  an academically sound reading/English                                                                    
     curriculum should contain, as  suggested by a large and                                                                    
     old body of research on  the development of reading and                                                                    
     writing  skills. The  foundation  for  good writing  is                                                                    
     good reading.  Students should spend  far more  time in                                                                    
     and outside  of school  on reading  than on  writing to                                                                    
     improve reading  (and writing) in every  subject of the                                                                    
     curriculum.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     3. Common Core's  writing standards are developmentally                                                                    
     inappropriate at many grade levels.  Adults have a much                                                                    
     better idea of what  'claims,' 'relevant evidence,' and                                                                    
     academic  'arguments'  are.  Most  elementary  children                                                                    
     have  a limited  understanding  of  these concepts  and                                                                    
     find it  difficult to compose  an argument  with claims                                                                    
     and evidence. It would be  difficult for children to do                                                                    
     so even if Common  Core's writing standards were linked                                                                    
     to appropriate reading standards  and prose models. But                                                                    
     they  are  not.  Nor  does  the  document  clarify  the                                                                    
     difference  between an  academic argument  (explanatory                                                                    
     writing)  and   opinion-based  writing   or  persuasive                                                                    
     writing, confusing  teachers and students  alike. Worse                                                                    
     yet,  Common Core's  writing standards  stress emotion-                                                                    
     laden, opinion-based writing  in the elementary grades.                                                                    
     This kind of writing does  not help to develop critical                                                                    
     or analytical  thinking, and it establishes  a very bad                                                                    
     habit  in very  young  children. There  is no  research                                                                    
     evidence to support this kind of pedagogy.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:43:20 AM                                                                                                                   
     4.  Common Core  expects English  teachers to  spend at                                                                    
     least  half  of  their reading  instructional  time  at                                                                    
     every grade  level on informational  texts-a percentage                                                                    
     from  which  students  cannot  benefit  intellectually.                                                                  
     Common   Core   lists    10   reading   standards   for                                                                  
     informational texts and 9  standards for literary texts                                                                    
     at every  grade level, thus reducing  literary study in                                                                  
     the English class  to less than 50%.  However, there is                                                                    
     NO  body  of  information  that  English  teachers  are                                                                  
     responsible for teaching,  unlike science teachers, for                                                                    
     example,  who  are  charged with  teaching  information                                                                  
     about science. English  teachers are trained-by college                                                                    
     English departments  and teacher  preparation programs-                                                                  
     to teach  the four major genres  of literature (poetry,                                                                    
     drama,  fiction, and  nonfiction) and  the elements  of                                                                  
     rhetoric, not  a large  body of  fragmented information                                                                    
     on a variety of contemporary or historical topics.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     5. Common  Core reduces  opportunities for  students to                                                                    
     develop  critical  thinking. Critical,  or  analytical,                                                                    
     thinking  is  developed  in   the  English  class  when                                                                    
     teachers teach  students how to read  between the lines                                                                    
     of  complex  literary  works.  Analytical  thinking  is                                                                    
     facilitated by  the knowledge that students  acquire in                                                                    
     other  ways and  in  other subjects  because it  cannot                                                                    
     take place  in an intellectual  vacuum." As noted  in a                                                                    
     2006  ACT report  titled 'Reading  Between the  Lines:'                                                                    
     'complexity   is   laden   with   literary   features.'                                                                    
     According  to  ACT,  it  involves  'literary  devices,'                                                                    
     'tone,' 'ambiguity,'  'elaborate' structure, 'intricate                                                                    
     language,'  and unclear  intentions. Critical  thinking                                                                    
     applied  to  low-complexity  texts, ACT  concluded,  is                                                                    
     inferior   to  critical   thinking  applied   to  high-                                                                    
     complexity texts. Thus, reducing  literary study in the                                                                    
     English  class  in   order  to  increase  informational                                                                    
     reading not  only reduces the opportunity  for students                                                                    
     to  learn how  to  do critical  thinking  but also,  in                                                                    
     effect, retards college readiness.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:44:58 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  asked  when  MS.  Stotsky  realized  that  the                                                               
Validation Committee was not going in the right direction.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
DR. STOTSKY answered that during  the first month the committee's                                                               
members  were  given a  confidentiality  agreement  to sign.  She                                                               
explained that  she had been  on many civic committees  and knows                                                               
what Sunshine Laws are in addition  to how the public needs to be                                                               
informed. The committee was given  a confidentiality agreement to                                                               
sign that meant  members could never talk about  what happened in                                                               
meetings during  the course of  committee's lifetime.  She stated                                                               
that she had  never been on a committee where  rights were signed                                                               
away to talk about what the  committee did. The committee was the                                                               
"watch   dog"  committee   and  the   requirement  to   sign  the                                                               
confidentiality agreement was the beginning of the process.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
She  informed the  committee that  members had  no way  of really                                                               
influencing the  Common Core Standards  writers even  though that                                                               
was  one of  the Validation  Committee's  charges. She  explained                                                               
that  the  Validation  Committee   was  charged  to  ensure,  for                                                               
example,  that the  CCSS  were  internationally benchmarked.  She                                                               
said  she asked  for her  very first  critique on  what countries                                                               
CCSS  would be  internationally benchmarked  with and  noted that                                                               
she could never get the names  of the countries. She said she and                                                               
Professor  Milgram  could  not   sign-off  on  the  CCSS  because                                                               
information  that  the  Validation   Committee  was  supposed  to                                                               
receive was  not received.  People who  support CCSS  continue to                                                               
say  that  they are  internationally  benchmarked,  but a  person                                                               
cannot  find out  what countries.  There were  a number  of clues                                                               
throughout about  the Validation Committee "going  south" and the                                                               
CCSS document going even farther south.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:47:58 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  addressed  previous testimony  on  the  waiver                                                               
process and noted that there were  two steps for a waiver process                                                               
for NCLB;  one was to accept  CCSS outright and the  other was to                                                               
have  universities  validate  the  standards. He  said  that  the                                                               
University  of  Alaska validated  the  standards  that the  state                                                               
adopted.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
DR.  STOTSKY  answered  that   having  universities  sign-off  on                                                               
standards has  happened in  many states.  She asked  who actually                                                               
signed-off in Alaska, the president  or the chancellor. She noted                                                               
that the  teaching faculties in  many states have  not signed-off                                                               
and individuals  who do not  teach have signed-off.  She asserted                                                               
that higher  level university administrators  are not  people who                                                               
typically have read the math  standards, in addition to not being                                                               
a  mathematician, scientist,  or engineer,  or an  individual who                                                               
can  look  at  the  math standards  and  understand  whether  the                                                               
standards meet college-readiness.  She said it is  hard to answer                                                               
Senator   Dunleavy's  question   if  the   individual  from   the                                                               
University of Alaska is not known.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
10:49:28 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR  STEVENS  stated  that  the committee  will  find  out  who                                                               
signed-off  at  the  University  of Alaska.  He  noted  that  Dr.                                                               
Stotsky was  talking about  the Alaska  Standards as  compared to                                                               
the CCSS and asked if the  testing was the same. He remarked that                                                               
he  understood   that  Dr.  Stotsky   was  not  happy   with  the                                                               
"secretism" of the process of developing the test.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
DR. STOTSKY  answered that  Alaska would have  been able  to take                                                               
the  Smarter Balanced  Test  if the  state  formally adopted  the                                                               
CCSS.  She noted  that  Alaska  has similar  tests  to the  CCSS.                                                               
Alaska  could  adopt  some  tests   developed  by  other  testing                                                               
companies,  but they  have all  become aligned  to CCSS.  She the                                                               
problem is  no one  knows where the  cut-scores or  test passages                                                               
are going  to be. She  addressed the issue regarding  not knowing                                                               
what the reading  levels will be. She said she  is reviewing what                                                               
Smarter Balanced and Partnership  for Assessment of Readiness for                                                               
College  and  Careers  (PARCC)   have  been  releasing  regarding                                                               
reading  levels for  grade  11. Smarter  Balanced  was closer  to                                                               
grade  9 or  grade 10  in reading  level and  noted that  subject                                                               
matter dealt with informational  issues that would not constitute                                                               
a body of information that  an English teacher would be teaching.                                                               
She emphasized  that English teachers  teach reading  skills. She                                                               
asserted  that she  did  not know  why  Alaska's institutions  of                                                               
higher education would  think the Smarter Balanced  test would be                                                               
the kind of test the state  would want for college readiness; but                                                               
they need  to be able  to speak. She  asked if the  committee has                                                               
heard  from   anybody  from   Alaska's  institutions   of  higher                                                               
education  in   engineering,  math,  science,  English,   or  the                                                               
humanities;  those are  the people  the committee  needs to  hear                                                               
from, not people from the Fordham Foundation or Washington D.C.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:52:52 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR STEVENS  replied that  the committee  has not  reached that                                                               
point  yet, but  the intent  is to  hear from  the University  of                                                               
Alaska  within the  next  one to  two weeks.  He  asked that  Dr.                                                               
Stotsky continue with her comments.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
DR. STOTSKY responded that the  committee needs to make sure that                                                               
they are communicating with the  people who are actually teaching                                                               
faculty  in   the  state's  institutions  of   higher  education.                                                               
Teaching  faculty members  are the  only  ones who  can tell  the                                                               
committee  whether the  state has  a good  set of  standards that                                                               
will  determine  admission.  She   continued  with  her  prepared                                                               
statement and noted that she  left off when addressing literature                                                               
standards  and   paraphrased  from  the  prepared   statement  as                                                               
follows:                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     6.  Common Core's  standards are  not 'fewer,  clearer,                                                                    
     and  deeper.' They  may appear  to be  fewer in  number                                                                  
     than  those  in  many  states  because  very  different                                                                    
     objectives    or   activities    are   often    bundled                                                                    
     incoherently  into one  'standard.' As  a result,  they                                                                    
     are   not  clearer   or  necessarily   deeper.  It   is                                                                    
     frequently  the  case  that  these  bundled  statements                                                                    
     posing as standards are not  easy to interpret and many                                                                    
     are poorly written. For  example, a literature standard                                                                    
     for grades  9/10 asks students  to: 'determine  a theme                                                                    
     or central  idea of  a text and  analyze in  detail its                                                                    
     development over the course of  the text, including how                                                                    
     it  emerges  and  is shaped  and  refined  by  specific                                                                    
     details;  provide an  objective summary  of the  text.'                                                                    
     This wretched  sentence is a  jumble of at  least three                                                                    
     different  activities: determining  a theme,  analyzing                                                                    
     its development,  and summarizing  a complete  text. If                                                                    
     Common Core's ELA  standards are to be  used, they must                                                                    
     first  be  revised  by experienced,  well-trained  high                                                                    
     school English teachers for  clarity and readability so                                                                    
     that   they    can   consistently    guide   curriculum                                                                    
     development.  Since  Alaska's Department  of  Education                                                                    
     claims  it has  not adopted  Common Core's  copyrighted                                                                    
     documents, Alaska is free to  revise these standards as                                                                    
     it sees fit.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
10:55:39 AM                                                                                                                   
     7.   The   vocabulary   standards   are   weak,   often                                                                    
     inappropriate,  and  more   often  poorly  exemplified.                                                                  
     These  standards  should  be the  strongest  strand  in                                                                    
     Common Core's  ELA standards because of  the importance                                                                    
     of vocabulary  knowledge in reading  comprehension. But                                                                    
     they are  not rigorous and often  contain inappropriate                                                                    
     pedagogical advice.  For example, in grade  2, students                                                                    
     are to  'use sentence-level  context as  a clue  to the                                                                    
     meaning  of a  word or  phrase'  as the  first of  many                                                                    
     strategies  to  determine  the meaning  of  an  unknown                                                                    
     word. In  grade 2,  students should  be first  asked to                                                                    
     sound  out unfamiliar  words to  see if  they recognize                                                                    
     them  as  part  of   their  own  vocabulary  since  the                                                                    
     'meaning' of  text-appropriate words should not  be the                                                                    
     problem in  grade 2. Identification  of a  written word                                                                    
     (a  reading skill)  is. Moreover,  students need  to be                                                                    
     able to  read the  'context' in  order to  use it  as a                                                                    
     clue.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     As another  example, in grade  2, students are  also to                                                                    
     'use   glossaries   and   beginning   dictionaries   to                                                                    
     determine  or   clarify  the   meaning  of   words  and                                                                    
     phrases.'  However,  they  have  not  been  taught  the                                                                    
     difference between  these two types of  references; one                                                                    
     gives  the  technical  meaning,   the  other  the  most                                                                    
     frequent  meaning  (which  may  not  be  the  technical                                                                    
     meaning).  This advice  is a  particular disservice  to                                                                    
     children who need strong vocabulary development.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     As yet  another example,  in grade  2, students  are to                                                                    
     'distinguish  shades of  meaning among  closely related                                                                    
     verbs  (e.g., toss,  throw, hurl)  and closely  related                                                                    
     adjectives  (e.g.,  thin, slender,  skinny,  scrawny).'                                                                    
     Since many of  these words are unlikely to  be found in                                                                    
     grade 2  texts, it is  not clear what grade  2 teachers                                                                    
     can do with this standard.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     Summary:                                                                                                                   
     (1) Common Core's ELA standards  are NOT rigorous. They                                                                    
     were designed  to allow mid-level grade  11 students to                                                                    
     enroll  in credit-bearing  courses  in a  non-selective                                                                    
     college.                                                                                                                   
     (2)  Common Core's  standards  are NOT  internationally                                                                    
     benchmarked  and  will not  make  any  of our  students                                                                    
     competitive.                                                                                                               
     (3)  There  is NO  research  to  support Common  Core's                                                                    
     stress on writing instead of reading.                                                                                      
     (4)  There  is NO  research  to  support Common  Core's                                                                    
     stress  on informational  reading  instead of  literary                                                                    
     study in the English class.                                                                                                
     (5) There is no research  to support the value of 'cold                                                                    
     reading  of historical  documents,  a bizarre  pedagogy                                                                    
     promoted by  the chief architect  of Common  Core's ELA                                                                    
     standards.                                                                                                                 
     (6)  Available research  suggests exactly  the opposite                                                                    
     of what  Common Core's  document and  standards promote                                                                    
     in the ELA classroom.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:57:48 AM                                                                                                                   
     Suggestions to Alaska Legislators:                                                                                         
     1.  Return  to, revise,  and  strengthen  your own  ELA                                                                    
     standards.  The adoption  and implementation  of Common                                                                    
     Core's ELA  standards (no matter what  they are called)                                                                    
     does  not improve  the academic  education of  Alaska's                                                                    
     children, especially its  neediest students, nor should                                                                    
     Alaska  base state  assessments  in  reading on  Common                                                                    
     Core's English  language arts standards. It  would be a                                                                    
     waste  of  taxpayers'  money  to  base  assessments  on                                                                    
     standards  that need  even more  revision than  its own                                                                    
     standards did.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     2.  Develop  a  set of  entrance  exams  (matriculation                                                                    
     tests) for  your own institutions of  higher education,                                                                    
     drawing on their  engineering, science, and mathematics                                                                    
     faculty  and literary/humanities  scholars. They  could                                                                    
     also  ask these  faculty  members  to collaborate  with                                                                    
     mathematics  and  science  teachers  in  Alaska's  high                                                                    
     schools   in  designing   syllabi   for  the   advanced                                                                    
     mathematics  and  science   courses  in  Alaska's  high                                                                    
     schools. Why should  federal education policy-makers or                                                                    
     test developers  mandate low admission  requirements in                                                                    
     mathematics, science,  or English to  Alaska's colleges                                                                    
     and universities?                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
11:01:19 AM                                                                                                                   
     3. Offer  two different types of  high school diplomas.                                                                    
     Not all high  school students want to go  to college or                                                                    
     can do  the reading  and writing required  in authentic                                                                    
     college  coursework.   Many  have  other   talents  and                                                                    
     interests and  should be provided with  the opportunity                                                                    
     to   choose   a   meaningful  four-year   high   school                                                                    
     curriculum that  is not college-oriented.  One diploma,                                                                    
     like the  old New  York Regents  Diploma, would  be for                                                                    
     students  willing to  do advanced  work in  mathematics                                                                    
     and science leading to a  STEM career, or in English or                                                                    
     the  humanities.  The  other  could be  a  Common  Core                                                                    
     Minimal Competency Diploma.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     4. Review and  revise if needed all  standards at least                                                                    
     every  five  to  seven years  using  identified  Alaska                                                                    
