1 / 64

Common Core State Standards Shifts: Changes in Classroom Practices

Common Core State Standards Shifts: Changes in Classroom Practices. Sheraton Waikiki, Oahu 5 March, 2012. Rebekah Caplan Literacy Field Services Specialist. Welcome and Introductions. • Take a minute to introduce yourselves at your tables: Name Role (teacher, coach, administrator…)

torie
Download Presentation

Common Core State Standards Shifts: Changes in Classroom Practices

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Common Core State Standards Shifts: Changes in Classroom Practices Sheraton Waikiki, Oahu 5 March, 2012 Rebekah Caplan Literacy Field Services Specialist

  2. Welcome and Introductions •Take a minute to introduce yourselves at your tables: Name Role (teacher, coach, administrator…) School Complex Grade Level

  3. Group Survey: Show of Hands • How would you rate your background knowledge and experience with the Common Core State Standards? • 3 = Quite knowledgeable/experienced. • If a teacher (or a coach supporting teachers) I have begun implementing or piloting the standards, and I am quite familiar with the ELA documents and expectations. • If an administrator, I have attended several seminars/trainings, and have begun hosting meetings/provided PD at my site/complex. • 2 = Somewhat knowledgeable. This is an exploratory year, and I plan going full bore this summer and next year. • 1= Just beginning to learn about the CCSS. I came to this symposium hoping to add to my growing knowledge.

  4. Goals and Agenda • Deeper understanding of principles that guided development of the CCSS • Deeper understanding of fundamental “shifts” in the CCSS for ELA and how we address expectations • Deeper understanding of the place of “argument” in the standards • Information about how Pearson’s Schoolwide Improvement Model (SIM) supports implementation of the CCSS

  5. Common Core State Standards FOR English Language Arts & Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects

  6. Standards Organization • A comprehensive K–5 section with four strands • Reading strand (includes Foundational Skills) • Writing strand • Speaking and Listening strand • Language strand

  7. Standards Organization • A comprehensive K–5 section with four strands • Reading strand (includes Foundational Skills) • Writing strand • Speaking and Listening strand • Language strand • Two content area-specific sections for grades 6-12 with four strands • • ELA • Reading strand • Writing strand • Speaking and Listening strand • Language strand • • History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects • Reading strand • Writing strand

  8. Presentation Title runs here l 00/00/00

  9. Presentation Title runs here l 00/00/00

  10. Three Appendices •Appendix A: Supplementary material on reading, writing, speaking and listening, and language, as well as a glossary of key terms. • Appendix B: Exemplar texts and sample performance tasks. • Appendix C: Annotated samples of student work demonstrating at least an adequate performance in student writing at various grade levels.

  11. Big Questions • How can a K-12 set of standards be so lean? • What guided the development of these standards? Academic Language for All Students

  12. Common Core State Standards “Five Principles of Development” David Coleman, ELA Team Coordinator for the CCSS From The Common Core Implementation Video Series Hunt Institute and the Council of Chief State School Officers

  13. Common Core State Standards: Five Principles of Development • (1) College and career readiness Students must be truly college and career ready upon graduation from high school. Standards should build a staircase to readiness. • (2) Best state standards • Standards should be built not by collecting what are most common or popular standards between states but by identifying states with the most proven academic standards and performances. • (3) Solid evidence • Standards should be based on evidence for what matters most for college and career readiness—not just what we say or hope for. • (4) Focus • Standards must focus on what matters most so teachers have time to teach and students have time to practice. If standards become too long, they are a “wish list,” not standards. • (5) Local flexibility, teacher judgment • Standards should not dictate how to teach; they should not dictate a curriculum. They are a core set of expectations for college and career readiness.

  14. Common Core State Standards: Five Principles of Development “Thestandards are not everything you could teach, but describe a vibrant powerful core that, if mastered, opens up wide areas of knowledge in mathematics, science, literacy, history, social studies.”

  15. College and Career Readiness • What is that core? • What are fundamental “shifts” from how we have addressed literacy in the past?

  16. Standards Organization • A comprehensive K–5 section with four strands • Reading strand (includes Foundational Skills) • Writing strand • Speaking and Listening strand • Language strand • Two content area-specific sections for grades 6-12 with four strands • • ELA • Reading strand • Writing strand • Speaking and Listening strand • Language strand • • History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects • Reading strand • Writing strand

  17. What Matters Most • A few essential things done • Differently • Susan Pimentel, ELA Team Coordinator for CCSS

  18. Fundamental “Shifts” for Realizing College and Career Readiness • •Shared responsibility for literacy development. • Teachers address literacy across content areas and grades. (A staircase to readiness, across the curriculum). • • Text complexity and range. • Teachers help students read, write about, and discuss texts of sufficient complexity and range—in all content areas.

  19. Increasing Text Complexity

  20. 1962

  21. 8XGreater Independent reading assigned by college professors is ______ times greater than the quantity of reading assigned to high school seniors.

  22. High School and College U.S. History Textbooks

  23. Lily’s beautiful and juicy language… • impulse borne of kindness • radical recalibration • instructional interludes • nothing but the most beautiful • texts will do

  24. Text Complexity

  25. Fundamental “Shifts” for Realizing College and Career Readiness • •Shared responsibility for literacy development. Teachers address literacy across content areas. • • Text complexity and range. Teachers help students read, write about, and discuss texts of sufficient complexity and range—in all content areas. • • New grounding in informational texts. • • 50% of all reading in the elementary grades • • 75% of all reading in the secondary grades • • Close reading of texts. Reading that requires analysis and inference based on evidence in the text; discussions are “text-dependent.”

