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Using Unit Design to Plan for Instruction Focus on Unit Two: Poetry and Literary Analysis

Using Unit Design to Plan for Instruction Focus on Unit Two: Poetry and Literary Analysis . Middle School Reading/English Language Arts September 27, 2013. Training Outcomes. “Poetry” by Nikki Giovanni.

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Using Unit Design to Plan for Instruction Focus on Unit Two: Poetry and Literary Analysis

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  1. Using Unit Design to Plan for InstructionFocus on Unit Two: Poetry and Literary Analysis Middle School Reading/English Language Arts September 27, 2013

  2. Training Outcomes

  3. “Poetry” by Nikki Giovanni Poetry poetry is motion graceful as a fawn gentle as a teardrop strong like the eye finding peace in a crowded room we poets tend to think our words are golden though emotion speaks too loudly to be defined by silence sometimes after midnight or just before the dawn we sit typewriter in hand pulling loneliness around us forgetting our lovers or children who are sleeping ignoring the weary wariness of our own logic to compose a poem no one understands it it never says "love me" for poets are beyond love

  4. “Poetry” by Nikki Giovanni it never says "accept me" for poems seek not acceptance but controversy it only says "i am" and therefore i concede that you are too a poem is pure energy horizontally contained between the mind of the poet and the ear of the reader if it does not sing discard the ear for poetry is song if it does not delight discard the heart for poetry is joy if it does not inform then close off the brain for it is dead if it cannot heed the insistent message that life is precious which is all we poets wrapped in our loneliness are trying to say

  5. Analyzing the Poem • On your first reading, what did the poem mean? How did the poet’s specific choice of words help you make meaning? • Turn and talk to your colleagues about how language choices help you make meaning in poetry.

  6. PARCC/Common Core Shifts in RELA Practice

  7. Implementing the Common Core State Standards requires… • Unpacking the standards to understand what is contained within each and how they build over the years. • Developing clear expectations for learning goals and objectives. • Understanding the interconnectedness of the Standards. They are not taught in isolation. • Building classroom environment as a literacy community where students read and re-read for a variety of purposes, write from and about texts, build on speaking and listening skills and use language effectively.

  8. CCSS Focus Standard: Unpacking For Instruction Common Core State Standards in MS RELA: Focus Standard Reading Standard 4 • College and Career Ready Anchor Standard #4: • What are the Knowledge Demands? What do students need to know? • What are the Instructional Implications? What do teachers need to do?

  9. Unpacking the Standards CCR Anchor Standard for Reading 4 Interpret words and phrases as they are used in a text, including determining technical, connotative, and figurative meanings, and analyze how specific word choices shape meaning or tone. • Turn and talk to your colleagues- what would students have to know and be able to do? What are instructional implications for this anchor standard?

  10. Review of Discussion

  11. Examination of CCSS Standard RL 4: Grade-Specific Bands

  12. CCSS are available in each Core CFPG

  13. Unpacking the Standards: Grade-Specific Bands • CCSS RL 6 4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the impact of a specific word choice on meaning and tone • CCSS RL 7 4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the impact of rhymes and other repetitions of sounds (e.g., alliteration) on a specific verse or stanza of a poem or section of a story or drama. • CCSS RL 8 4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the impact of specific word choices on meaning and tone, including analogies or allusions to other texts.

  14. Unpacking Standards: Target Grade CCSS RL 7 4 • Using the CCSS Planning Grid, work in groups to unpack CCSS RL 7 4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the impact of rhymes and other repetitions of sounds (e.g., alliteration) on a specific verse or stanza of a poem or section of a story or drama. • First, think about the big ideas in the standard itself • Next, try to determine the component parts of the standard-what one has to know and be able to do to master this standard- think in terms of action verbs required for cognitive demand- e.g., identify, explain, analyze, etc. • Then, write student objectives to reflect what the students will learn: Students will…. • Consider how this objective will be assessed • Think about a possible graphic organizer that might help visualize the key components of the objective

  15. Taking a Closer Look at Unit 2

  16. Closer Look at Unit 2: Why Literary Analysis? • PARCC Prose Constructed Response- Literary Analysis is assessed as a task on the PARCC examination- targets reading literature (RL) and writing analytic essay (W2) • Integration of Standards • Reading- read and reread closely for different purposes • Writing- experiment with different forms, audiences, and purposes while learning technique • Language- learn how to say it with clarity and precision • Speaking & Listening- opportunity to build comprehension, collaboration, and presentation skills • Focus on close reading/analytic writing/ evidence-based discussion

  17. Planning for Implementation of Unit 2: Poetry/Literary Analysis • Curriculum Framework Progress Guides for 2013-2014 • Unit 2 Overview • Unit 2 Resource Kit- Found on the MS RELA Google Site • Essential Processes for CCSS Collaborative Planning document • Planning Grid and MS RELA DTA Lesson Planner • Resources- CCSS Literature Core Textbooks, poetry anthologies- rich variety of materials including paired texts, complex texts, and leveled texts for all readers.