     teachers,  discipline-based  experts  in the  arts  and                                                                    
     sciences, and  parents. All assessments should  also be                                                                    
     reviewed  by   Alaska  teachers   and  discipline-based                                                                    
     experts in the  arts and sciences before  the tests are                                                                    
     given.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
11:02:19 AM                                                                                                                   
     5.  Restructure and  reform  teacher and  administrator                                                                    
     training  programs in  Alaska's institutions  of higher                                                                    
     education   to    ensure   that   the    teachers   and                                                                    
     administrators  from   these  education   schools  have                                                                    
     stronger  academic  credentials  than  they  now  have.                                                                    
     Raising  the  floor  for all  children  should  be  our                                                                    
     primary educational goal,  not closing demographic gaps                                                                    
     among groups of  children. The only thing  we know from                                                                    
     education  research on  teacher  effectiveness is  that                                                                    
     effective teachers know the  subject matter they teach.                                                                    
     We   need  to   raise  the   academic  bar   for  every                                                                    
     prospective  teacher we  admit  to  a teacher  training                                                                    
     program in an education school.  That is the first step                                                                    
     in raising  student achievement in this  country, not a                                                                    
     set of paper standards.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
(Note:  Dr.   Stotsky  presented   references  in   her  prepared                                                               
statement.)                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
11:03:44 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR STEVENS thanked Dr. Stotsky and  noted that she made a good                                                               
point  regarding making  sure teaching  faculty is  involved, not                                                               
just administrators.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   GATTIS  addressed   states   making  their   own                                                               
standards. She  asked how  many states have  not chosen  CCSS and                                                               
have come up with their own standards.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
DR.  STOTSKY answered  that there  are four  or five  states that                                                               
chose not to adopt CCSS.  She noted Texas, Nebraska, and Virginia                                                               
as three states that have not  adopted CCSS. In 2010, most states                                                               
had boards of education simply vote  to adopt CCSS, in many cases                                                               
before they  were even  written. She pointed  out the  issue with                                                               
adopting standards without having expert advice.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
11:05:04 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  asked  what her  expectations  were  going  to                                                               
entail  when  she first  signed  on  to be  a  part  of the  CCSS                                                               
process.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
DR. STOTSKY replied that she had  a clear charge to the committee                                                               
to ensure  that the  standards were  internationally benchmarked,                                                               
rigorous, and research based. Drafts  were provided to review and                                                               
critiques were submitted in kind  to standards writers or to some                                                               
"black  box." She  informed the  committee that  she never  got a                                                               
word  back on  her  critiques. She  explained  that whatever  she                                                               
suggested was  never done. She said  she had spotted some  of the                                                               
same problems that  are currently in Common  Core's final version                                                               
right at  the beginning and she  never could get to  speak to the                                                               
standards writers.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
She explained  that she was on  a committee that was  supposed to                                                               
be overseeing the standards-writers  and the Validation Committee                                                               
was totally ignored. She said  her experience was bizarre because                                                               
she had never been on any kind  of committee in her life like the                                                               
Common Core's  Validation Committee. She noted  her experience in                                                               
civic committees  and the Common Core's  Validation Committee was                                                               
not  a civic  committee. The  Common Core's  Validation Committee                                                               
was a  committee appointed as a  kind of "fig leaf"  for a rubber                                                               
stamp by two private organizations  that were funded by the Gates                                                               
Foundation to  develop national  standards. The  Gates Foundation                                                               
gave  money to  groups that  would evaluate  state standards  and                                                               
come up with a  grade for the CCSS, but making  sure the CCSS got                                                               
a high  enough grade  so that  it could  then use  the CCSS  as a                                                               
"boiler  plate." The  "boiler plate"  effect did  not occur  with                                                               
Alaska's Academic  Standards. The "boiler plate"  phrase was used                                                               
for  at least  eight or  so  different states  that said,  "These                                                               
standards are among  the worst in the country and  you are better                                                               
off adopting Common Core."                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
She explained to  the committee that a person  could only imagine                                                               
what  happened in  states  with the  media  when the  bottom-line                                                               
evaluation quotation "worst in the  country" was noted. She noted                                                               
that  state boards  of  education,  including Massachusetts,  had                                                               
never read  the CCSS that  they adopted. No questions  were asked                                                               
about  college-readiness  or  standards;  it  was  given  because                                                               
states would  be given $250 million  of "Race To The  Top" money.                                                               
Massachusetts was  promised $250  million in exchange  for giving                                                               
up  such wonderful  standards. She  noted that  the Massachusetts                                                               
Governor  was friends  with  President Obama  and  the state  was                                                               
promised $250  million in "Race To  The Top" money and  the state                                                               
received  the money  if prior  standards  were given  up for  the                                                               
CCSS.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
She said  the CCSS process was  all about politics and  not about                                                               
education. She  asserted that CCSS  is about  centralized control                                                               
of  education  in Washington,  D.C.  She  declared that  Alaska's                                                               
legislators have  recognized the  pattern of what  she previously                                                               
noted.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
11:08:36 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR DUNLEAVY addressed the  Accuplacer Test, American College                                                               
Testing  (ACT),  Scholastic  Assessment   Test  (SAT)  and  other                                                               
national assessments used to  predict college readiness, success,                                                               
or as  a tool  to measure  where students are  in terms  of being                                                               
able to succeed  in college. He asked to confirm  that all of the                                                               
primary national assessments have been aligned to CCSS.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
DR.  STOTSKY  answered  correct.  She explained  that  there  are                                                               
almost no  independent points of  reference other than  Trends in                                                               
International   Mathematics  and   Science  Study   (TIMSS).  She                                                               
explained that TIMSS  is controlled by an  international group of                                                               
educators  and  is  not  aligned  to  CCSS.  TIMSS  is  the  only                                                               
international  test  that  can  provide some  sense  of  what  is                                                               
happening to high school students.  The Program for International                                                               
Student Assessment  (PISA) is only a  test of skills and  that is                                                               
what  the Department  of Education  is pushing  for, because  the                                                               
assessment  only tests  15-year-old  students, and  the level  of                                                               
math content is  pitifully low. She specified that  ACT, SAT, and                                                               
the General  Education Diploma (GED)  have all been  aligned down                                                               
to CCSS,  leaving almost  no way to  determine how  "dumbed down"                                                               
high school curriculum will be.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
She noted that she  is not talking about grades 1,  2, or 3; this                                                               
is part  of the problem that  confuses a lot of  people. She said                                                               
CCSS has  a lot of  very impressive and tough  sounding standards                                                               
in  the very  early grades;  but it  peters out  totally by  high                                                               
school.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
She  noted  the lack  of  Science,  Technology, Engineering,  and                                                               
Mathematics (STEM)  standards in  high school. She  asserted that                                                               
states  end  up   with  a  "dumbed  down"  set   of  high  school                                                               
mathematical  standards with  CCSS. English  Language Arts  (ELA)                                                               
standards cannot be easily assessed  until the passages and where                                                               
the cut-score is in CCSS. There  is no way of measuring direction                                                               
unless there  are before and after  tests used in states  to find                                                               
out  what is  happening.  She said  she  recommended "before  and                                                               
after" testing to  a few states. She suggested that  a state with                                                               
its  own test  should be  kept  on file  and readministered  five                                                               
years  later to  see  if  students are  doing  better, worse,  or                                                               
simply cannot even address it at all.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
11:11:48 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR STEVENS addressed the Gates  Foundation (GF) and noted that                                                               
the  legislature is  pretty much  removed  from GF.  He asked  to                                                               
clarify that  Dr. Stotsky feels  that GF  is headed in  the wrong                                                               
direction.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
DR. STOTSKY replied that GF is  going in the wrong direction. She                                                               
explained that  GF has  supported the development  of the  set of                                                               
standards and  gave money to: the  National Governors Association                                                               
(NGA), the Council  of Chief State School  Officers (CCSSO) trade                                                               
organizations,  Parent Teacher  Association  (PTA), Achieve,  and                                                               
the Fordham  Institute. She said  GF has given money  wherever it                                                               
could to  promote the adoption of  CCSS. One could still  have an                                                               
argument even  if CCSS  were first class  standards. Only  GF can                                                               
answer why they  are going in the direction that  they chose. She                                                               
said GF  has more money  than anybody  else and has  funded every                                                               
organization, but they could not fund parents.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
She explained  that a rising  opposition has been  occurring with                                                               
parents  all over  the country.  She revealed  that she  has been                                                               
speaking to a  lot of parent groups. Parents are  looking at what                                                               
their kids  are doing in class  and they are getting  very upset.                                                               
Home-schoolers are particularly upset  because they worry what is                                                               
going to happen  when it is time for their  children to apply for                                                               
college due to a CCSS aligned test that will have to be taken.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
She  noted that  GF could  not get  state legislatures  to buy-in                                                               
because there are  too many. State legislatures in  the past year                                                               
are being hit with bills for  the CCSS testing and the technology                                                               
that has  to be purchased  due to  a certain level  of bandwidth.                                                               
Bills  are coming  due  for state  legislatures  that were  never                                                               
anticipated.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
She  said when  speaking to  state legislatures  the question  is                                                               
always addressed regarding  what exactly is the  Common Core. She                                                               
explained  that 45  or more  state boards  of education  voted in                                                               
2010 to adopt a set of  standards that nobody in higher education                                                               
in any  state had vetted. She  revealed that she had  gone state-                                                               
by-state  and  verified  that   engineering,  science,  and  math                                                               
faculty were not  invited to look at the standard  prior to state                                                               
adoption.  She noted  that  Michigan  did not  reach  out to  its                                                               
first-rate  universities,  faculty,  and experts  to  review  the                                                               
standards.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
11:16:14 AM                                                                                                                   
REPRESENTATIVE GATTIS asked if there  were any state legislatures                                                               
that have paused, slowed down, or even undone the CCSS.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
DR.  STOTSKY answered  that  Indiana has  paused  and Georgia  is                                                               
trying  to have  review committees.  She said  no state  has been                                                               
able to undo  the sticky mess that their boards  of education put                                                               
them in without a lot of  thought. States are discovering that it                                                               
is not  easy to legally  get out  of a vote  by a governor  and a                                                               
board of education.  She asserted that state  boards of education                                                               
have restructured  entire school systems  for a set  of standards                                                               
that unqualified people had written.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
11:18:04 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR STEVENS thanked Dr. Stotsky for her comments.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
11:19:45 AM                                                                                                                   
DR.   JAMES   MILGRAM,    Professor   Emeritus,   Department   of                                                               
Mathematics,    Stanford   University,    Stanford,   California,                                                               
presented  the committee  with his  prepared  statement on  "Some                                                               
Problems with Mathematics Core Standards" as follows:                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     I  am an  internationally known  research mathematician                                                                    
     at Stanford University. As  a research mathematician, I                                                                    
     have a  large number of  honors. For example, I  am one                                                                    
     of   the   very   small   numbers   of   20th   century                                                                    
     mathematicians  whose collected  works  are slated  for                                                                    
     publication by  a major publisher.  I've also  had many                                                                    
     International  honors such  as the  Gauss professorship                                                                    
     in Germany,  and even recently,  I gave  lecture series                                                                    
     in  Japan,  China, and  Canada  on  my recent  work  in                                                                    
     Robotics and  Bioinformatics. In  2009 I  was appointed                                                                    
     to  the Common  Core  Validation Committee.  I was  the                                                                    
     only actual mathematician and,  indeed, the only member                                                                    
     with a Ph.D. in a content  area and not in education on                                                                    
     Validation, so  I took in on  myself to try to  get the                                                                    
     best possible document in mathematics.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
DR. MILGRAM  noted that unlike  Dr. Stotsky's experience,  he was                                                               
able to interact directly with the  lead authors for the CCSS. He                                                               
said he was  able to considerably strengthen  what had originally                                                               
been  planned  by  some  of  the  sponsors.  He  said  the  Gates                                                               
Foundation  was  not  so  involved   in  the  math.  Marc  Tucker                                                               
[National  Center  on  Education  and  the  Economy  (NCEE)]  and                                                               
Achieve were very  much involved. He said he ended  up doing some                                                               
considerable discussion  with groups  to try  to explain  why the                                                               
standards had  to be  tougher. He  remarked that  he was  able to                                                               
achieve a little  bit of improvement over what  the original plan                                                               
was.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
11:21:41 AM                                                                                                                   
DR. MILGRAM continued with his prepared statement as follows:                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     However,  in  the  end,  I  could not  sign  off  on  a                                                                    
     statement to  the effect that  CCMS was  benchmarked at                                                                    
     the level  of the  top international  standards. Today,                                                                    
     I'd like  to describe  my reasons, and  to try  to help                                                                    
     you understand  why I think  adopting CC is a  very bad                                                                    
     idea.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     The  famous education  historian, Diane  Ravitch, noted                                                                    
     in her book  Left Back, that every 20 years  or so, the                                                                  
     education  schools notice  that our  K-12 outcomes  are                                                                    
     not  improving  in  math,  in fact,  they  seem  to  be                                                                    
     getting  worse.   They  then   say  'We  can   fix  the                                                                    
     problems.'  And they  present to  us  exactly the  same                                                                    
     programs  and curricula  that they  presented 20  years                                                                    
     earlier. They  tell the small  group that  remembers 20                                                                    
     years back,  that we  had improperly  implemented their                                                                    
     programs then, so the failure  was not the fault of the                                                                    
     schools of education.  This time we need  to spend more                                                                    
     money and everything will be fine.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
He asserted that  legislatures are finding out that  the costs of                                                               
the CCSS  tests are  astronomical. Legislatures  routinely buy-in                                                               
to  the  wishful thinking.  He  said  he  is reminded  of  Albert                                                               
Einstein's famous  definition of insanity, "Doing  the same thing                                                               
over  and  over  again  and   expecting  different  results."  He                                                               
continued with his prepared statement as follows:                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     So,  welcome  to California  in  1993.  We are  hearing                                                                    
     exactly the same  rhetoric now as we heard  then and we                                                                    
     are  being  presented  with   the  same  curricula  and                                                                    
     programs as then. Indeed,  the chief difference between                                                                    
     then  and now  is that  this time  they are  presenting                                                                    
     them  to   the  entire   country.  The   terrible  math                                                                    
     textbooks that  we got rid  of in California  with such                                                                    
     difficulty are now back.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     The  foundation for  this advance  is  the Common  Core                                                                    
     Math  Standards (CCMS)  a political  document that  was                                                                    
     written in such  a manner that it  could be interpreted                                                                    
     in many  different ways.  The point  was to  get buy-in                                                                    
     from  as many  states and  education establishments  as                                                                    
     possible.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
11:24:42 AM                                                                                                                   
     CCMS claims that its intent  is to correct the problems                                                                    
     with   U.S.   K-12   mathematics   and,   if   followed                                                                    
     faithfully,  will   make  all  high   school  graduates                                                                    
     workforce and college-ready. It  is said that CCMS will                                                                    
     also strengthen the Science, Technology, Engineering,                                                                      
     Math  (STEM)  pipeline,  and   rescue  our  economy  by                                                                    
     dramatically   increasing   the  number   of   students                                                                    
     majoring in STEM areas at university.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     In  order to  do  this  it is  claimed  that CCMS  will                                                                    
     correct  our  'Mile  Wide  and  Inch  Deep'  K-12  math                                                                    
     curriculum, making  our instruction much more  like the                                                                    
     focused  teaching  in   the  high-achieving  countries.                                                                    
     There will be  far fewer standards and  they will focus                                                                    
     on  key  topics,  exactly  as   is  done  in  the  high                                                                    
     achieving countries.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Indeed,   grade  by   grade,  CCMS   does  have   fewer                                                                    
     standards, but to do this  they produce things like the                                                                    
     following  monstrosity,  a  first  grade  addition  and                                                                    
     subtraction standard:                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
          Add within 100,  including adding a two-digit                                                                         
          number and  a one-digit number, and  adding a                                                                         
          two-digit number and a  multiple of 10, using                                                                         
          concrete  models or  drawings and  strategies                                                                         
          based   on   place   value,   properties   of                                                                         
          operations,  and/or the  relationship between                                                                         
          addition   and    subtraction;   relate   the                                                                         
          strategy to a written  method and explain the                                                                         
          reasoning  used.  Understand that  in  adding                                                                         
          two-digit  numbers, one  adds tens  and tens,                                                                         
          ones and ones; and  sometimes it is necessary                                                                         
          to compose a ten.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
11:27:02 AM                                                                                                                   
     This  is a  glom  of separate  standards.  In the  high                                                                    
     achieving  countries   only  a  small  amount   of  the                                                                    