  26. NAEP Reading Framework Range of Reading: Increased Attention to Reading Informational Texts (National Assessment Governing Board 2009, 11)

  27. Fundamental “Shifts” for Realizing College and Career Readiness • • Emphasis on argument. • Premium put on written and spoken arguments; focus on logical reasoning. • • Short, focused research projects… • • Writing to Sources. • Writing in response to reading texts • • Focus on academic language. • Textual, oral, written

  28. Summing Up the “Shifts” in the Common Core State Standards A Perspective from David Coleman, ELA Team Coordinator “What the standards demand is for students to read like a detective and to write like an investigative reporter.”

  29. Fundamental “Shifts” for Realizing College and Career Readiness • Evidence! • Evidence! • Evidence!

  30. Fundamental “Shifts” for Realizing College and Career Readiness • •Shared responsibility for literacy development. • • Text complexity and range • • New grounding in informational texts • • Close reading of texts • • Emphasis on argument • • Short, focused research projects • • Writing to Sources • • Focus on academic language • • Evidence…Evidence…Evidence!

  31. Fundamental “Shifts” for Realizing College and Career Readiness • Focusing on what matters most. • Time for teachers to teach. • Time for students to practice. • K-12 • Across the disciplines.

  32. Fundamental “Shifts” for Realizing College and Career Readiness • • Shared responsibility for literacy development. • • Text complexity and range • • New grounding in informational texts • • Close reading of texts • • Emphasis on argument • • Short, focused research projects • • “Writing to Sources” • • Focus on academic language • • Evidence…Evidence…Evidence!

  33. College and Career Readiness The Role of Argument in the Standards (Common Core State Standards Initiative 2010b, 24)

  34. Turn and Talk What is argument? Academic Language for All Students

  35. What is Argument? What might students say?

  36. What might students say? • Synonyms for the verb, to argue: fight, quarrel, disagree, bicker, wrangle, squabble, dispute, feud

  37. Table Task Least serious Most serious Work with your table group to arrange the following words in an array from left to right with the least serious way to argue on the left to the most serious on the right: Synonyms for the verb, to argue: quarrel, disagree, fight, dispute, feud

  38. What is Argument? A different kind of definition… An Academic Definition

  39. Academic Definition An argument is a reasoned, logical way of demonstrating that a writer’s position, belief, or conclusion is valid. • Synonyms for the academic definition: Argue: contend, assert, maintain, insist, hold, claim, reason, allege

  40. Persuasion and Argument What’s the difference between persuasion and argument?

  41. Difference between persuasion and argument In persuasion, the goal is to convince—to get others to believe as you believe. You can use emotional appeals and subjective or biased information to achieve your goal of persuasion. For an argument your goal is to establish that your claim is reasonable or logical. Your claim uses data, reliable authorities, evidence, textual support, primary and secondary sources.

  42. Guiding Question Why is it that the reading and writing of “argument” have become so important for college and career readiness?

  43. Why is Argument so Essential? Excerpt from the CCSS for ELA Appendix A: The unique importance of argument in college and careers is asserted eloquently by Joseph M. Williams and Lawrence McEnerney of the University of Chicago Writing Program. As part of their attempt to explain to new college students the major differences between good high school and college writing, Williams and McEnerney define argument not as “wrangling” but as “a serious and focused conversation among people who are intensely interested in getting to the bottom of things cooperatively.”:

  44. Why is Argument so Essential? Those values are also an integral part of your education in college. Four four years, you are asked to read, do research, gather data, analyze it, think about it, and then communicate it to readers in a form…which enables them to assess it and use it. You are asked to do this not because we expect you all to become professional scholars, but because in just about any profession you pursue, you will do research, think about what you find, make decisions about complex matters, and then explain those decisions—usually in writing—to others who have a stake in your decisions being sound ones. In an Age of Information, what most professionals do is research, think, and make arguments. (And part of the value of doing your own thinking and writing is that it makes you much better at evaluating the thinking and writing of others.) (ch1) Common Core State Standards for ELA, Appendix A

  45. CCR Anchor Standards Reading Standard Eight: Delineate and evaluate the argument and specific claims in a text, including the validity of the reasoning as well as the relevance and sufficiency of the evidence. Writing Standard One: Write arguments to support claims in an analysis of substantive topics or texts, using valid reasoning and relevant and sufficient evidence.

  46. Partner Task • With a partner, decide on the learning progression for building students’ capacity to read and evaluate arguments, K-12. • Write the grade level next to the standards for: Kindergarten Grades 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 Grades 9-10 and 11-12 Academic Language for All Students

  47. Answer Key

  48. Answer Key

  49. Answer Key

  50. The Vision of a College and Career Ready Student They value evidence. Students cite specific evidence when offering oral or written interpretation of a text. They use relevant evidence when supporting their own points in writing and speaking, making their reasoning clear to the reader or listener, and they constructively evaluate others’ use of evidence. (Common Core State Standards Initiative 2010c)

More Related