  18. Revised CFPG will be dated 2013

  19. Accessing the CPFGs Choose your grade, then select the document you wish to access.

  20. Accessing the CPFGs

  21. Accessing the CPFGs

  22. HOLT McDOUGALCurriculum Materials my.hrw.com

  23. Collaborative Planning Tools • Essential Processes for CCSS Collaborative Planning • Unit 2 Overview • MS RELA DTA Lesson Planner • CCSS Planning Grid • Sample Lesson for Tone Day 2

  24. UNIT PLANNNG Use the Unit 2 Overview and the Essential Processes for CCSS Collaborative Planning tool to analyze the unit. Notice where and when CCSS standards are taught and how one could use the resources.

  25. DAILY PLANNING • Now let’s take a look at the daily lesson planner and how we might use this to build additional lessons or modify existing sample lesson plans to meet our needs. • Analyze the lesson plan sample using the MS RELA DTA. • What do you notice about the FFT components? • How could teachers use this model to help them plan for additional lessons?

  26. Use the REVISED DTA.

  27. Summative Assessment for Unit 2Planning with the End in Mind We must also address how the unit will be assessed. In order to do so, we will look briefly at the PARCC writing task for Literary Analysis and the PARCC rubric because the summative task for Unit 2 will include a PARCC-like Prose Constructed Response to measure how well students are able to demonstrate their learning. First, we have to return to the Big Ideas from the Shifts in CCSS…

  28. Shift 2: Reading and writing grounded in evidencefrom text, literary and informational • PARCC focuses on students rigorously citing evidence from texts throughout the assessment. • PARCC includes questions with more than one right answer to allow students to generate a range of rich insights that are substantiated by evidence from text(s). • PARCC requires writing to sources rather than writing to de-contextualized expository prompts. • PARCC also includes rigorous expectations for narrative writing, including accuracy and precision in writing in later grades.

  29. Students’ Command of Evidence with Complex Texts is at the Core of Every Part of the Assessment! SO. . . Two standards are always in play—whether items are focused on reading or writing. These standards are: • Reading Standard One (Use of Evidence) • Reading Standard Ten (Complex Texts)

  30. Understanding the Literary Analysis Task: From PARCC Templates • Students carefully consider two literary texts worthy of close study. • They are asked to answer a few EBSR and TECR questions about each text to demonstrate their ability to do close analytic reading and to compare and synthesize ideas. (Our Unit 2 Summative Assessment will have multiple choice items and some EBSRs- there will not be TECRs during this school year.) • Students write a literary analysis about the two texts. (Prose Constructed Response-PCR) • Our Unit 2 Summative Assessment will have a PCR based on two literary texts- poems.

  31. PARCC Rubric • We will use the PARCC Primary Trait Scoring Rubric to score the student writing PCRS for the Unit 2 Assessment. • We will work as a system to set student anchor papers for the essays and teachers will grade the student responses in collaborative teams. • PARCC rubric is available at http://www.parcconline.org/samples/english-language-artsliteracy/grades-6-11-generic-rubrics-draft

  32. PARCC Scoring Rubric

  33. Turn and Talk:What are the assessment implications?

  34. Additional Planning Considerations… • Differentiation • ELL Support • Teacher models • UDL What other considerations should we think about in planning?

  35. Universal Design for Learning (UDL)

  36. Using the support materials • Create a lesson plan. Work Session…

  37. Biggest Takeaways • What have you learned about unpacking the standards, using the unit resources, and collaborative planning for unit and daily instruction? • Turn and talk with a partner at your table • about your biggest takeaways from this session.

  38. Secondary Reading/English Language Arts Office Andrea Thomas-Munson, Instr. Spec., 6-8 Andrea.Munson@pgcps.org Karen Shaw, Instr. Spec.-Special Educ.,6-12 Karen.shaw@pgcps.org Doreen Myers, Supervisor-Secondary RELA dmyers@pgcps.org Patricia Miller- Secondary RELA Consultant plmiller@pgcps.org Phone Number 301-808-8284

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