     material above is covered in  first grade or even first                                                                    
     and  second grade  together, and  yet this  material is                                                                    
     the  main focus  of  instruction most  of these  years.                                                                    
     Moreover, some  of the standard  is probably  absurd to                                                                    
     ask  of first  or second  graders. For  example, relate                                                                    
     the  strategy  to  a written  method  and  explain  the                                                                    
     reasoning  used. Also,  the  number  of choices  given,                                                                    
     using concrete  models or drawing and  strategies based                                                                    
     on place  value, properties  of operations,  and/or the                                                                    
     relationship  between   addition  and   subtraction  is                                                                    
     clearly overwhelming for students of this age.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
11:28:58 AM                                                                                                                   
     It seems that  the reason for this omnibus  glom was to                                                                    
     include the  many different approaches to  addition and                                                                    
     subtraction  that  are   advocated  in  the  interested                                                                    
     states and  associations such  as the  National Council                                                                    
     of Teachers  of Mathematics  (NCTM). As a  result, CCMS                                                                    
     has often  preserved the "mile  wide" structure  of our                                                                    
     standards,  just using  fewer, often  incomprehensible,                                                                    
     paragraphs to do it.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Another major issue is that  the standards develop very                                                                    
     slowly. Indeed, by the end  of sixth grade CCMS is more                                                                    
     than  one year  behind international  expectations, and                                                                    
     by  the  end  of  eighth grade,  more  than  two  years                                                                    
     behind.  For  example,   internationally,  one  expects                                                                    
     fourth graders  to be quite fluent  with ratios, rates,                                                                    
     and motion-at-constant-speed types of questions.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
11:30:17 AM                                                                                                                   
     I   would  grade   the   standards   as  follows:   K-5                                                                    
     considerably above  average for our states,  not nearly                                                                    
     as good as  the best which are CA, MA,  IN, MN, WA, but                                                                    
     better  than  90 percent;  sixth  to  seventh grade  is                                                                    
     about  average;  eighth   grade  mostly  just  spinning                                                                    
     wheels;  and   high  school  is  a   serious,  serious,                                                                    
     problem.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR. MILGRAM noted  that the mathematics issue is  very similar to                                                               
English  Language Arts  (ELA) in  that  things are  okay for  the                                                               
first  five  years and  really  fall  apart  by high  school.  He                                                               
continued his prepared statement as follows:                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Indeed, in March,  2010 one of the two  lead authors of                                                                    
     CCMS,  Jason  Zimba,  testified as  follows,  'We  have                                                                    
     agreement to  the extent that it's  a fuzzy definition,                                                                    
     that the  minimally college-ready student is  a student                                                                    
     who passed Algebra II.'                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. MILGRAM  explained that  the original intent  in CCSS  was to                                                               
have  Algebra  I as  the  minimal  standard for  a  college-ready                                                               
student,  one of  the things  that he  succeeded in  changing. He                                                               
noted that the change involved an  enormous fight in order to get                                                               
a simple change  from Algebra I to Algebra II.  He continued with                                                               
his prepared statement as follows:                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     But  even   Algebra  II  is  an   extraordinarily  weak                                                                    
     standard.  Only  about  one  in  three  students  whose                                                                    
     highest math course in high  school was Algebra II will                                                                    
     obtain a  four year college  degree in any  subject and                                                                    
     there is  only a 1 in  50 chance that a  STEM intending                                                                    
     student with this background will  ever get a four year                                                                    
     degree in any STEM area.  Of course, even Algebra II is                                                                    
     a considerable improvement on  the original draft where                                                                    
     the definition  of college-ready  student is  a student                                                                    
     who  passed Algebra  I; U.S.  government provided  data                                                                    
     shows  that  with  this  standard  only  7  percent  of                                                                    
     students will ever obtain a 4 year college degree.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
11:33:00 AM                                                                                                                   
Mr. Zimba clarified the Algebra II definition later in his                                                                      
testimony by stating that CCMS is not for STEM and he expanded                                                                  
on it by saying the following:                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     Not  only not  for STEM,  it's also  not for  selective                                                                    
     colleges.  For example,  for UC  Berkeley, whether  you                                                                    
     are going to  be an engineer or not,  you'd better have                                                                    
     pre-calculus to get into UC Berkeley.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     Thus we are talking  about preparing kids for 'success'                                                                    
     at   community  colleges   and  perhaps   non-selective                                                                    
     colleges like University of  Phoenix. In particular, it                                                                    
     entirely abandons the top 30  percent of a typical high                                                                    
     school class.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     Here is the  reason I say 30 percent.  In California we                                                                    
     have   two  university   systems,  the   University  of                                                                    
     California  (UC)   system  and  the   California  State                                                                    
     University  system  (UCS).  The  UC  system  guarantees                                                                    
     admission  to   about  the  top   10  percent   of  the                                                                    
     California high school graduating  class, while the CSU                                                                    
     system  guarantees  admission  to   about  the  top  30                                                                    
     percent.  In the  case of  the UC  system, currently  a                                                                    
     student  who  has  not  gone   further  than  the  CCMS                                                                    
     expectations will  not be  eligible for  admission, and                                                                    
     in  the  CSU system,  they  may  be eligible,  but  the                                                                    
     expectation  is  that they  would  have  to start  with                                                                    
     trigonometry   and   pre-calculus,   which,   as   I've                                                                    
     mentioned, severely  curtails the likelihood  that they                                                                    
     will  ever  major in  a  STEM  area, or,  indeed,  even                                                                    
     graduate.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
11:35:13 AM                                                                                                                   
     We  can  assume that  our  education  schools are  well                                                                    
     aware  of  all  this.  Consequently, it  should  be  no                                                                    
     surprise  that a  key requirement  for states  to apply                                                                    
     for  'Race to  the  Top' money  was  to include  signed                                                                    
     agreements with  the heads of  all public  colleges and                                                                    
     universities or systems stating  that students with the                                                                    
     CCMS background,  passing the SBAC or  PARCC Algebra II                                                                    
     exam  in mathematics  and  a  similar ELA  requirement,                                                                    
     would be eligible for  credit bearing introductory math                                                                    
     courses  in  any  public college  or  university.  This                                                                    
     severely threatens  the international dominance  of our                                                                    
     university  system  by   forcing  public  colleges  and                                                                    
     universities to  make most of their  non-credit bearing                                                                    
     remedial  courses into  courses that  can be  taken for                                                                    
     credit,  which has  a dramatic  effect on  the expected                                                                    
     subject knowledge of their math and ELA majors.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     So I would judge that, in  spite of the quality of CCSS                                                                    
     in the  early grades, the  overall effect of  these new                                                                    
     standards  is extremely  risky not  only for  students,                                                                    
     but, indeed, for our very economic wellbeing.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
11:36:51 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR  GARDNER  stated  that   her  understanding  is  CCSS  is                                                               
designed  and required  for all  students. She  said we  all know                                                               
some students want  to, or will be able to  pursue, STEM careers,                                                               
particularly  at  selective universities.  She  said  she is  not                                                               
certain that it  is fair to require, as part  of graduation, that                                                               
students take the rigorous mathematics  courses. She asked if she                                                               
misunderstood Dr. Milgram's  presentation regarding the necessity                                                               
for all students to take more advanced math courses.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
DR. MILGRAM  replied yes.  He explained that  the CCSS  becomes a                                                               
ceiling because schools basically have  to teach to the tests. He                                                               
noted the negative  impact on ambitious students.  Data will show                                                               
that wealthy  districts test  high and  low income  districts are                                                               
negatively  impacted  when  there  is no  expectation  that  more                                                               
advanced courses should be available.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
11:40:15 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR GARDNER  remarked that she  has a different  opinion. She                                                               
said students in Alaska have the  option to take math classes far                                                               
beyond the three years required for  a high school diploma in the                                                               
major and urban schools.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
DR.  MILGRAM  revealed  that  his   grandson  attends  school  in                                                               
Anchorage and  he is well aware  of what occurs in  the Anchorage                                                               
School District.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
11:41:08 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  asked to  verify  that  the university  system                                                               
officials in California have signed off on the CCSS process.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR.  MILGRAM answered  yes. He  detailed that  California applied                                                               
for, but  did not receive, "Race  to the Top" money.  In order to                                                               
apply it was necessary for  California's high officials to sign a                                                               
letter agreeing to give the  students a college credit course for                                                               
passing either  the Partnership for  Assessment of  Readiness for                                                               
College  and  Careers  (PARCC)  or  Smarter  Balanced  Assessment                                                               
Consortium (SBAC) exams.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  assumed that California  will continue  to have                                                               
international  students  apply  to  Stanford.  He  asked  if  the                                                               
university's  benchmarks,  standards,  or assessments  change  to                                                               
determine readiness for international students.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
11:42:41 AM                                                                                                                   
DR.  MILGRAM  noted that  Stanford  University  is not  a  public                                                               
university.   He   explained   that   Stanford   University   has                                                               
anticipated the  issue Senator  Dunleavy mentioned  by redefining                                                               
itself as the dominant core-university  for countries that border                                                               
the  Pacific  Ocean.  He  remarked   that  it  is  becoming  more                                                               
difficult  for  Stanford University  to  find  U.S. citizens  for                                                               
admission  and  the  entry  number  keeps  going  down.  Stanford                                                               
University's   structure  of   their  undergraduate   system  has                                                               
appeared to change. He asserted  that Stanford University has not                                                               
changed their expectations in the terms of its courses.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
11:44:14 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY   asked  what  admission   benchmarks  Stanford                                                               
University uses for non-CCSS students from foreign countries.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR. MILGRAM replied that  Stanford University informally requires                                                               
calculus as remedial. He explained  that it is very difficult for                                                               
a student to be admitted  into Stanford University without taking                                                               
a high  school calculus course.  Other elite universities  in the                                                               
U.S.  have  the  same  approach as  Stanford's  requirements.  He                                                               
asserted  that CCSS  will  limit the  number  of students  taking                                                               
calculus in  high school. Approximately  19 percent of  U.S. high                                                               
school students  take calculus, whereas 90  percent take calculus                                                               
in the high achieving countries.  Fewer U.S. citizens will end up                                                               
at the elite schools. He remarked  that none of the elite schools                                                               
are going to lower their standards.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
11:45:49 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR  FRENCH  said  the  committee   is  hearing  two  starkly                                                               
opposing  views of  CCSS. He  asked to  confirm that  Dr. Milgram                                                               
believes the CCSS are too weak.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR.  MILGRAM answered  yes. He  qualified that  standards do  not                                                               
have a huge effect on curriculum;  but they do have a real effect                                                               
on expectations.  He clarified that  CCSS is better than  the old                                                               
standards. However, the  reality is CCSS is not  near good enough                                                               
for  the U.S.  to  remain competitive  internationally. The  U.S.                                                               
will pay the cost of lower  standards. He said to not expect CCSS                                                               
to be a solution to the country's real problems.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  FRENCH noted  prior testimony  from Dr.  Stotsky on  her                                                               
belief  regarding  the influence  of  Gates  Foundation money  on                                                               
producing some of the decisions.  He pointed out that Dr. Stotsky                                                               
specified that she  was not getting paid by anybody  to appear to                                                               
testify on  CCSS. He asked if  Dr. Milgram is getting  money from                                                               
either side of the debate.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
DR. MILGRAM answered no. He specified  that he only asks that his                                                               
travel expenses  be compensated for  when providing  testimony in                                                               
person.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
11:48:32 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR STEVENS thanked Dr. Milgram  for his comments and asked the                                                               
committee for their input.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH reviewed the testimony  from Dr. Stotsky. He remarked                                                               
that Dr. Stotsky  was not truthful in certain  situations and the                                                               
committee hit  on the  fact that  Dr. Milgram  believes everybody                                                               
should be  taking calculus.  He said Alaska  would really  face a                                                               
different challenge  from its constituency if  the state requires                                                               
all students to take calculus.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
He  said  he  would  correct  some of  the  information  said  in                                                               
previous  testimony.   The  CCSS  Validation  Committee   was  28                                                               
members,  24 members  signed  off; Dr.  Stotsky  and Dr.  Milgram                                                               
obviously did  not sign  off. He  noted that  the 24  members not                                                               
being mathematicians was not accurate.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE GATTIS  asked for confirmation  that 24 out  of 28                                                               
Validation  Committee members  did sign  off. She  inquired about                                                               
the two other individuals that did not sign off.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH  replied that  the two other  members felt  like they                                                               
did not have enough information  to make their decision. He noted                                                               
that  Ms.  Stotsky  said  that  there was  a  lack  of  focus  on                                                               
literature. He read the introduction to the CCSS as follows:                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Because  the ELA  classroom must  focus on  literature,                                                                    
     stories,  drama,  and  poetry,   as  well  as  literary                                                                    
     nonfiction, a  great deal  of informational  reading in                                                                    
     grades 6  through 10 must  take place in  other classes                                                                    
     if  the [National  Assessment of  Educational Progress]                                                                    
     (NAEP)   assessment   framework   is  to   be   matched                                                                    
     instructionally.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
He continued  that the CCSS do  call for much of  ELA instruction                                                               
to  take  place  in  other  classes  and  a  continued  focus  on                                                               
literature.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
He pointed  out that the  Council of Chief State  School Officers                                                               
(CCSSO) is  partially funding  by the  Gates Foundation  (GF). He                                                               
noted that  a lot  of organizations  are funded by  GF and  he is                                                               
happy  to  provide additional  information  if  the committee  so                                                               
desired.  He  summarized that  the  bottom  line is  that  states                                                               
decided  to  do  CCSS  well   before  funding  was  provided.  He                                                               
explained that CCSSO sought funding  to try to save states money.                                                               
The first proposal  on the CCSS was to actually  have states pay-                                                               
in and  work on developing  the standards with states'  money. He                                                               
pointed  out that  commissioners at  the time  did not  feel like                                                               
they would  be able to get  an appropriation to be  involved with                                                               
CCSS as initially proposed. CCSSO raised money to write CCSS.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
He addressed  a claim  on Michigan and  their standards.  He said                                                               
one of the members on  the Validation Committee was Bill Schmidt,                                                               
a  mathematics professor  from Michigan  State University  and an                                                               
individual who signed-off on CCSS.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
11:52:07 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR FRENCH  noted Dr.  Milgram twice  iterated that  the CCSS                                                               
were not  benchmarked at the  top of international  standards. He                                                               
asked if Mr. Minnich agreed or disagreed.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. MINNICH  replied that  he disagreed. He  said Dr.  Milgram is                                                               
suggesting that  many more  people are  taking calculus  in other                                                               
countries. He stated he cannot  validate Dr. Milgram's claim that                                                               
90  percent of  kids in  other  countries take  calculus. He  set                                                               
forth that an interesting conversation  would occur if the states                                                               
were to go to a standard  where 90 percent of kids take calculus.                                                               
He asserted that the current  mathematics level in the U.S. would                                                               
not allow  for an  immediate jump  to 90  percent of  kids taking                                                               
calculus.  He summarized  that the  CCSS was  benchmarked against                                                               
other countries;  Finland, Singapore,  and a  long list  of other                                                               
countries.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
11:53:21 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR STEVENS asked Dr. Milgram and Dr. Stotsky to respond.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
DR. MILGRAM replied  that the number of people  who graduate from                                                               
high school  in the high  achieving countries is over  90 percent                                                               
and most  do not allow  high school degrees without  calculus. It                                                               
is  not  realistic to  say  this  country's  kids cannot  get  to                                                               
calculus because  they can with  proper instruction.  He asserted                                                               
that students are not being  properly instructed and changes will                                                               
not occur under  CCSS. The cost of CCSS, especially  in the near-                                                               
term future,  is going  to be dramatic.  The U.S.  cannot compete                                                               
long term with  the other countries and related  the challenge to                                                               
China's rapid growth  in space exploration. He said  the U.S. has                                                               
to realize the potential impact  from the education the country's                                                               
children receive.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
11:56:18 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR STEVENS noted that Mr. Minnich agreed.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY   asked  to   clarify  that   Alaska's  current                                                               
standards are better than the old standards.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR.  MILGRAM answered  yes. He  specified  that Alaska's  current                                                               
standards were virtually identical to  the CCSS. He detailed that                                                               
90 percent of  the states' standards for lower  grades are better                                                               
than the standards  the states had. He said  where Core Standards                                                               
fall apart is in the higher grades.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
DR.   STOTSKY   addressed   Mr.   Minnich's   response   to   her                                                               
presentation.  She   said  the   information  she   provided  was                                                               
accurate. She specified that her  emphasis pertains to what is in                                                               
the CCSS.  She said Mr.  Minnich's rebuttal refers to  the CCSS's                                                               
introductory text and not the standards.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
