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The "Core Knowledge" movement is an educational reform based on the premise that a
grade-by-grade core of common learning is necessary to ensure a sound and fair
elementary education. The movement was started by Professor E. D. Hirsch, Jr., author
of Cultural Literacy and The Schools We Need, and is based on a large body of research
in cognitive psychology, as well as a careful examination of several of the world's fairest
and most effective school systems. Professor Hirsch has argued that, for the sake of
academic excellence, greater fairness, and higher literacy, early schooling should
provide a solid, specific, shared core curriculum in order to help children establish
strong foundations of knowledge.
The Core Knowledge Curriculum
The Core Knowledge Curriculum emphasizes high-level performance skills in core
subjects such as Language Arts, Mathematics, History, Civics, Geography, Science, Art,
and Music. Computer Technology and Physical Education are included so that each
student will have a well-rounded educational foundation. One might think of Core
Knowledge as the K-8 equivalent of a great college liberal arts education. It has the
depth and breadth to help our learners develop a strong and solid foundation for future
learning. For more information about Core Knowledge, visit the foundation’s web site,
www.coreknowledge.org/CK
For years, educators have identified skills that should be taught at each grade level, but
content decisions have been left to individual classroom teachers. Thus, a vast
disparity of topics is taught depending on the personal interests and expertise of some
teachers. The progression of curriculums across some school’s grades and even within
the same grade level has been quite unorganized.
The Core Knowledge Sequence was developed to provide students with a rich
vocabulary and broad knowledge base on which future instruction can build, broaden,
and deepen. The ultimate goal is to ensure that all children are given access to the
same knowledge base that assures later educational success.
Thus, the Core Knowledge Sequence provides a detailed, explicit, and systematic
sequence of grade-specific content that can be taught consistently year after year. This
core content is organized to spiral through the grade levels, becoming more
sophisticated and detailed in each successive grade. The sequence revisits topics about
every three years in increasing depth. Thus, advanced knowledge is built upon
foundational knowledge taught in earlier grades.
Our experience shows that students retain information much longer and develop skills
more easily when meaningful content is combined with the teaching of skills
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