Common Core

Richard Kessler

 
 
Richard Kessler, TREASURER OF COMMON CORE and DEAN OF MANNES COLLEGE THE NEW SCHOOL FOR MUSIC. Mr. Kessler is one of the principal authors of the plan that led to the creation of the Center for Arts Education in 1996, when he was serving as an arts education consultant. As a keynote speaker, conference panelist, and workshop facilitator, he has been engaged by organizations such as the League of American Orchestras, Association of Performing Arts Presenters, and Bank Street College of Education, among others.

I grew up at the beach in Queens, NY, and as they say in Queens,

From 1997 to 2004, Mr. Kessler was executive director of the American Music Center (AMC), the national service and information center for new American music. During his tenure, Mr. Kessler’s accomplishments included the creation of award-winning web magazine NewMusicBox.org, a nationwide career development program for composers and performers, the establishment of the American Music Center Collection at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, the establishment of AMC’s first endowment, the creation of the National Music Coalition, and an increase in AMC grant making programs to more than $7 million from 2002–2004.

From 1993 to 1997, Mr. Kessler was vice president of Artsvision, an arts education consulting company where he created and implemented arts and education programs throughout the United States and Canada. He designed programs for school communities, arts organizations, and foundations, including the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra, GE Fund, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, New York Community Trust, Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, and many others. Before joining Artsvision, Mr. Kessler was a Naumburg Award-winning chamber musician, performing as a trombonist and teaching throughout the world for almost fifteen years.

A native of Brooklyn, New York, Mr. Kessler holds two degrees from The Juilliard School and was a faculty member of the Manhattan School of Music from 1988 to 1993. He is a board member of the American Composers Orchestra, the Festival of New Trumpet Music (FONT), Sequitur–a new–music presenting organization, and the Steering Committee of the New York City Arts Coalition. In May 2005, Kessler received a Letter of Distinction from the American Music Center for his significant contribution to the field of contemporary American music.

 
 

December 8 • Check out Education Week’s coverage of Common Core’s recent national survey of school teachers.

November 14 • Read Lynne Munson’s response to the latest NAEP results. Joanne Jacobs’s “Linking and Thinking on Education” and the Core Knowledge blog also highlighted her piece.

September 15 • A new Salon.com article highlights Common Core’s upcoming study on curriculum narrowing and quotes Executive Director Lynne Munson: “We were surprised at the extremity of the narrowing indicated by the teachers who took our survey.”

July 22 • Common Core releases new, second edition of its popular Curriculum Maps in English Language Arts. News Release

May 6 • Common Core's Curriculum Maps for ELA have exceeded 2 million page views.

February 24 • Common Core's Lynne Munson writes on "What Students Really Need to Learn" in the lastest issue of ASCD's Educational Leadership.

January 5 • Common Core’s Curriculum Maps for English Language Arts have exceeded one million views. See the press release here.

December 8 • Last week, the North Carolina State Board of Education approved revised social studies standards. Thanks to input from Common Core, among others, North Carolina's students will now take four social studies courses, including two US history courses covering the European exploration of the New World through contemporary time.

October 18 • Common Core’s Lynne Munson participates in a New America Foundation panel of leaders working to bring technology into classrooms in innovative ways. Watch a video of the discussion here.

October 11 • Common Core’s Lynne Munson gives Ed Week her perspective on 21st-century learning: "Twenty-first-century technology should be seen as an opportunity to acquire more knowledge, not an excuse to know less."

October 4 • California Governor vetoes curriculum narrowing bill. Opposed by Common Core, the bill would have effectively eliminated the state’s arts and foreign language high school graduation requirement. More...

Spring 2010 • The new issue of the AFT’s American Educator shines a light on 21st century skills, featuring contributions from Common Core’s Lynne Munson and Laura Bornfreund, eduwonk Andy Rotherham and UVA’s Dan Willingham, Diana Senechal, and Diane Ravitch.

December 4 • EdWeek profile questions motives of the Partnership for 21st Century Skills. 5

November 10 • You can now read Diane Ravitch’s op/ed on 21st century skills in the Boston Globe, Providence Journal, Metro West Daily News, Lowell Sun, and Quincy Patriot Ledger.

November 3Education Week highlights Common Core’s concerns about the appointment of a P21 leader to a key Dept. of Education post.

November • Lynne Munson and Richard Kessler explain why arts education is vital in the November 2009 issue of Parenting magazine.

October 10 • Diane Ravitch’s recent op/ed on 21st century skills has been reprinted in the Providence Journal.

September 16 • A group of prominent scholars, teachers, education reform advocates, and union leaders issued a statement today expressing concern about the program put forth by the Partnership for 21st Century Skills (P21) and calling for its revision. Press Advisory (pdf)

September 15 • Common Core’s Diane Ravitch shows how dated the idea of “21st century skills” really is in the Boston Globe

July 13 • Common Core’s Lynne Munson raises concerns about national standards at convention of the American Federation of Teachers. (PDF document)

July 9In USAToday Common Core’s Lynne Munson argues that a comprehensive education is more likely than a STEM education to produce new scientists.

July 2A USAToday editorial cites and links to Common Core’s “Still at Risk” study which showed how little our 17-year-olds know about history and literature.

June 2 • Common Core releases Why We’re Behind: What Top Nations Teach Their Students But We Don’t, a report showing that the nations that consistently outrank us on international comparison tests provide their students with a fulsome education in the liberal arts and sciences. Why is this news? Because the U.S. is moving further and further away from this model. Read brief excerpts from the documents featured in the report here.

Why We're Behind