Staying the Course: The Development of Virginia's Standards of Learning and the Decision not to Adopt the Common Core State Standards

The research study investigated the history of the curriculum standards movement in the Commonwealth of Virginia in the context of the national standards movement in order to explain how and why the Commonwealth of Virginia arrived at the decision not to adopt the Common Core State Standards based o...

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Main Author: Foulke, Gary Brian
Other Authors: Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/71710
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-717102020-12-09T05:43:19Z Staying the Course: The Development of Virginia's Standards of Learning and the Decision not to Adopt the Common Core State Standards Foulke, Gary Brian Educational Leadership and Policy Studies Tripp, Norman Wayne Lineburg, Mark Young Magliaro, Susan G. Sellers, James L. : K-12 public school reform national curriculum standards Virginia Standards of Learning Common Core State Standards The research study investigated the history of the curriculum standards movement in the Commonwealth of Virginia in the context of the national standards movement in order to explain how and why the Commonwealth of Virginia arrived at the decision not to adopt the Common Core State Standards based on descriptive evidence. The study utilized a qualitative methodology with a two-phase data collection process. First, documents from the Virginia Board of Education and the Virginia Department of Education were collected and analyzed using the constant comparative method (Maykut and Morehouse, 1994). Second, data were collected from major figures in the history of Virginia public education over the last 20 years, including former Superintendents of Public Instruction, through in-person interviews. Data from the interviews were analyzed using the constant comparative method (Maykut and Morehouse, 1994). An interview protocol was developed, tested for content validity, and piloted prior to conducting the interviews. Categories that emerged from the data analysis for both research questions were identified and descriptive evidence was presented related to both research questions. Three major conclusions from the study were identified and discussed that appeared to influence Virginia's decision not to participate in the Common Core State Standards: the Virginia Standards of Learning are an institutionalized system; the Virginia Standards of Learning had bipartisan political support; and confidence in the Standards of Learning outweighed confidence in the Common Core State Standards. Ed. D. 2016-07-03T06:00:26Z 2016-07-03T06:00:26Z 2015-01-09 Dissertation vt_gsexam:4277 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/71710 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic : K-12 public school reform
national curriculum standards
Virginia Standards of Learning
Common Core State Standards
spellingShingle : K-12 public school reform
national curriculum standards
Virginia Standards of Learning
Common Core State Standards
Foulke, Gary Brian
Staying the Course: The Development of Virginia's Standards of Learning and the Decision not to Adopt the Common Core State Standards
description The research study investigated the history of the curriculum standards movement in the Commonwealth of Virginia in the context of the national standards movement in order to explain how and why the Commonwealth of Virginia arrived at the decision not to adopt the Common Core State Standards based on descriptive evidence. The study utilized a qualitative methodology with a two-phase data collection process. First, documents from the Virginia Board of Education and the Virginia Department of Education were collected and analyzed using the constant comparative method (Maykut and Morehouse, 1994). Second, data were collected from major figures in the history of Virginia public education over the last 20 years, including former Superintendents of Public Instruction, through in-person interviews. Data from the interviews were analyzed using the constant comparative method (Maykut and Morehouse, 1994). An interview protocol was developed, tested for content validity, and piloted prior to conducting the interviews. Categories that emerged from the data analysis for both research questions were identified and descriptive evidence was presented related to both research questions. Three major conclusions from the study were identified and discussed that appeared to influence Virginia's decision not to participate in the Common Core State Standards: the Virginia Standards of Learning are an institutionalized system; the Virginia Standards of Learning had bipartisan political support; and confidence in the Standards of Learning outweighed confidence in the Common Core State Standards. === Ed. D.
author2 Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
author_facet Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Foulke, Gary Brian
author Foulke, Gary Brian
author_sort Foulke, Gary Brian
title Staying the Course: The Development of Virginia's Standards of Learning and the Decision not to Adopt the Common Core State Standards
title_short Staying the Course: The Development of Virginia's Standards of Learning and the Decision not to Adopt the Common Core State Standards
title_full Staying the Course: The Development of Virginia's Standards of Learning and the Decision not to Adopt the Common Core State Standards
title_fullStr Staying the Course: The Development of Virginia's Standards of Learning and the Decision not to Adopt the Common Core State Standards
title_full_unstemmed Staying the Course: The Development of Virginia's Standards of Learning and the Decision not to Adopt the Common Core State Standards
title_sort staying the course: the development of virginia's standards of learning and the decision not to adopt the common core state standards
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/71710
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