11:58:33 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR STEVENS announced that the committee will stand at-ease.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:01:21 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS reconvened the meeting.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MIKE  HANLEY,  Commissioner,  Alaska Department  of  Education  &                                                               
Early Development (DEED), Juneau,  Alaska, introduced himself and                                                               
described  it  as  good  news  that  Alaska  adopted  the  Alaska                                                               
Academic Standards  rather than  the Common Core  State Standards                                                               
(CCSS) for  English/Language Arts  and Mathematics.  He explained                                                               
that  nine  university  professors  were on  the  committee  that                                                               
developed the  standards, a different  team did the  vetting, and                                                               
the process did not require any confidentiality agreements.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:03:51 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER  HANLEY said  the presentation  today would  look at                                                               
how the English/language arts and  math standards were developed,                                                               
and  the  difference  among  states  on  how  the  standards  are                                                               
adopted. In  Alaska, the starting  point was the  state education                                                               
policy that is  in statute. It is a powerful  statement about the                                                               
responsibilities  for  education in  Alaska  to  ensure that  all                                                               
students  will  succeed in  their  education  and work  and  lead                                                               
satisfying lives. He  noted that the DEED website  refers to this                                                               
as [Preparing College, Career and Culturally Ready Graduates.]                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY said it appeared  in testimony this morning that                                                               
there were two methods for the  waiver. One was to adopt the CCSS                                                               
and the  other was to get  the university to validate  the Alaska                                                               
Academic Standards.  He asked for confirmation  that Alaska chose                                                               
the second method.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSION HANLEY agreed that Alaska did not adopt the CCSS.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  commented  that  it sounds  like  the  mission                                                               
statement is changing.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER   HANLEY  replied   the   mission  statement   isn't                                                               
changing, but  there is recognition  that too many  students need                                                               
remediation.  Both employers  and the  university have  said that                                                               
students  were   not  being   adequately  prepared   for  further                                                               
education, further training,  or work. The idea is  to bridge the                                                               
gap and prepare students for the next step.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:07:06 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  pointed out that university  validation ensures                                                               
that kids  are educated to be  college ready, but all  kids don't                                                               
want  to go  to college.  He questioned  how it  was possible  to                                                               
merge the systems without changing the mission.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  HANLEY replied  that  the  mission isn't  changing;                                                               
it's   being   clarified   and  shifting   from   graduation   to                                                               
preparation.   He  added   that  validation   is  something   the                                                               
university system did.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY responded  that if the university  system is the                                                               
only one  that did  validation then  students are  being prepared                                                               
for university.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY  clarified that the university  validated the                                                               
standards in  regard to the  waiver, and employers  were involved                                                               
with  the  development  of  the   standards.  A  student  who  is                                                               
proficient  in these  standards will  match the  expectations for                                                               
entry-level courses. That was the validation process.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  asked if the mission  does what is going  to be                                                               
done or if the statement needed to be revisited.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY said he believes the mission works.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:09:12 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER  HANLEY continued  the presentation  explaining that                                                               
Alaska  statute  states that  the  duties  of the  Department  of                                                               
Education  and  Early  Development are  to  "develop  performance                                                               
standards  in  reading, writing  and  mathematics  to be  met  at                                                               
designated age  levels by each  student in public schools  in the                                                               
state." It  further states that  the department "Shall  develop a                                                               
comprehensive   system  of   student  assessments,   composed  of                                                               
multiple  indicators  of  proficiency  in  reading,  writing  and                                                               
mathematics."                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
He highlighted  that in  Moore v.  State, Judge  [Sharon] Gleason                                                               
identified and  defined the  clause to  establish and  maintain a                                                               
system  of public  education in  Alaska as  meaning four  things.                                                               
Development of standards and assessments  were two key components                                                               
of  the  responsibilities  as a  state;  funding,  oversight  and                                                               
support were the others.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:10:12 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER  HANLEY  said   that  the  corresponding  regulation                                                               
speaks to the general definition  of standards and curriculum. [4                                                               
AAC  04.010(c)] says,  "The  content  standards identify  student                                                               
abilities that  evidence mastery of  a subject area.  The content                                                               
standards  are not  graduation  requirements  of curriculum,  but                                                               
they  establish what  constitutes  excellent educational  results                                                               
and  allow a  school district  to  tailor its  curriculum to  the                                                               
conditions, goals, and expectations of its community."                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  STEVENS asked  if Alaska  would  be free  to use  national                                                               
exams  based on  CCSS  since the  Alaska  Academic Standards  are                                                               
substantially similar.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY offered his belief  that the state would have                                                               
the option  of maintaining  control of  the standards  while also                                                               
accessing an  assessment around the  CCSS. He said that's  why in                                                               
April Alaska  joined the  Smarter Balanced  Assessment Consortium                                                               
as an advisory  state. It is a better match  than the Partnership                                                               
for  Assessment  of Readiness  for  College  and Careers  (PARCC)                                                               
which is  being developed for the  CCSS. He noted that  DEED just                                                               
finished a  request for proposal  (RFP) to provide or  develop an                                                               
assessment. The  components of that assessment  will be addressed                                                               
in tomorrow's presentation, he said.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS  asked what the state  is giving up and  what it is                                                               
getting  by  going  from  common  core  to  the  Alaska  Academic                                                               
Standards.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY replied that he  didn't believe the state was                                                               
giving up anything, but it could  be argued that it would give up                                                               
access to  curriculum that's aligned  to the CCSS.  What's gained                                                               
is local  vetting by  educators of  the higher  education system,                                                               
ownership, and no outside influence as  to what can and cannot go                                                               
into the  standards and what  students are expected to  learn. He                                                               
opined that  the Alaska Academic  Standards are aligned  with the                                                               
standards and expectations of other states.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:14:30 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked if this was  a national movement and not a                                                               
federal imposition.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  HANLEY  replied  that  CCSS  is  a  relatively  new                                                               
movement.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked if a member  of the Council of Chief State                                                               
School Officers (CCSSO) who was  in the audience would agree that                                                               
it's a national movement.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY  stated that the  Alaska standards are  not a                                                               
national movement.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  observed  that  a  timing  issue  was  causing                                                               
confusion,  because   Alaska  got  involved  with   the  national                                                               
movement associated with CCSS as it was sweeping the country.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  HANLEY agreed  that  the state  capitalized on  the                                                               
national movement.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY   asked  if   he  agreed   that  there   was  a                                                               
relationship with the  waiver under the No Child  Left Behind Act                                                               
(NCLB).                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY agreed there was a distant relationship.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY asked  if the  state would  still be  under the                                                               
NCLB paradigm if it hadn't applied for the waiver.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY said yes.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked if the  state could have gotten the waiver                                                               
if the university had validated the old standards.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY said  no, because the old  standards were not                                                               
rigorous enough to be considered college and career ready.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:17:24 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked  if the university system  had to validate                                                               
standards that were common core-like in order to be accepted.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY  replied that  there were  several components                                                               
to get  a waiver, one  of which was  to have college  and career-                                                               
ready standards.  Secretary of  Education Duncan  recognized that                                                               
the CCSS represented college and  career-ready standards. A state                                                               
that didn't  have those common  core standards had to  prove that                                                               
its standards  were college and  career-ready and that's  done by                                                               
having the university system vet the standards.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked  if he agreed that federal  money was tied                                                               
to the NCLB Act.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY answered no.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  pointed out that  the Race  to the Top  Fund is                                                               
federal.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY  responded that the first  round specifically                                                               
spoke to common standards.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  commented  that  the  national  movement,  the                                                               
university looking at standards and  the NCLB waiver appear to be                                                               
a series of interesting coincidences.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY  responded that  those were  totally separate                                                               
processes.  The Alaska  Academic Standards  were being  developed                                                               
long before Secretary Duncan thought about a waiver from NCLB.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:20:59 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS related that he  had received calls from people who                                                               
described  the state  standards  as common  core  by a  different                                                               
name. He asked if there  were substantial differences between the                                                               
Alaska Academic Standards and the CCSS.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY  said yes,  and Dr.  McCauley would  speak to                                                               
the similarities  and differences. He  added that when  the state                                                               
joined the Smarter Balanced Assessment  Consortium (SBAC) it said                                                               
the  Alaska Academic  Standards  were  substantially similar  and                                                               
that the assessment would adequately measure Alaska students.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  HUGGINS asked  what  penalty  Kathleen Porter-Magee  was                                                               
referring to when she talked about opting out without penalty.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY  explained that her  point was that  there is                                                               
no penalty for adopting or not adopting.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  STEVENS   asked  Commissioner   Hanley  to   continue  the                                                               
presentation.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY  displayed the "Alaska English  Language Arts                                                               
and Mathematics Standards" notebook,  which is organized by grade                                                               
level. He  explained that  the standards  were developed  by DEED                                                               
and  adopted by  the State  Board of  Education in  its entirety.                                                               
Everything that  was adopted is  in the notebook and  it includes                                                               
nothing that  was not  adopted. He deferred  to Dr.  McCauley for                                                               
further discussion.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:24:55 PM                                                                                                                    
SUSAN  MCCAULEY, PhD.,  Director,  Teaching  & Learning  Support,                                                               
Alaska  Department  of  Education  &  Early  Development  (DEED),                                                               
Juneau, Alaska,  said she wanted  to review  a few of  the Alaska                                                               
Academic Standards,  but she  was also  prepared to  discuss what                                                               
the  standards are,  what they're  not, how  they compare  to the                                                               
CCSS,  and  how  they  compare to  the  previous  standards.  She                                                               
directed  attention to  the English/Language  Arts Standards  for                                                               
kindergarten as  an example.  The kindergarten  standards include                                                               
reading   standards  for   literature,   reading  standards   for                                                               
informational  text, reading  standards for  foundational skills,                                                               
writing   standards,  speaking   and  listening   standards,  and                                                               
language standards.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
DR. MCCAULEY noted  that there had been a  lot of interchangeable                                                               
use  of the  terms  "standard" and  "curriculum," and  emphasized                                                               
that  they  are very  different.  Standards  are guidelines  that                                                               
describe the  skills students are  to master at each  grade level                                                               
and  curriculum  describes methodology  and  means  by which  the                                                               
standards will  be met. Curriculum  includes everything  from the                                                               
textbooks to the lesson plans  that teachers will develop to meet                                                               
the standards. In  Alaska, the Department of  Education and Early                                                               
Development (DEED)  is charged  with adopting  standards, whereas                                                               
curriculum is a local decision.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR. MCCAULEY reviewed the reading  standards for kindergarten and                                                               
third grade emphasizing that the  standards do not talk about how                                                               
a  child  will  attain  the  standard. They  are  a  roadmap  for                                                               
building incrementally, grade-by-grade so  that there are no gaps                                                               
or  redundancies in  the  instruction.  They provide  consistency                                                               
with  regard to  what is  taught at  each grade  level. There  is                                                               
nothing  in the  standards that  tell how  the instruction  takes                                                               
place.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:28:25 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR HUGGINS asked  what happens when a student  does not meet                                                               
the standard for his or her grade level.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
DR. MCCAULEY said  it is first very important to  ensure that the                                                               
standards are  clear, concise and  coherent enough  that teachers                                                               
understand precisely what  should be taught at  each grade level.                                                               
She opined  that the new  Alaska Academic Standards  provide that                                                               
clarity. She  said that states  have taken  different approaches,                                                               
but school districts  in Alaska are looking  at what intervention                                                               
structures are needed when  students aren't mastering grade-level                                                               
standards. This  can't be ignored because  the problem compounds.                                                               
A  student  who hasn't  mastered  third  grade math  and  doesn't                                                               
receive additional  support is  unlikely to  master the  on grade                                                               
level skills in subsequent grades.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
DR.  MCCAULEY suggested  that individual  school districts  could                                                               
talk  about  the  assessment  and   support  measures  they  have                                                               
developed to  help students  who aren't  working at  grade level,                                                               
and reiterated the  importance of having clarity in  the on grade                                                               
level  standards  to   begin  with.  What  standards   do  is  to                                                               
concretely clarify what skills, if  mastered at each grade level,                                                               
will result in the student being prepared for what comes next.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR HUGGINS suggested that if  10 teachers read the standards                                                               
for  any grade  level  there would  be a  great  variance in  the                                                               
interpretation of those standards.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
DR. MCCAULEY said districts take  a varied approach, but they are                                                               
all required by regulation to  review curriculum on a cycle. They                                                               
work at the local level to bring clarity to the standard.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:34:55 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS  highlighted the importance  of being able  to read                                                               
at grade level in the third grade.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked  if a child is passed on,  failed, or sent                                                               
for remediation  if they don't  meet the standard for  reading in                                                               
third grade.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  HANLEY   replied  that  there  is   no  statute  or                                                               
regulation that determines that; it's done at the local level.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  asked, theoretically,  what happens if  none of                                                               
the students meet the standards.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  HANLEY  said  that  one  of  DEED's  constitutional                                                               
responsibilities is  support and oversight. In  that regard, DEED                                                               
does a  lot of  curriculum alignment and  work with  districts to                                                               
answer  the question  at  the  local level  of  what  to do  when                                                               
students aren't proficient.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:37:20 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  GARDNER   asked  if   more  intervention   training  and                                                               
curriculum alignment is being done than in the past.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY said yes; over  the last year he's heard more                                                               
thanks  from  districts  for  helping  and  that  more  would  be                                                               
appreciated.  He  acknowledged that  compliance  is  part of  the                                                               
leadership role, but support is what  DEED is defining as the key                                                               
role with regard to standards.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:38:24 PM                                                                                                                    
DR.  MCCAULEY  highlighted  the differences  between  the  Alaska                                                               
Academic Standards  and the Common  Core State Standards.  In the                                                               
area  of English/language  arts,  the  Alaska Academic  Standards                                                               
have a total  of 320 individual standards, and 133  or 42 percent                                                               
of  those standards  are different  than the  CCSS. However,  the                                                               
content is  substantially similar.  For example, in  fourth grade                                                               
Alaska students  are required to  write a  multi-paragraph essay,                                                               
and CCSS  has the same  requirement. Alaska changed  its standard                                                               
to meet what is expected nationally.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
She   discussed  the   process  that   educators,  post-secondary                                                               
teachers  and representatives  from  business  and industry  went                                                               
through to develop the standards,  and that they felt that Alaska                                                               
needed modifications in  the case of 42 percent  of the standards                                                               
that  are  in   the  CCSS.  None  were   insignificant  or  token                                                               
modifications. She  provided examples, including the  addition of                                                               
culturally relevant reading materials.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
DR. MCCAULEY  said that the CCSS  has 229 standards for  math and                                                               
the committee  decided to modify 49  percent of those and  add 26                                                               
more.  The  additions included  things  like  solving real  world                                                               
problems involving elapsed times between time zones.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS  asked if modifying  nearly 50 percent of  the math                                                               
standards might be  a disadvantage when Alaska  students take the                                                               
common core tests that are given nationally.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. MCCAULEY  said she didn't  believe so, because  the standards                                                               
are  substantially   similar.  She  explained  that   the  Alaska                                                               
Academic Standards  were developed  because DEED  wanted autonomy                                                               
and  control  over  the  standards, and  to  ensure  that  Alaska                                                               
students will be prepared and competitive.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked if the  Alaska Academic Standards are more                                                               
rigorous or just different.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
DR. MCCAULEY replied they're different and equally rigorous.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  asked if  there would  be any  discussion later                                                               
about  the  process  for  adoption   of  standards,  the  federal                                                               
nationalized approach,  and joining the assessment  consortium in                                                               
an advisory role.  [He indicated that he  received an affirmative                                                               
response.]                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:45:17 PM                                                                                                                    
DR. MCCAULEY summarized  that Alaska did not adopt  the CCSS, and                                                               
those  standards  are  not  identical   to  the  Alaska  Academic                                                               
Standards.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS remarked that that was helpful.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR.  MCCAULEY  compared  the Alaska  Academic  Standards  to  the                                                               
previous  standards.  She  explained that  when  the  development                                                               
committee  considered  objectively  the  rigor  of  the  previous                                                               
