Legislators and Superintendent John White have reached a compromise on a plan to move forward with Louisiana student standards and tests.
Both sides of the Common Core debate will declare a victory with this compromise.
For Common Core opponents:
- BESE will begin a review process of the standards and come up with proposed new/revised standards by February 21, 2016.
- The public, the Legislature, and Louisiana’s next governor will be able to weigh in on any new proposed standards.
- Louisiana will no longer be part of the PARCC consortium for its tests. Next year’s tests will have no more than 49% of questions from PARCC.
For Common Core supporters:
- Louisiana will keep its commitment to more rigorous standards and will have tests that allow Louisiana to compare its performance to other states.
- The existing Common Core standards will remain in place until new standards are developed and approved.
- Although new standards must be approved by the Legislature and the governor, any decision must be on the standards as a whole; they can’t edit specific parts. A No vote means BESE goes back to the drawing board, and the existing standards remain in place.
For more on the compromise and the proposed legislation that will make it possible, click on the links below.
View the proposed plan: Terms of an Agreement to Implement Challenging Louisiana Student Standards and Tests.
Read a Statement from the Council for a Better Louisiana (CABL) on the proposed compromise.