Note: CSCOPE
is a vertically aligned scope and sequence used by hundreds of school
districts.
Today is Part 3 of our rational
response to the irrational critiques of CSCOPE. For the record, I am not an
agent for CSCOPE nor do I have any financial connection to CSCOPE. However, I am an advocate for providing
teachers with the resources necessary to be successful in their endeavors. CSCOPE is one of those resources. I recognize it for what it is, a screw
gun in a world of screwdrivers. Now back to the debate.
Anti-CSCOPE Argument Number 7: CSCOPE doesn’t give unlimited access to anyone who
requests it. What are they hiding?
Response: Yes, CSCOPE has
limited access to its resources.
And yes, it is hiding something... its intellectual property. Open access would allow its competitors
to steal and then profit from its work.
We can argue the legal merits of this; there are precedents on both
sides. And honestly, I have argued
both sides. But ultimately, in the
current financial environment (created by Perry and our Republican legislators) I see CSCOPE access as a toll road issue. You pay
for access, you get access. You
don’t pay, for whatever reason, your access is severely limited. P.S. - One of the original and primary
anti-CSCOPE Loonies, got mad and began her crusade when a district chose CSCOPE over the product she
was trying to sell. Interesting.
Anti-CSCOPE Argument Number 8: School leaders across the state praise the value of CSCOPE,
so obviously there must be a greater conspiracy/agenda at work. Otherwise, why would they keep harping
on cost-savings, collaboration, ESC/school district partnerships, teacher
support and student performance, if they weren’t trying to cover something up?
Response: The reason why an ever-growing majority
of school leaders (at all levels) praise CSCOPE is because it actually delivers
what it promises. A vertically
aligned, TEKS correlated scope and sequence, with extensive instructional
resources at an affordable (essentially free) cost. The product has improved every year and CSCOPE personnel
have been responsive to the needs of districts, campuses and teachers. If there is a bad guy in this equation,
it is the state (see Bush, Perry, et. al.). It has held a gun to the head of
schools in the form of accountability driven sanctions while simultaneously reducing
per pupil school funding. In this
environment, the only viable curriculum solution has been to adopt CSCOPE as a
survival tool.
Anti-CSCOPE Argument Number 9: Some parents and teachers don’t like CSCOPE. So, obviously
it is bad.
Response: I must admit that I
don’t know how to counter this argument with a group of people who believe that
CSCOPE is the precursor to the U.N. Black Helicopters showing up to take over
the country. Yes, there are
parents who don’t like CSCOPE. So what?
CSCOPE follows the prescribed state curricular standards (TEKS). Public schools can’t opt out of
teaching the TEKS. If they do, sanctions soon follow. For parents who don't understand this, home school remains a viable option. As for the teacher half of the argument, it depends on the teacher. CSCOPE is simply a tool. A tool that is better than any individual
teacher can create on his or her own.
The teacher who has concerns about the sequence of presented content has
avenues to address these concern. The teacher who has concerns about the pacing
of CSCOPE (of which there are many) doesn’t actually have a CSCOPE issue: that
teacher has an accountability issue (see Bush, Perry, et. al.). And the teacher who just doesn’t want
to be told what to teach, sorry, but that teacher needs to quit or move to a different state. The simple and brutal truth is, like it or not,
the rules of the game have been changed.
Tomorrow, we’ll conclude the
initial salvos of this discussion.
Think. Work. Achieve.
Your turn...
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