standards compared  to what was happening  nationally, they found                                                               
a  significant  gap.  As  previously  mentioned,  an  independent                                                               
analysis  of   the  previous  standards  corroborated   what  the                                                               
development committee found.  It was clear that  Alaska needed to                                                               
significantly upgrade its standards.  The old standards were more                                                               
than  six years  old, had  no  speaking and  listening skills  in                                                               
English/language arts, and only went  to tenth grade. The upgrade                                                               
attempts to be comparatively  rigorous while maintaining autonomy                                                               
to develop standards that are specific to Alaska students.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY asked  if she  would agree  that the  standards                                                               
changed  and  so  did  the goals  and  purpose.  Previously,  the                                                               
approach was an  exit concept, and now it's an  entry concept for                                                               
university.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  HANLEY  said  he  described it  as  a  change  from                                                               
graduation to preparation.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  reiterated his  belief  that  the mission  was                                                               
changing, but the mission statement hadn't changed.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
DR. MCCAULEY responded that the  changes were in response to some                                                               
very  compelling  Alaska  data  that would  be  irresponsible  to                                                               
ignore.  It  demands  a  response when  50  percent  of  incoming                                                               
freshmen  at  the University  of  Alaska  have to  take  remedial                                                               
classes  and 22  percent  of  Alaska jobs  are  exported to  non-                                                               
Alaskans.  This  isn't  solely about  college  preparation;  it's                                                               
about preparation for any post-secondary training, she stated.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  remarked that it  was only the  university that                                                               
was part of the validation process.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
DR. MCCAULEY clarified  that it was not just  the university that                                                               
was involved  in the development  of the standards, and  that the                                                               
term validation  was about  whether or not  students who  met the                                                               
standards would need remedial course work.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY reiterated  that teachers want to  know what the                                                               
mission is; previously  it was to prepare students  to exit [high                                                               
school]  and now  it's preparing  them  to enter  [post-secondary                                                               
school]. He opined  that there would be  more conversations about                                                               
this, because the purpose has changed for K-12 education.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:51:27 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  STEVENS asked  if the  standards  would be  upgraded on  a                                                               
regular basis.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  HANLEY  replied  that school  districts  are  being                                                               
asked  to  review  their  curriculum every  six  years  and  it's                                                               
appropriate  that  the  standards   are  reviewed  in  a  similar                                                               
timeframe. Future  adjustments to  the standards are  unlikely to                                                               
be as extensive as this, he said.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
DR.  MCCAULEY  summarized  her   talking  points  about  the  new                                                               
standards.  They  intend to  effectively  prepare  kids for  what                                                               
comes after  graduation, and they  address the gaps  that existed                                                               
between  high  school  preparation   and  what  comes  next.  The                                                               
standards development  process involved 8 meetings  of 230 Alaska                                                               
representatives  from  56  organizations, including  teachers  of                                                               
mathematics, language  arts, special education,  English language                                                               
learners,     post-secondary      educators,     and     industry                                                               
representatives.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  HANLEY added  that it  is DEED's  responsibility to                                                               
help develop  standards and to  work with the Alaska  State Board                                                               
of  Education  &  Early  Development in  the  adoption  of  those                                                               
standards. He briefly summarized the subsequent presentations.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:55:16 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR GARDNER  asked if the  Alaska State Board of  Education &                                                               
Early Development adopted the standards.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY  confirmed that  it is the  responsibility of                                                               
the state board  of education to do the official  adoption and to                                                               
put them in regulation.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR HUGGINS  commented that the  development of  standards is                                                               
the easy part; the vigor of  the execution is the difficult part.                                                               
He  asked to  have a  conversation later  about three  structural                                                               
things she'd like to do, based on the new standards.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY  expressed appreciation for the  insight, and                                                               
noted that the  district had been working on  the standards since                                                               
2012.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
DR.  MCCAULEY  agreed  that  the   focus  should  be  on  how  to                                                               
effectively implement the standards and help students meet them.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  HUGGINS commented  on  the high  percentage of  students                                                               
taking remedial  classes and the  low percentage of  students who                                                               
actually graduate  from university,  and stressed  the importance                                                               
of  figuring  out  what  the difficulty  is,  regardless  of  the                                                               
standard.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:59:41 PM                                                                                                                    
At ease from 1:59 pm to 2:06 pm.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:06:41 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  STEVENS   reconvened  the   meeting  and   introduced  Mr.                                                               
Merriner.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:07:01 PM                                                                                                                    
JIM  MERRINER, Chair,  Alaska State  Board of  Education &  Early                                                               
Development  (State Board),  Juneau,  Alaska, presented  "Mission                                                               
Statement & Adoption Efforts of Alaska's Academic Standards."                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. MERRINER said the State  Board's mission was adopted in 2003.                                                               
It is  "To ensure quality standards-based  instruction to improve                                                               
academic  standards  for   all  students."  Adopting  educational                                                               
standards, which is  what will be taught and  learned, is central                                                               
to  the State  Board's mission.  Board members  and DEED  take it                                                               
seriously.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
He  explained that  Alaska first  adopted standards  in 1994-1995                                                               
for grades 3 through 10. It made a significant revision in 1998-                                                                
1999, minor revisions  in 2004, and in June 2012  the State Board                                                               
adopted new and more rigorous standards for grades K-12.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. MERRINER  provided an overview  of the presentation.  He said                                                               
he would  discuss the State  Board's engagement in  the standards                                                               
revision  process,  the discussion  leading  to  the decision  to                                                               
submit the  standards for public  review and comment  in December                                                               
2011,  the  public   comment  period,  legislative  communication                                                               
regarding the standards, and approval  by the State Board in June                                                               
2012.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:09:40 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MERRINER  related that  the topic  of revising  Alaska's 3rd-                                                               
10th grade  standards was first  discussed in November 2008  at a                                                               
statewide education summit that  was attended by 400 stakeholders                                                               
from across the state. A  consensus among the summit participants                                                               
was that  world-class schools have strong  academic standards and                                                               
high  expectations  for  all students.  The  summit  action  plan                                                               
called for a review of  the 3rd-10th grade standards to determine                                                               
alignment  with world-class  21st  century  skills, and  Alaska's                                                               
graduation  outcomes for  student's post-secondary  opportunities                                                               
of their choosing.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
He said that following up on  the summit's action plan, the State                                                               
Board and  DEED initiated a  standards review process.  During 11                                                               
board meetings  over the course  of three years, the  State Board                                                               
was regularly  briefed on, and  engaged in, discussion  about the                                                               
standards development work in Alaska and nationwide.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MERRINER  highlighted some  of  the  relevant board  meeting                                                               
discussions.  In June  2009,  then-Commissioner LeDoux  discussed                                                               
the  nationwide movement  to develop  common standards,  and that                                                               
states are ultimately  in control of standards.  Alaska was asked                                                               
but did not join the  process of developing common standards, but                                                               
the state  did stay engaged in  the process. In March  2010, DEED                                                               
briefed the  State Board regarding  the results of  the alignment                                                               
study that  compared Alaska's 3rd-10th  grade standards  with the                                                               
CCSS.  In  December 2010,  the  State  Board discussed  with  the                                                               
university  president  how new  Alaska  standards  could help  to                                                               
better  align the  K-12 and  post-secondary arenas.  Commissioner                                                               
LeDoux  indicated that  the University  of Alaska  already had  a                                                               
seat at the table during the standards development process.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
In  June 2011,  Alaska's K-12  assessment director  reviewed with                                                               
the State  Board the standards  development process to  date, and                                                               
Representative  Dick testified  about  engaging  industry in  the                                                               
standards  development  work.  In  September  2011,  Commissioner                                                               
Hanley told the  State Board that the draft  K-12 standards would                                                               
be brought to the board meeting  in December, and that they would                                                               
meet the high benchmarks of national and global competitiveness.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MERRINER  said  that  in  December  2011,  the  State  Board                                                               
submitted  the draft  K-12 standards  for extended  public review                                                               
and comment. Before doing so,  the State Board sought information                                                               
from DEED on public engagement  efforts during the department-led                                                               
standards development  process. They learned that  eight meetings                                                               
were held to develop the  standards and invitees and participants                                                               
included   mathematics  and   language  arts   teachers,  special                                                               
education  teachers,  English  language learner  students,  post-                                                               
secondary  educators,  and  industry representatives.  The  eight                                                               
full-day meetings ultimately  included 230 Alaska representatives                                                               
from 56 different organizations.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:14:16 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MERRINER explained  the process for putting  a regulation out                                                               
for  public  comment.  It  is   sent  to  all  school  districts,                                                               
superintendents,  school   principals,  education  organizations,                                                               
legislators,  and public  and school  libraries. The  regulations                                                               
are also  published in  the Anchorage Daily  News, online  and in                                                             
DEED's  newsletter. During  the extended  public comment  period,                                                               
DEED held  five open public  community meetings,  eight webinars,                                                               
and  17  in-person   presentations  statewide.  Additionally,  18                                                               
requests for public  comment were sent out  through DEED's weekly                                                               
newsletter, and  125 Alaskan organizations  were asked  to review                                                               
and provide feedback.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
In January 2012, the draft  standards were discussed in the State                                                               
Board's annual report to the  legislature. During the legislative                                                               
session, each State Board member met  with at least one member of                                                               
the legislature regarding the draft K-12 standards.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MERRINER stated  that in  January  2013 he  reported on  the                                                               
adoption  of  the K-12  standards  in  the State  Board's  annual                                                               
report to the legislature.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:16:17 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MERRINER reported  that during the five  month public comment                                                               
period, the State Board received  66 pages of public comment from                                                               
33 individuals  and groups. Every  comment was read  and reviewed                                                               
by  each  State Board  member.  Many  of the  comments  expressed                                                               
thanks for including  all the stakeholders in  the development of                                                               
the standards. Some commenters urged  adoption of the CCSS rather                                                               
than   separate  Alaska   standards.  A   few  of   the  comments                                                               
specifically asked  for literacy  standards for  history, science                                                               
and technical subjects  in secondary grades, and  a few supported                                                               
the distinction  between narrative  and informational  text. Some                                                               
of the public  comment supported adoption of  the draft standards                                                               
on the  condition that  the state also  invests in  an assessment                                                               
system that  is aligned  to the standards  that is  comparable to                                                               
peers nationwide.  Concern was raised  that the standards  may be                                                               
written  for   college  bound  students   only,  and   about  the                                                               
developmental   appropriateness   of   some   of   the   proposed                                                               
kindergarten  math standards.  There was  mention that  the draft                                                               
standards were  too wordy and  some comments  voiced appreciation                                                               
that speaking and listening standards  were included. Concern was                                                               
mentioned  about  the increased  rigor  of  the draft  standards,                                                               
particularly for  math. Comment was  received about the  need for                                                               
professional  development  in  the   implementation  of  the  new                                                               
standards.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. MERRINER said that all  public comments that made educational                                                               
sense  for  Alaska  students were  incorporated  into  the  final                                                               
version  that went  before  the State  Board  for discussion  and                                                               
consideration in  June 2012. For  example, literacy  standards in                                                               
history, science,  and technical  subjects were added  for grades                                                               
6-12, and a table emphasizing  math computational skills expected                                                               
by the standards at each grade  level was added. In June 2012 the                                                               
State Board adopted the new standards.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:18:34 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MERRINER said  that during the final  discussion, Esther Cox,                                                               
the State  Board chair during the  standards development process,                                                               
reminded the members  that "This conversation will  never be over                                                               
because  we   need  to  constantly  review   our  standards."  He                                                               
concluded by  reiterating that adopting educational  standards is                                                               
central to  the State Board's  mission and the members  taking it                                                               
seriously. He reminded the committee  that the State Board begins                                                               
each meeting with public comment,  and anyone who has comments or                                                               
suggestions regarding  the new Alaska standards  should feel free                                                               
to bring them to the board. He offered to answer questions.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  STEVENS recognized  Ms. Cox  and thanked  her and  all the                                                               
board members for their service.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
He  asked  Mr.  Merriner  if  he was  comfortable  that  the  new                                                               
standards  refer  to  vocational,  career, and  life  studies  in                                                               
addition to college bound students.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. MERRINER  said he was  and related  his impression of  one of                                                               
the day-long meetings he attended looking at the math standards.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:21:19 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS thanked Mr. Merriner and introduced Dr. Thomas.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DANA THOMAS,  PhD., Vice President, Academic  Affairs, University                                                               
of Alaska Statewide System, Fairbanks,  Alaska, stated that he is                                                               
a  product of  the  Alaska  public school  system  and a  33-year                                                               
faculty member at  the university, six of which were  as chair of                                                               
mathematics at  UAF. He provided  an overview of the  topic areas                                                               
he was asked to address: UA  view of the standards, engagement in                                                               
development  of the  standards, vetting  the standards,  expected                                                               
impact of the new standards.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. THOMAS confirmed that the  University of Alaska validated and                                                               
submitted a  formal letter  of support for  the new  standards to                                                               
U.S.  Secretary of  Education  Arne Duncan  as  part of  Alaska's                                                               
application  for a  waiver from  elements  of the  No Child  Left                                                               
Behind  Act.  One  of  the   questions  that  arose  during  that                                                               
conversation was  whether UA would  have done that under  the old                                                               
standards. He said his answer would  be "No," because the rate of                                                               
need for  developmental education  of high school  graduates from                                                               
Alaska  coming to  the university  makes  it clear  that the  old                                                               
standards aren't  preparing high  school graduates to  be college                                                               
ready.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS asked if he would  address the group that looked at                                                               
the new standards.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
DR.  THOMAS explained  that they  were discussed  with the  chief                                                               
academic officers  of the  three institutions,  and as  the chief                                                               
academic officer  for the UA  system, he  gave the advice  to the                                                               
president.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS  asked for confirmation that  faculty were involved                                                               
in the process.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR. THOMAS replied that many  faculty members were involved later                                                               
in the  development and  vetting process;  the decision  to write                                                               
the letter was an administrative decision.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
He reviewed  some of  the ways that  UA demonstrates  support for                                                               
the  new  Alaska  Academic Standards.  These  include:  educating                                                               
teacher  candidates to  use the  new standards  in designing  and                                                               
assessing  instruction;  providing in-service  opportunities  for                                                               
teachers  both  by  distance  and in  person;  aligning  the  new                                                               
standards  with  UA's  current  work  on  revising  baccalaureate                                                               
general  education requirements;  [documenting  alignment of  the                                                               
standards,  instruction  and  assessment  for  Alaska's  Learning                                                               
Network   courses;  and   Alaska  standards   are  used   in  the                                                               
implementation  of  a  dual  credit   course  for  K-12  students                                                               
participating in Future Education of Alaska].                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR. THOMAS  highlighted that another demonstration  of support is                                                               
that  the  university  has  a  member  on  the  Smarter  Balanced                                                               
Assessment  team  in order  to  decide  whether  that is  a  good                                                               
college-ready assessment.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:26:06 PM                                                                                                                    
DR.  THOMAS  compared  the  old   and  new  standards,  primarily                                                               
mathematics. He  said that  it's of great  concern that  the vast                                                               
majority  of the  need for  developmental education  for students                                                               
coming to  UA is in  the area  of mathematics. The  new standards                                                               
are much more advanced and  more specific than the old standards.                                                               
As previously mentioned, the old  standards only went through the                                                               
10th grade,  which didn't reflect  college ready. The  new Alaska                                                               
Academic  Standards  include  a greater  emphasis  on  functions,                                                               
trigonometry, data analysis and  probability, which makes it more                                                               
likely that high  school graduates will complete  a college level                                                               
degree.  Emphasis is  placed on  developing an  ability to  apply                                                               
mathematics  to  novel situations  and  to  identify and  explain                                                               
logical and/or  flawed reasoning.  The new  standards extensively                                                               
discuss the use  of matrices and what a student  needs to be able                                                               
to  do  with  them,  whereas  the  old  standards  had  just  one                                                               
statement about matrices. The positive  aspect for the university                                                               
is that things like multiplying  matrices won't have to be taught                                                               
in  introductory   statistics  if  high  school   graduates  have                                                               
achieved the skill.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
He said  the new standards have  much more detail and  content on                                                               
conditional probability, random  variables and distributions, and                                                               
the use  of probability  in decision  making. This  helps prepare                                                               
students for the real world, far beyond just college ready.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:29:12 PM                                                                                                                    
DR. THOMAS  discussed how the  new standards are  helping prepare                                                               
students  to  be  career  ready,   not  just  college  ready.  He                                                               
explained  that  certain  labor union  certifications  require  a                                                               
significant  background  in  trigonometry,  and  that  a  lot  of                                                               
laborers currently  can't achieve  the certification  because the                                                               
old standards  didn't have  that. The situation  is the  same for                                                               
plumbers  and  pipefitters.  He relayed  that  his  son  recently                                                               
became a  journeyman after completing a  five-year apprenticeship                                                               
program that  started with  a cohort  of 30  and finished  with a                                                               
cohort of  14. The most common  reason for dropping out  was that                                                               
the apprentice could not do  the math, particularly trigonometry.                                                               
The  new standards  are helping  to better  prepare students  for                                                               
career or college.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
The  old standards  were  very generic  on  reading and  writing,                                                               
whereas the  new standards provide  more specifics.  For example,                                                               
there  are now  specific standards  for reading  and writing  and                                                               
science and technology,  and reading and writing  and history and                                                               
social  studies.   There  are  new  standards   on  speaking  and                                                               
listening  skills, and  adapting  your speech  to your  audience.                                                               
Many  of those  elements  did  not exist  in  the old  standards.                                                               
Furthermore, there have  been significant upgrades in  the use of                                                               
technology.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
DR. THOMAS discussed how the  University of Alaska engaged in the                                                               
development of  the new Alaska  Academic Standards. He  said that                                                               
19  different faculty  took part  in the  College &  Career Ready                                                               
Standards Revision  meetings over  the two-year  process. Faculty                                                               
from  the  three  large  and  rural campuses  in  the  fields  of                                                               
mathematics,   English   composition  and   reading,   education,                                                               
chemistry, and  early childhood  development participated  in the                                                               
meetings.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
UAA's Center for Alaska Education  Policy Research partnered with                                                               
the  Oregon Educational  Policy Improvement  Center to  conduct a                                                               
survey of  faculty who  teach entry-level  courses in  UA's four-                                                               
year and two-year postsecondary programs.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
DR.  THOMAS related  that as  part  of the  vetting process,  the                                                               
Department of Education and  Early Development (DEED) distributed                                                               
the draft standards on January 4,  2012. On February 17, 2012 all                                                               
department  chairs  and  deans  at  UAF  were  asked  to  provide                                                               
feedback. He noted  that the provosts at both UAS  and UAA recall                                                               
sending similar  solicitations, but  they were unable  to provide                                                               
documentation of having done so.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
He addressed  the question  of whether  the new  Alaska Standards                                                               
address the need  for developmental education and the  K-12 to UA                                                               
gap. He  recapped that roughly  52 percent of recent  Alaska high                                                               
school graduates attending the UA  system need some developmental                                                               
coursework,  and that  UA is  working in  close partnership  with                                                               
DEED  to  reduce  that  number.  He  described  this  as  a  true                                                               
partnership because UA educates  teachers, helps mentor teachers,                                                               
and  helps place  teachers through  the Alaska  Teacher Placement                                                               
Program.  He expressed  gratitude  for the  significant help  the                                                               
legislature  has provided  through the  implementation of  Alaska                                                               
Performance Scholars  (APS) and the Alaska  Advantage Program. He                                                               
highlighted that only  20 percent of APS students  entering UA in                                                               
fall  2013  needed  developmental  education.  He  suggested  the                                                               
legislature  might also  consider incentivizing  calculus in  the                                                               
APS curriculum.  He described this  as a small change  that might                                                               
help the national agenda.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:34:12 PM                                                                                                                    
DR. THOMAS stated that UA  expects to see significant improvement                                                               
in  reducing the  need for  developmental  coursework for  Alaska                                                               
high school graduates, based on  the new Alaska Standards and the                                                               
relatively new Alaska Performance Scholarship program.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:35:30 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  STEVENS asked  for more  information on  the developmental                                                               
courses, such  as who teaches the  classes and what it  costs the                                                               
student.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
DR. THOMAS replied  that the student pays the same  amount as any                                                               
entry  level  course  and  that the  qualifications  to  teach  a                                                               
developmental class  require just  a master's degree.  He further                                                               
explained  that  they are  four  credit  classes with  regard  to                                                               
qualifying for financial aid, and  non-credit classes with regard                                                               
to meeting baccalaureate requirements.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS  asked if developmental classes  would generally be                                                               
offered through a  community college program in  states that have                                                               
a community college system.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
DR.  THOMAS said  yes, whereas  the  University of  Alaska has  a                                                               
combined community  college and university mission  so it carries                                                               
both responsibilities.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS  cited the significant  difference in  cost between                                                               
community  college  and  university   courses  in  the  state  of                                                               
California,  and   suggested  that  Alaska  might   find  a  less                                                               
expensive way to deliver developmental classes.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR. THOMAS  recounted that  UA is working  to better  prepare new                                                               
teachers and high  school graduates, and is  partnering with DEED                                                               
through the  Alaska Learning Network  to ensure that  the correct                                                               
level of classes are offered statewide.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:37:33 PM                                                                                                                    
DR.  THOMAS  reiterated that  because  the  new Alaska  Standards                                                               
won't be fully implemented until  2015/16, it's too early to tell                                                               
what their impact will be.  However, there is reason for optimism                                                               
and UA is  actively engaging new teacher candidates  to learn and                                                               
implement the new standards in the classroom.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR.  THOMAS concluded  his comments  with a  summary of  the five                                                               
changes he advocated for this past summer.                                                                                      
   1)  Examine an Alaska Performance Scholarship curriculum for                                                                 
      all students unless a parent opts the student out;                                                                        
   2)  Improve math outcomes by improving requirements for new                                                                  
      teacher hires, changing teaching methods and standards, and                                                               
      embedding it in other content areas;                                                                                      
   3)  Implement college-ready assessment no later than 11th                                                                    
      grade, and having the university engaged in the Smarter                                                                   
      Balanced Assessment group;                                                                                                
   4)  Further facilitate K-12 in the University of Alaska dual                                                                 
      enrollment; and                                                                                                           
   5)  Improve teacher retention, particularly in rural Alaska,                                                                 
      by expanding or improving the teacher mentoring process.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:39:56 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  GARDNER asked  if he  agrees with  Dr. Milgram  that new                                                               
math standards are not rigorous  enough, and that students should                                                               
be  more  rigorously  prepared  for  STEM  fields  and  selective                                                               
universities.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR.  THOMAS  replied the  new  standards  are a  significant  and                                                               
positive step forward. He said  that national research shows that                                                               
a student  who takes a math  class after algebra II  is much more                                                               
likely to complete a baccalaureate  degree than those who do not.                                                               
As a mathematician, he'd like to  see a higher proportion of high                                                               
school  graduates who  have already  taken  calculus, but  Alaska                                                               
isn't  ready to  demand that  of  all high  school graduates.  He                                                               
reiterated  that building  incentives in  the Alaska  Performance                                                               
Scholarship would  be a  good way  to help  achieve some  of that                                                               
national agenda.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:41:51 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS  asked how much  it costs a  UAF student to  take a                                                               
remedial education class.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
DR. THOMAS replied it's about $450 for a three credit class.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY asked  if  he  would be  working  with DEED  to                                                               
develop   K-12    assessments,   possibly   utilizing    the   UA                                                               
developmental curriculum.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
DR. THOMAS  answered that UA is  very happy to partner  with DEED                                                               
to  ensure  that  students are  appropriately  prepared  to  take                                                               
collegiate-level  courses. The  Alaska Learning  Network provides                                                               
that opportunity.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS thanked Dr. Thomas and introduced Diane Hirshberg.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:43:27 PM                                                                                                                    
DIANE HIRSHBERG, PhD., Director,  UAA Center for Alaska Education                                                               
Policy Research  (CAEPR), Anchorage,  Alaska, provided  a summary                                                               
of the 2012 Alaska Content Standards Validity Study.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
DR. HIRSHBERG explained that when CAEPR  was hired to work on the                                                               
validity study, they subcontracted part  of it to the Educational                                                               
Policy Improvement  Center (EPIC) from the  University of Oregon.                                                               
That  research organization  is the  national expert  that did  a                                                               
similar study  when Texas  decided not to  adopt the  Common Core                                                               
State Standards and needed to validate their standards.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
She  displayed a  chart showing  the 174  faculty respondents  by                                                               
course content  area. Comments were solicited  from UA's two-year                                                               
and  four-year  programs  and  community  campuses,  as  well  as                                                               
faculty   from  Alaska   Pacific   University,  Wayland   Baptist                                                               
University,  Ilisagvik College,  AVTEC,  the Northern  Industrial                                                               
Training  Program, Alaska  Christian  College,  and the  Amundsen                                                               
Educational Center.  Input was solicited from  this wide spectrum                                                               
of  faculty  in  the  belief  that Alaska  students  need  to  be                                                               
prepared either for  an academic career or to go  on for further,                                                               
current,  technical education.  She noted  that including  such a                                                               
diversity of voices had not been done elsewhere in the country.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR.  HIRSHBERG explained  that the  first piece  of the  validity                                                               
study  looks  at whether  the  standards  are applicable  to  the                                                               
course  content areas.  As might  be expected,  the math  content                                                               
standards were relevant to the  math instructors and the language                                                               
arts content standards were relevant  to the English instructors,                                                               
but there was move variation  in what seemed relevant to somebody                                                               
teaching other  introductory courses. What was  more relevant was                                                               
to  ask whether  the standards,  as a  whole, would  sufficiently                                                               
prepare students for success in the respondent's course.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
She highlighted  that almost 50  percent of the  respondents said                                                               
that the  new standards for  English/language arts  represent all                                                               
of the  knowledge and skills  necessary for success in  an entry-                                                               
level course,  and over 80  percent said the  standards represent                                                               
"most to all" the skills  necessary for success. The response was                                                               
even stronger for the mathematics standards.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:47:31 PM                                                                                                                    
DR. HIRSHBERG  said the respondents  were also asked  whether the                                                               
English/language  arts   and  mathematics  standards   reflect  a                                                               
sufficient level  of cognitive demand  for students who  meet the                                                               
standards to be  prepared to succeed in  the respondent's course.                                                               
The   answers    were   encouraging;   80   percent    said   the                                                               
English/language arts  standards are adequate  in most of  all of                                                               
the areas necessary  for success in an entry-level  course at the                                                               
university or  in a technical training  program. For mathematics,                                                               
85 percent of the respondents  said the standards reflect most to                                                               
all of the cognitive demand  sufficient for students who meet the                                                               
standards to be  prepared to succeed in  the respondent's course.                                                               
These strong  results support the  veracity of the  new standards                                                               
raising  students' skill  levels to  where they  need to  be, she                                                               
said.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:50:07 PM                                                                                                                    
DR.  HIRSHBERG addressed  some  of the  comments  that were  made                                                               
during the process. A number of  people talked about the need for                                                               
students to  have technical and  scientific reading skills  and a                                                               
technical vocabulary,  and the  board added  in those  areas. The                                                               
request by  a handful  of people  for more  focus on  reading and                                                               
mathematical skills was met with  the technical reading piece. In                                                               
conclusion, she  said that key  question is whether  the students                                                               
will actually achieve the standards that have been set for them.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS thanked Dr. Hirshberg for the presentation.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:52:07 PM                                                                                                                    
At ease                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:01:22 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR   STEVENS    reconvened   the   meeting    and   introduced                                                               
Superintendent Graff.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:01:41 PM                                                                                                                    
ED  GRAFF,  Superintendent,   Anchorage  School  District  (ASD),                                                               
Anchorage, Alaska,  thanked the committee for  the opportunity to                                                               
provide  information about  how  ASD is  implementing the  Common                                                               
Core  State Standards  (CCSS), and  the continuing  commitment to                                                               
student success.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
He  stated that  one of  the immediate  benefits of  adopting the                                                               
CCSS is the  ability to collaborate with  like-size districts. He                                                               
explained  that the  ASD belongs  to an  organization called  The                                                               
Council  of  the  Great  City   Schools  (CGCS),  which  provides                                                               
resources that range from  professional development to curriculum                                                               
alignment,  as  well  as  a think  tank  opportunity  with  other                                                               
districts.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS  asked if he  was referring to the  Alaska Academic                                                               
Standards.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SUPERINTENDENT   GRAFF  clarified   that  the   Anchorage  School                                                               
District  adopted  and  has implemented  the  Common  Core  State                                                               
Standards. He  added that  those are not  the standards  that the                                                               
state   will  use   to  assess   the  district,   but  they   are                                                               
substantially similar to the Alaska Academic Standards.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
He continued to  explain that by belonging to  CGSC, the district                                                               
has been  able to use  some of  the resources they  developed. He                                                               
directed attention  to a parent  roadmap that describes  areas of                                                               
focus  for  each  grade  level   and  provides  examples  of  the                                                               
assessments  as  well  as  activities that  are  aligned  to  the                                                               
standards.  The roadmap  is available  in a  number of  different                                                               
languages, which is helpful because  ASD is a district of diverse                                                               
languages.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SUPERINTENDENT  GRAFF reported  that the  Anchorage School  Board                                                               
adopted the  Common Core State  Standards in the spring  of 2011.                                                               
He reviewed some of the key  shifts from the old Alaska standards                                                               
to  CCSS. For  language arts  there is  close reading  of complex                                                               
literary and  informational texts, evidence-based writing,  and a                                                               
strong focus on  vocabulary. In math there are  fewer topics with                                                               
more depth,  there is a  balance of concept and  computation, and                                                               
they  include   the  standards   of  mathematical   practice.  He                                                               
highlighted that  the curriculum is  based on the  standards, not                                                               
textbooks.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:06:17 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR GARDNER asked what that means.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SUPERINTENDENT GRAFF replied that  there has been a misconception                                                               
that CCSS  comes with a  set of texts  that a district  must use,                                                               
but there  is actually a  great deal of flexibility  in selecting                                                               
textbooks. He  noted that the  district was going through  a math                                                               
review  when the  CCSS were  adopted,  so the  district was  very                                                               
conscientious about the purchase of new math materials.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
DARLA  JONES,  PhD.,   Assistant  Superintendent  for  Curriculum                                                               
Instruction, Anchorage  School District, said it  was critical to                                                               
follow a thorough curriculum alignment  process when the district                                                               
adopted  the Common  Core State  Standards. Different  approaches                                                               
were utilized in English/language arts and math.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
The  Anchorage  School District  turned  to  the Basal  Alignment                                                               
Project   for  English/language   arts,   because  that   project                                                               
recognizes the reality of budget  challenges. The project allowed                                                               
the  district to  use existing  textbooks,  collaborate with  the                                                               
CGCS  and other  districts  across the  country, and  essentially                                                               
rewrite  existing test  questions and  identify vocabulary  terms                                                               
that  would  be  more  appropriate  for  the  Common  Core  State                                                               
Standards. She  noted that the  district decided to  use Houghton                                                               
Mifflin for the reading program and rework the approach.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:09:48 PM                                                                                                                    
DR. JONES explained that the  Anchorage School District partnered                                                               
with  the  University  of  Texas  Dana  Center  for  professional                                                               
development and to  create new math units of study  for all grade                                                               
levels.  Math  is  their  primary area  of  expertise,  and  they                                                               
provided  a framework  for transitioning  to  the new  standards.                                                               
During  this process,  65 ASD  educators engaged  in an  18-month                                                               
study  of  the  math  standards   and  the  research  behind  the                                                               
standards. This  work guided an  intense math review  process for                                                               
new resources at grades K-8.  Many of these same educators became                                                               
the  site-based  math  specialists  who  help  lead  professional                                                               
development efforts throughout the district.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
She reported  that ASD also created  comprehensive academic plans                                                               
that incorporate the  Basal Alignment lessons and  the math units                                                               
of study.  The academic plans provide  information about learning                                                               
outcomes  for  each  quarter  and  identify  essential  concepts,                                                               
essential vocabulary,  instructional resources,  and assessments.                                                               
She said  that ASD  is committed to  revising the  academic plans                                                               
each year  to better  meet the  needs of  students at  each grade                                                               
level,  and   hopes  to  include  more   resources  for  teachers                                                               
including  more assessments  and suggestions  for differentiation                                                               
for struggling readers,  as well as those in  need of enrichment.                                                               
She noted  that the academic plans  are all available on  the ASD                                                               
website.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:11:49 PM                                                                                                                    
DR.  JONES said  that ASD  is developing  academic plans  for all                                                               
subject  areas   as  they  incorporate  the   Common  Core  State                                                               
Standards  across  all  disciplines.   For  example,  the  Social                                                               
Studies coordinator  worked with ASD educators  and key community                                                               
members to produce the book  Picturing Anchorage that is based on                                                               
the  Social  Studies  content standards,  ASD's  social/emotional                                                               
learning  standards, Alaska  Cultural Standards,  as well  as the                                                               
common core  standards. She opined that  this project illustrates                                                               
how  the CCSS  provides a  foundation that  educators can  use to                                                               
create  curricular   resources  that   meet  the  needs   of  the                                                               
community. She noted that the  CCSS doesn't include things like a                                                               
handwriting  program,   but  ASD  will  continue   their  current                                                               
program, because  brain research has  shown that there  are major                                                               
benefits to students in learning cursive.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:13:30 PM                                                                                                                    
SUPERINTENDENT   GRAFF  highlighted   that  Picturing   Anchorage                                                               
addresses  Senator  Gardner's  question about  curriculum  versus                                                               
textbook. It  supports the  notion that the  district is  able to                                                               
adjust and create resources.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
He said  that the last  critical piece of the  discussion centers                                                               
on  the assessments  and what  the updated  assessment will  look                                                               
like. The  shifts in instructional  practices and  curriculum are                                                               
specifically based  on increasing  expectations of  what students                                                               
need to  be able to know  and do. Ultimately, the  new assessment                                                               
that the  state adopts will be  measuring that. It will  be a new                                                               
baseline  for   how  to  determine  student   success.  It's  not                                                               
comparable to the  past - it's a new baseline  because of the new                                                               
standards.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SUPERINTENDENT GRAFF displayed two  sample practice questions for                                                               
math that  try to determine  whether the student  understands how                                                               
to add fractions  and the concept of greater than  and less than.                                                               
The  first question  is from  the old  Alaska assessment  and the                                                               
second is from the CCSS  assessment. These examples show that the                                                               
CCSS standards are more challenging.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Future considerations  include the state assessment  because that                                                               
is the  standard that ASD  will be  assessed on even  though they                                                               
adopted the CCSS.  The district is cognizant  of the differences,                                                               
he  said. The  new  assessments will  utilize  technology so  the                                                               
district  has  to be  prepared  for  that. Finally,  professional                                                               
development will be an ongoing consideration.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:20:47 PM                                                                                                                    
SUPERINTENDENT  GRAFF  concluded  his comments  by  displaying  a                                                               
picture of  an Anchorage kindergarten  class and noted  that they                                                               
will  graduate in  2026 having  been exposed  to the  Common Core                                                               
State Standards from kindergarten through 12th grade.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY asked  if there  was a  fiscal note  or if  the                                                               
district  had the  resources  in their  budget  to implement  the                                                               
assessment and teacher training.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SUPERINTENDENT  GRAFF  said  the   district  does  not  have  the                                                               
resources in  the budget,  and he  believes that  without support                                                               
for  professional  development,  the  state will  fall  short  in                                                               
addressing  any standards.  He noted  that the  district is  also                                                               
requesting an increase in bandwidth  and double the amount during                                                               
assessment windows.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:22:59 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  asked  if  the  district  would  approach  the                                                               
governor   and   legislature  once   they   know   the  cost   of                                                               
implementation.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SUPERINTENDENT GRAFF answered yes.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY   expressed  interest  in   receiving  specific                                                               
information  on  the  total  cost  and  a  budget  breakdown  for                                                               
implementing  the CCSS,  the assessments,  technology, and  staff                                                               
development.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
He  also asked  for follow  up information  about Dr.  McCauley's                                                               
testimony that  49 percent of  the Alaska Academic  Standards for                                                               
math  are different  than  the Common  Core  State Standards  for                                                               
math.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:27:37 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER HANLEY  said he heard Superintendent  Graff say that                                                               
ASD adopted local  standards before the state  adopted the Alaska                                                               
Academic Standards and they happened  to be the Common Core State                                                               
Standards.   Superintendent   Graff   also  said   the   district                                                               
recognized,  and  was  addressing, the  differences  between  the                                                               
standards. Commissioner  Hanley noted  that he  sent a  letter to                                                               
superintendents advising  that if  a district adopts  a different                                                               
set of standards they had  a responsibility to address the Alaska                                                               
Academic  Standards,  as  well  as the  ones  that  were  locally                                                               
adopted.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  asked if  there's a  disparity between  ASD and                                                               
the  state   in  light  of   the  testimony  from   Stanford  and                                                               
Massachusetts that  the Common Core State  Standards are minimal;                                                               
they're better than the old  Alaska standards but not as rigorous                                                               
as the new Alaska Academic Standards.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER HANLEY maintained that  the standards are different,                                                               
but equally rigorous.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS thanked the presenters and recognized Pete Lewis.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:29:50 PM                                                                                                                    
PETE LEWIS,  Superintendent, Fairbanks North Star  Borough (FNSB)                                                               
School District, Fairbanks, Alaska, introduced himself.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MELANIE  HADAWAY,  Secondary  Curriculum  Coordinator,  Fairbanks                                                               
North  Star Borough  (FNSB) School  District, Fairbanks,  Alaska,                                                               
introduced herself.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SUPERINTENDENT LEWIS  stated that  the Fairbanks  School District                                                               
has been  vigorously implementing  the Alaska  Academic Standards                                                               
for  English/language  arts, math  and  culture  since they  were                                                               
adopted  in 2012.  The ongoing  initiatives include  aligning the                                                               
curriculum, working  on assessments, integrating  technology, and                                                               
providing professional  development. He discussed the  process in                                                               
August  2012 to  introduce the  standards to  all corners  of the                                                               
school district to  ensure that expectations were  clear and that                                                               
the message from the administration was consistent.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS.   HADAWAY   emphasized   that   this   was   a   districtwide                                                               
implementation, not  just for  teachers. She  said they  tried to                                                               
focus  on  the shifts  in  English/language  arts, especially  in                                                               
nonfiction  texts.  That means  that  reading  and writing  isn't                                                               
solely the  responsibility of the English  teacher. The intention                                                               
is to  have students reading  and writing  difficult, challenging                                                               
text in all curriculum areas.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:33:58 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. HADAWAY reviewed some of  the other districtwide initiatives.                                                               
With  support  from  DEED,  the district  had  a  week-long  math                                                               
institute for  teachers looking at the  new standards, especially                                                               
the mathematical practices. A literacy  institute was attended by                                                               
more  than just  English/language  arts teachers  to support  the                                                               
increased  standards. The  idea  was for  everyone to  understand                                                               
that the standards all work together  to create a climate of high                                                               
achievement.  She summarized  that the  standards are  the "what"                                                               
and the curriculum helps figure out the "how."                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:35:05 PM                                                                                                                    
SUPERINTENDENT LEWIS  explained that in 2011  the school district                                                               
began to  align its  curriculum to  Common Core  State Standards,                                                               
and then switched to align  with the Alaska Academic Standards in                                                               
2013. Throughout, the  curriculum has been aligned  to the Alaska                                                               
Cultural Standards.  He said it's  clear that some  standards are                                                               
more important or powerful and  the district is focusing on those                                                               
to provide a roadmap to aid in the mastery of other standards.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:37:22 PM                                                                                                                    
SUPERINTENDENT  LEWIS  discussed   the  importance  of  providing                                                               
teachers real-time  support on  curriculum. The  district created                                                               
K-12  content leadership  teams that  include teachers,  parents,                                                               
and the  university. The curriculum department  provides support,                                                               
and principals facilitate and provide  direction, in each content                                                               
area.  This process  allows  for  changes to  be  made much  more                                                               
quickly than waiting six years for the next curriculum review.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:38:31 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. HADAWAY  directed attention to the  supporting documents that                                                               
show that  when K-12 teachers reviewed  the curriculum, including                                                               
the recent  revisions for career  technical education  and social                                                               
studies,  they  found  that the  Alaska  Academic  Standards  for                                                               
literacy and math are at the  core of the entire curriculum. They                                                               
went  through  line-by-line  comparing the  new  Alaska  Academic                                                               
Standards to see  where the "what" was different.  They wanted to                                                               
see if anything was missing  from the district's curriculum or if                                                               
things  they  asked for  weren't  included.  As Senator  Dunleavy                                                               
pointed out, there are different  ways to interpret the different                                                               
standards and they wanted to  ensure that the teachers understood                                                               
and were on the same page,  not just in English/language arts and                                                               
math, but in every area of the curriculum.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:39:45 PM                                                                                                                    
SUPERINTENDENT  LEWIS said  that the  district tried  to identify                                                               
power standards  for ongoing benchmark  assessments. The  idea is                                                               
to have multiple measures to  determine whether a student has met                                                               
the standards.  Eventually those will  be tied to  the evaluation                                                               
process.  Sample assessments  are available  to teachers  through                                                               
the  district-created Edmodo  site.  Technology  is an  important                                                               
aspect of the districtwide assessments.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. HADAWAY  explained that  students will  still take  the State                                                               
Benchmark  Assessment (SBA)  this spring,  but now  they will  be                                                               
able  to  take  the  practice test  online  using  Google  forms.                                                               
Students are able to practice  and develop their skills, and it's                                                               
also  beneficial  for teachers,  as  this  is  a new  system  for                                                               
everyone.  She explained  that Google  Lux uses  a script  called                                                               
Flubaroo  making it  possible for  the assessment  results to  be                                                               
delivered  to principals  and teachers  soon  after the  students                                                               
complete the practice test.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SUPERINTENDENT LEWIS explained that  a districtwide committee was                                                               
formed to help  transition to the new  evaluation system. They've                                                               
adopted the Charlotte  Danielson model and are in  the process of                                                               
creating a system for gathering  data on student performance that                                                               
is fair and  accurate across grade levels and  content areas. The                                                               
idea   is  to   provide   appropriate   information  to   improve                                                               
instruction that is aligned to  the Alaska Academic Standards for                                                               
English/language arts,  math, and culture. The  standards provide                                                               
a clear target for that.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:46:44 PM                                                                                                                    
SUPERINTENDENT  LEWIS   discussed  the  resources   for  success:                                                               
funding, time,  and professional development. He  said funding is                                                               
an  issue and  it's  important  to stay  the  course during  this                                                               
multiple year  process. He noted  that Massachusetts  gave school                                                               
districts the  time to implement  their standards  correctly, and                                                               
that's led  to success. There's  also a  professional development                                                               
component to ensure that everyone  is adequately trained in order                                                               
to be  successful. The  district wants  to make  sure it  has the                                                               
appropriate  structure and  support  systems in  place to  ensure                                                               
that both  students and  staff are  successful. That  being said,                                                               
there has  to be a  balance between the assessment  processes and                                                               
different initiatives and a system  that allows teachers the time                                                               
to  teach. He  also spoke  about  the balance  between local  and                                                               
state control  and the balance between  professional autonomy and                                                               
ensuring that  teachers are aiming  at the targets.  The district                                                               
is committed to  preparing their students so that  they will have                                                               
the opportunity to compete in  a global society. He concluded the                                                               
presentation by showing pictures of  students in the district and                                                               
reiterated the commitment to prepare them for success.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:50:06 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR GARDNER asked  how the district paid to  send teachers to                                                               
summer  institutes  for  literacy,  cultural  responsibility  and                                                               
curriculum alignment.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. HADAWAY explained  that the district partnered  with DEED for                                                               
the   institutes;  for   the  curriculum   alignment  they   used                                                               
curriculum professional  development money to  encourage teachers                                                               
to come in over the  summer for developing education credits with                                                               
a district focus in mind.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:51:18 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS  thanked Superintendent  Lewis and Ms.  Hadaway and                                                               
welcomed Peggy Cowan and Lisa Skiles Parady.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:51:45 PM                                                                                                                    
PEGGY   COWAN,  Superintendent,   North   Slope  Borough   School                                                               
District, Barrow, Alaska,  stated that the district  is guided by                                                               
the board-adopted  strategic plan which is  student-centered. She                                                               
spoke to the following mission statement of the strategic plan:                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
        Learning in our schools is rooted in the values,                                                                        
     history and language of the Iñupiat. Students develop                                                                      
     the academic and cultural skills and knowledge to be:                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
       Critical and creative thinkers able to adapt in a                                                                        
     changing environment and world;                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
       Active, responsible, contributing members of their                                                                       
     communities; and                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
       Confident, healthy young adults, able to envision,                                                                       
     plan and take control of their destiny.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SUPERINTENDENT COWAN said  the district is mission  driven and it                                                               
has a  mission-driven curriculum  development process.  The board                                                               
wants students  to have  the outcomes  that boards,  parents, and                                                               
legislators  want for  their children  regardless  of where  they                                                               
live. The mission articulates that,  but also grounds the work in                                                               
the place the students are from and their Iñupiat heritage.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
She said the  presentation today is about standards  and how they                                                               
inform  curriculum development  in one  rural school  district in                                                               
Alaska. As  she listened to  the national conversation,  a common                                                               
misconception  that is  often associated  with standards  is that                                                               
standards lead to standardization.  She maintained that standards                                                               
do  not  inherently  lead  to  standardization  of  instructional                                                               
delivery.  We can  expect students  in Kaktovik  and Boston  that                                                               
have  the  same understanding  and  skills  to be  successful  in                                                               
careers  or college  in the  21st century,  but standards  do not                                                               
have to  be delivered  in the same  way. In  actuality, standards                                                               
provide targets  that allow the  instruction to be  more flexible                                                               
than before teachers had targets.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
It  used to  be that  the only  way you  could guarantee  content                                                               
coverage  was  to demand  use  of  specific materials.  Now  with                                                               
standards, districts and schools  have flexibility in instruction                                                               
to  reach  the  targets  established   by  their  standards.  The                                                               
district's presentation illustrates that.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
The district  is using the  new Alaska Academic Standards  in the                                                               
district's own  way. These  standards are  more rigorous  than in                                                               
the past, which  is good because the students are  competing in a                                                               
national and  global market and  need to  be as well  prepared as                                                               
other states  and regions. A huge  change in benefit is  that the                                                               
new standards  finally provide depth.  They are no longer  a mile                                                               
wide  and an  inch deep;  a  common and  accurate description  of                                                               
standards  and  curriculum  in   the  past.  This  is  especially                                                               
sympathetic  with our  district's use  of curriculum  development                                                               
guided  by  understanding  by design.  For  example,  the  anchor                                                               
standards in language arts give focus and emphasis.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
She  deferred to  Dr. Parady  to  provide an  explanation of  the                                                               
district's use of the state standards.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:51:58 PM                                                                                                                    
LISA SKILES  PARADY, PhD.  Assistant Superintendent,  North Slope                                                               
Borough   School   District,   Barrow,  Alaska,   delivered   the                                                               
presentation  "Implementation  Efforts  & Considerations  at  the                                                               
District Level."                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
DR. PARADY  described the challenges that  rural school districts                                                               
face as  extraordinary. The North  Slope Borough  School District                                                               
has  about 2,000  students. It  is  roadless and  larger than  38                                                               
states  the  size  of  Minnesota.  The  smallest  school  in  the                                                               
district  is Kaktovik  with 60  students  and the  largest is  in                                                               
Barrow with  700 students. Technology logistics  are particularly                                                               
complex.  Delivering services  is  daunting.  In-service take  an                                                               
incredible  amount  of  detail  and all  logistics  can  be  very                                                               
difficult ranging from heat, food service, busing, and travel.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
The first  goal is instructional  focus. All students  will reach                                                               
their  intellectual   potential  and  achieve   academic  success                                                               
through integrating  the Iñupiat  knowledge system into  the core                                                               
content  areas. That  is  referring to  the  state standard,  the                                                               
learning target the state has put forth for districts.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Bob Marzano, in What Works  in Schools: Translating Research Into                                                               
Action, said, "A  guaranteed and viable curriculum  is the number                                                               
1  school-level   factor  impacting  student   achievement."  The                                                               
opportunity  to   learn  addresses   the  extent  to   which  the                                                               
curriculum in a school is  guaranteed. That means that states and                                                               
districts give  clear guidance to teachers  regarding the content                                                               
to be  addressed in  specific courses  at specific  grade levels.                                                               
Standards  really ensure  the opportunity  for students  to learn                                                               
the "must  knows" versus the  "nice to knows." If  students don't                                                               
have  that opportunity  to learn  the content  expected of  them,                                                               
there is  little chance  that they will.  Viable in  this context                                                               
means  ensuring that  the articulated  curriculum content  or the                                                               
standards  for  a  given  course  or given  grade  level  can  be                                                               
adequately  addressed  in  the time  available.  Thus,  time  and                                                               
priority  really  must  be  given to  teach  students  the  "must                                                               
knows."                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:58:31 PM                                                                                                                    
DR. PARADY said  that curriculum needs to  be coherent, inviting,                                                               
thoughtful, and  culturally relevant. Curriculum provides  a plan                                                               
to  achieve designated  goals; it  is not  a list  of topics  and                                                               
related   activities.  She   discussed  the   difference  between                                                               
curriculum  and  standards and  explained  that  the North  Slope                                                               
Borough  School  District  is   using  the  new  Alaska  Academic                                                               
Standards  to inform  the  curriculum. The  standard  is what  is                                                               
taught, the  curriculum is  how it's  taught, and  the assessment                                                               
shows whether the student learned what is taught.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
4:01:11 PM                                                                                                                    
DR.  PARADY discussed  the three  stages of  backward design:  1)                                                               
identify the  desired results; 2) determine  acceptable evidence;                                                               
and 3)  plan learning  experiences and  instruction. She  drew an                                                               
analogy  between the  blueprint for  a house  design and  a model                                                               
curriculum blueprint.  She said you  start with a floor  plan and                                                               
work  to the  finished product,  which  is what  the North  Slope                                                               
School District has done. She  displayed the district's five-year                                                               
curriculum, alignment,  integration and mapping  structure (CAIM)                                                               
plan and  reiterated the statement  by Superintendent  Lewis that                                                               
it doesn't  happen in  one year,  because it's  complex, resource                                                               
intensive work. She explained that  the school board approved the                                                               
structural  framework  in 2009  and  at  that time  the  district                                                               
created K-12  core content  area teams to  guide the  process and                                                               
ensure alignment with both the  Alaska Academic Standards and the                                                               
Iñupiat  Learning  Framework.  She  reiterated  that  it  was  an                                                               
expensive process that involved all certified staff.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
DR.  PARADY  said   that  some  NSBSD  teachers   worked  on  the                                                               
development  of the  Alaska Academic  Standards and  she believes                                                               
that the  process was  sound and  transparent. The  standards are                                                               
closely  aligned to  the Common  Core State  Standards, but  they                                                               
were developed  locally. She disputed  the suggestion  of federal                                                               
overreach, and  highlighted that  the NSBSD  curriculum continues                                                               
to  align to  the Alaska  Cultural Standards.  She described  the                                                               
balance  between  Alaska  Academic   Standards  and  the  Iñupiat                                                               
Learning Framework as a marriage by design.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
She displayed a chart that  teachers use as a blueprint, starting                                                               
with the particular program area.  In the next level the balanced                                                               
content  standard  and Iñupiat  Learning  Framework  are used  to                                                               
develop overarching  understandings and essential  questions. The                                                               
next  level has  the districtwide  cornerstone assessment  tasks,                                                               
after  which units  are  developed for  either  courses or  grade                                                               
levels.  She described  it  as a  complex  process that  involves                                                               
integration of the standards throughout.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
DR. PARADY quoted  a teacher who observed that  teachers are able                                                               
to look  at the new  standards and  break down the  knowledge and                                                               
skills necessary  to show mastery  of that standard.  This wasn't                                                               
possible under the old standards due to their lack of clarity.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
DR.  PARADY reviewed  an interdisciplinary  unit on  surviving in                                                               
the  Arctic.  It  addresses  literacy,  science,  and  technology                                                               
standards and  is relevant knowledge.  She directed  attention to                                                               
the Iñupiat  Learning Framework and performance  expectations for                                                               
the unit  and noted that  they are equivalent to  the performance                                                               
expectations  found  in the  Alaska  Academic  Standards for  the                                                               
Iñupiat language, history, and culture.  She said the idea is for                                                               
students to transfer  this knowledge to other  areas of learning.                                                               
This empowers them as lifelong learners.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
4:10:56 PM                                                                                                                    
DR.  PARADY displayed  a visual  that illustrates  the challenges                                                               
that districts  currently face  with the  recent changes  in laws                                                               
and regulations. She described the  new standards as the building                                                               
blocks for the changes and  commended DEED for adopting them. She                                                               
concluded her comments with a  quote from a middle school teacher                                                               
who said  the new Alaska  Academic Standards may not  be perfect,                                                               
but they're a step in the right direction.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS thanked Dr. Parady and Superintendent Cowan.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR GARDNER  asked if the  NSBSD saw the new  Alaska Academic                                                               
Standards on  the horizon when  the district adopted  their five-                                                               
year plan in 2009.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
DR. PARADY explained that she  initiated the process when she was                                                               
recruited to the  North Slope because the district  didn't have a                                                               
curriculum.  She worked  closely  with DEED  to understand  their                                                               
expectations and  she learned there  was movement on the  rise to                                                               
develop  and  adopt  new  standards. She  said  the  North  Slope                                                               
Borough  School District  is ahead  of other  districts and  it's                                                               
been tremendously hard work.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
4:15:30 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  GARDNER asked  if the  cornerstone assessment  tasks she                                                               
described  are  routine  classroom  assessments  and  if  they're                                                               
different from Bright Beginnings Assessment.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR.  PARADY agreed  they are  different. She  explained that  the                                                               
district has performance  tests for in the  classroom and they're                                                               
in the process of creating districtwide tests.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  requested a  copy of  the district's  budget to                                                               
implement the standards,  including staff development, curriculum                                                               
changes, and technology.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE GATTIS  requested a  copy for the  House committee                                                               
as well.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  STEVENS  said  his  office  would  distribute  it  to  the                                                               
members.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
4:17:37 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS announced the committee would stand at-ease.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:24:24 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS  reconvened the meeting and  recognized Sunni Hilts                                                               
and Norm Wooten.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SUNNI  HILTS,  President,  Board  of  Directors,  Association  of                                                               
Alaska School Boards, Seldovia, Alaska, introduced herself.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
NORM  WOOTEN, Director  of  School  Improvement and  Governmental                                                               
Relations,  Board  of  Directors, Association  of  Alaska  School                                                               
Boards, Kodiak, Alaska, introduced himself.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
4:25:12 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. HILTS said she didn't mind being last in the roster of                                                                      
presenters as long as the children of Alaska and their education                                                                
is first. She then read the following into the record:                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     Good  afternoon,  Mr.  Chairman.  Thank   you  for  the                                                                    
     opportunity to testify on  the new Alaska standards for                                                                    
     English language arts and mathematics.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Our  statewide  organization  and   our  member  school                                                                    
     districts  have   been   involved  in   developing  and                                                                    
     implementing education  standards for  better than  two                                                                    
     decades. As  an educator yourself,  you are undoubtedly                                                                    
     aware of the  history of academic standards in Alaska -                                                                    
     from the  first standards developed in  the 1990s under                                                                    
     Governor Hickel, to those that  followed in the wake of                                                                    
     NCLB. Today, we have standards by  which administrators,                                                                   
     teachers, school boards and students are measured. And in                                                                  
     each of those cases, we have usually set the bar higher                                                                    
     each time the standards have been overhauled or amended.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     AASB  believes  the  Department of  Education  &  Early                                                                    
     Development did a  good job  in establishing the Alaska                                                                    
     Education Standards in 2012.  What our member districts                                                                    
     are requesting are the  resources and time to implement                                                                    
     them efficiently and effectively, with common sense and                                                                    
     continued emphasis on local participation - from parents,                                                                  
     teachers and  students. Alaska's K-12 students  must be                                                                    
     prepared for  careers or  college, and  the  new Alaska                                                                    
     Education Standards can help  in that preparation. But,                                                                    
     only if they are wisely implemented.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     If they are  wisely implemented, Alaska can continue to                                                                    
     strive for educational excellence. In  the last decade,                                                                    
     public schools as a whole have increased the high school                                                                   
     graduation rate from  about 60 percent to  more than 71                                                                    
     percent statewide, with the five-year cohort approaching                                                                   
     75 percent in 2013. We have lowered the dropout rate to                                                                    
     less than 5 percent. If we are to improve the standing of                                                                  
     U.S. students in relation to their counterparts in other                                                                   
     developed  countries,  and  if  we  are  to  lower  the                                                                    
     remediation rate at our own Alaska colleges, then higher                                                                   
     education standards are one answer.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Of course, standards are merely one part of the equation:                                                                  
     School Districts must also develop a curriculum to teach                                                                   
     the   standards,  provide  teachers   the   professional                                                                   
     development   and  instructional   strategies  so   the                                                                    
     curriculum can  reach  the classroom,  and  provide the                                                                    
     assessments  necessary to  gauge  whether teachers  are                                                                    
     effective and students are learning. School districts are                                                                  
     doing these important tasks all the  time, but with the                                                                    
     new standards, the urgency of the work and the workload                                                                    
     itself has increased immensely.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     Let's  take  one  school  district  to  illustrate  the                                                                    
     process   of   implementing    the   Alaska   Education                                                                    
     Standards:  this school  district is  of moderate  size                                                                    
     for Alaska,  is off  the road  system but  connected by                                                                    
     plane  and ferry  service, has  a good  graduation rate                                                                    
     and  a fairly  stable workforce  of administrators  and                                                                    
     teachers,  even  in  the face  of  layoffs  and  budget                                                                    
     reductions.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Like most  districts, this  one normally  budgets money                                                                    
     to conduct a curriculum  review over a six-year period.                                                                    
     If  there are  200  different course  offerings in  the                                                                    
     district,  that  means  35 of  them,  on  average,  are                                                                    
     reviewed each year to assess  the content being taught,                                                                    
     the   instructional  materials   being  used   and  the                                                                    
     training   and  development   needed  by   staff.  This                                                                    
     schedule  leaves  the  remaining   staff  to  focus  on                                                                    
     teaching and increasing student performance.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     That six-year  cycle is now  being crammed into  two or                                                                    
     three  years  because in  addition  to  the new  Alaska                                                                    
     Education  Standards, the  State Board  of Education  &                                                                    
     Early  Development  also  changed   the  way  staff  is                                                                    
     evaluated  and student  performance  is measured.  This                                                                    
     new  accountability  system  is to  be  implemented  in                                                                    
     2015-16  when 20  percent of  an educator's  evaluation                                                                    
     will be  based on  student growth. By  2018-19, student                                                                    
     performance will  compose 50  percent of  an educator's                                                                    
     evaluation. And  districts must  also gather  input for                                                                    
     each  educator's  evaluation  from  parents,  students,                                                                    
     community members and fellow educators.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     At our recent Annual Conference, the member districts of                                                                   
     AASB approved two resolutions that express their concerns                                                                  
     regarding assessments  in general  and the  High School                                                                    
     Graduation Qualifying Exam in particular. I submit those                                                                   
     resolutions separately for  your information. In short,                                                                    
     our members -  your local school districts - are asking                                                                    
     for help from EED to implement the standards and enable                                                                    
     students to do the new online assessments. School boards                                                                   
     are  also asking the  state to  repeal the  High School                                                                    
     Graduation Qualifying Exam because  it is out  of date,                                                                    
     expensive and time-consuming. The resources - and the six                                                                  
     school days devoted to the test each year - can be better                                                                  
     used  elsewhere, such  as  implementing the  new Alaska                                                                    
     standards.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     Finally, I  ask you  to help  us and  the Department of                                                                    
     Education  provide  the   public  with  information  to                                                                    
     understand the  new  standards as they  unfold  in your                                                                    
     communities. There will be many adjustments and - yes -                                                                    
     some bumps in  the road as  teachers learn new lessons,                                                                    
     districts acquire new  curriculum and as students reach                                                                    
     toward a higher level of learning.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     But we know that our students get only one chance at a K-                                                                  
     12 education. They will do what we expect them to do. If                                                                   
     the adults in their life step up, so will they. At AASB,                                                                   
     our mission  is to  advocate for children and  youth by                                                                    
     assisting  school boards  in  providing  quality public                                                                    
     education,  focused  on  student  achievement,  through                                                                    
     effective local  governance. Today, AASB would  like to                                                                    
     thank the State of Alaska for adopting higher education                                                                    
     standards and for  the Alaska Legislature for assisting                                                                    
     school districts in implementing them. Thank you.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
4:32:30 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR STEVENS asked if she would  say that the districts that the                                                               
Alaska Association of School Boards  represents are consistent in                                                               
their support for a common core program.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS.  HILTS  clarified  that  they're in  support  of  the  Alaska                                                               
Academic Standards.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  noted that the  question was about  support for                                                               
the  "common  core program"  and  the  response was  specific  to                                                               
supporting the standards.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR.  WOOTEN   confirmed  support   for  more   rigorous  academic                                                               
standards  and the  board is  standing behind  the standards  the                                                               
state has implemented.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked if there  is a cost to implementation that                                                               
is being borne by school districts.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  WOOTEN  replied the  AASB  supports  the standards,  but  it                                                               
recognizes  that implementation  has a  fairly significant  cost.                                                               
What  the committee  heard from  Anchorage, Fairbanks,  and North                                                               
Slope  is representative  of the  other school  districts in  the                                                               
state.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
4:34:29 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. HILTS  added that as a  school board member in  a tiny Alaska                                                               
community, she has  spent hours trying to  explain the standards,                                                               
why  they're used,  and  how they'll  help  Alaska students.  She                                                               
confirmed that implementing the new  standards will take a lot of                                                               
commitment and time and money.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  noted the testimony  about the need  to upgrade                                                               
technology and  asked if the  assumption is that  the assessments                                                               
would be computerized.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. WOOTEN  replied it's  not only the  assessment, but  also the                                                               
implementation of the curriculum that's based on technology.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY requested any fiscal information AASB has.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  WOOTEN  agreed to  pass  the  request  along to  the  member                                                               
districts.  He  added that  the  funding  is  coming out  of  the                                                               
operational budget so it affects the classroom.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS asked what the dropout rate was at the high point.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. WOOTEN offered to follow up with the exact number.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR STEVENS thanked Ms. Hilts and Mr. Wooten.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:38:15 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  STEVENS [adjourned]  the meeting  of the  Senate Education                                                               
Standing Committee at 4:38 p.m.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
000_CommonCore_Agenda_FINAL_010514.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & the Common Core
001_BIOGRAPHIES_AK_Standards_Hearing_Participants_Final.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & the Common Core
01_Minnich_Alaska Testimony Jan 7 2014 FINAL.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
02_PamGoins_CSG_Alaska presentation 1.7.14.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & the Common Core
03_KathleenPorterMagee_AK Testimony--01062014.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & the Common Core
03_Fordham - The State of State Standards 2010_Reference Only.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
04_05_CommonCore_Criticism.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
04a_Stotsky_WSJ_Common Core Doesn'tAddUp.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & the Common Core
04b_Stotsky_PreparedComments_Alaska Hearing.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & the Common Core
05_Milgram_Alaska-presentation.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & the Common Core
06_DEED_Senate_Educ_Cmte_ Presentation.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
06a_AKstandards_ELAandMath_byGradeLevel.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
07_SBEED_SenateEducCmte_Presentation.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
08_DanaThomas_UnivAlaska_K-12 Standards Presentation to Senate January 2014.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & the Common Core
08a_Hirshberg_CAEPR_Standards_Validity_Study.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
09_AnchSchoolDist_Superintendent_Presentation.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
09a_ASD_Supplemental_Standardsinfo.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & the Common Core
10a_FNSBSD_Senate Education Comm 1-7-14.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
10b_FNSBSD_Timeline for AKSS Implementation.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
10c_FNSBSD_English Curriculum vs. AKSS Overview for High School.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
10d_FNSBSD_K-2 Language Detailed Comparison pt 1.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
10e_FNSBSD_K-2 Language Detailed Comparison pt 2.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
10f_FNSBSD_K-2 Reading Detailed Comparison pt1.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
10g_FNSBSD_K-2 Reading Detailed Comparison pt2.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
10h_FNSBSD_K-2 Speaking-Listening Detailed Comparison.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
10i_FNSBSD_K-2 Writing Detailed Comparison.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
10j_FNSBSD_K-2 Writing Detailed Comparison pt 2.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
10k_FNSBSD_Grades 3-5 Standards Detailed Comparison pt1.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
10L_FNSBSD_Grades 3-5 Standards Detailed Comparison pt2.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & The Common Core
10m_FNSBSD Lang Arts Curriculum with AKSS_REVISED.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & the Common Core
11_NSBSD 2014 Senate EducationCmte.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & the Common Core
12a_Remarks by AASB President Sunni Hilts.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & the Common Core
12c_AASB Resolutions 5 15 and 5 17.pdf SEDC 1/7/2014 8:30:00 AM
AK Academic Standards & the Common Core