common core state standards: what’s the story? october 15, 2012

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Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

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Page 1: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

 

Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story?October 15, 2012

Page 2: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Today’s Agenda: Morning Session

• 8:30-8:45 Opening Reflections/Prayer• 8:50 AM Chapter One Change Leadership:

Activity • 9:20 AM General Info.: CCSS, Six Shifts, and

PARCC • 10:00 AM Break • 10:15 AM Deconstructing Standards (Stretch

break 10:40) • 11:00 AM Save the Last Word• 11: 30 AM Lunch

Page 3: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Today’s Agenda: Afternoon Session

• 12:15 PM Text-based Questions & Answers/ Close Reading

• Activity: “ The Golden Touch” and “ So You Want to Be President?”/Gallery Walk

• 1: 00 PM Break • 1: 05 PM Close Reading Video “ The Making of A

Scientist”• 1: 40 PM Reflection on Close Reading/ Green &

Red Flags • 2: 00 PM Evaluation (CPDU’s) and Adjourn

Page 4: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Context: Need for CCSS

• Read: Chapter One of Change Leadership

• Annotate the text as you read using the following symbols: = Something known R= Reminds meL = New learning = Important? = Question?? = Confusion! = Surprising Information

Page 5: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

“ Reframing the Problem”

• For reflection: “ How might the information presented by the authors assist you in your efforts in communicating the need for the new CCSS with your faculty?”

Page 6: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Skills for a Knowledge Economy“The rigor that matters most for the twenty-first century is demonstrated mastery of the core competencies for work, citizenship and life-long learning. In today’s world it’s not how much you know that matters; it’s what you can do with what you know.”

-Tony Wagner

The Global Achievement Gap

Page 7: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Background

• Common Core Standards– Coordinated by the National Governors

Association (NGA) and the Council of Chief State Officers (CCSSO)

–Written by…• K-12 teachers• Postsecondary faculty • State curriculum and assessment experts• Discipline Area Researchers• National organizations

Page 8: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

• Standards from individual high-performing countries and provinces were used to inform content, structure, and language. Writing teams looked for examples of rigor, coherence and progressions.

CCSS: Evidence Based

Page 9: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Top Performing Countries

• Mathematics: 1. Belgium2. Canada ( Alberta)3. China

• English Language Arts 1. Australia ( New South Wales and

Victoria)2. Canada ( Alberta, British Columbia and

Ontario)3. England

Page 10: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

College and Career Readiness (CCR)Standards• What do students need to know to be

college and career ready by the end of grade 12?

Page 11: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

CCR and CCSS: Reading Literature• 10 CCR standards for Reading – CCR Standard # 1: Read closely to determine

what the text says explicitly and to make logical inferences from it; cite specific textual evidence when writing or speaking to support conclusions drawn from the text.

– CCSS RL# 1: Ask and answer questions to demonstrate understanding of a text, referring explicitly to the text as the basis for the answers.

Page 12: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

K-12 ELA CCSS Standards

1. Reading a) Literature RL ( K-12) – 10 standardsb) Informational Text RI (K-12)- 10 standardsc) Foundational RF (K-5)–4 standards (cross

disciplinary)d) Reading in History RH (6-12)- 10 standardse) Reading in Science and Tech. Subjects RST

(6-12)-10 standards

2. Writing 3. Speaking and Listening 4. Language

Page 13: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Reading: RL, RI, RH*, RST*: Sub-headings• Key Ideas and Details: Standards 1-2-

3 • Craft and Structure: Standards 4-5-6• Integration of Knowledge and Ideas:

7-8-9• Range of Reading and Level of Text

Complexity: Standard 10

* Grades 6-12 only

Page 14: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Subheadings: Reading: RF ( K-5 only)• Understanding Concepts of Print• Phonological Awareness• Phonics and Word Recognition• Fluency

Page 15: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Grade Progressions

• Standard 1.RL.1: Ask and answer questions about key details in a text.

• Standard 5.RL.1:Quote accurately from a text when explaining what the text says explicitly and when drawing inferences from the text.

• Standard 8.RL.1: Cite the textual evidence that most strongly supports an analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text.

Page 16: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Key Design Considerations: ELA• Standards define year-end

expectations that lead to college/career readiness.

• Focus on results rather than means.• Focus on an integrated model of

literacy.• Research and media skills blended

into the standards.• Focus and coherence in instruction

and assessment.

Page 17: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

What’s not in the Standards

• How teachers should teach.• All that can or should be taught.• The nature of advanced work beyond the

CCSS.• The interventions for students well below

grade level.• The full range of support for English

language learners and students with special needs.

• Everything needed to be college and career ready.

Page 18: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Six Shifts

1. Balance of Literary & Informational Text

2. Literacy in Content Areas 3. Increasing Complexity of Texts 4. Text-based Questions and Answers5. Writing Using Evidence 6. Academic Vocabulary

Page 19: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

ELA Major Shifts: Recap

• Shift to higher level thinking skills.• Increasing focus on information

passages.• Not coverage, but depth and focus:

RIGOR.• Writing about texts and citing

sources.

Page 20: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Building Knowledge by Balancing Texts Grade Literary Informational

4 50% 50%

8 45% 55%

12 30% 70%

Page 21: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Text Complexity Bands/Lexile RangesText Complexity Grade Bands: CCSS

Old Lexile Ranges Lexile Ranges Aligned to CCR

K-1 N/A N/A

2-3 450-725 450-790

4-5 645-845 770-980

6-8 860-1010 955-1155

9-10 960-1115 1080-1305

11-CCR 1070-1220 1215-1355

Page 22: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Readability FormulasFlesch-Kincaid Grade Level Formula Score given as a grade level equivalent

based on word and sentence length.

Dale-Chall Readability Formula Word frequency and sentence length converted to grade levels. 

ATOS- Accelerated Reader Word difficulty ( by grade level), word length, sentence length, and text length. 

COH-METRIX ( University of Memphis) Factors in the cohesiveness of a text as well as readability factors.

Page 23: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Goal of Close Reading

• The ability to discern and cite evidence from the text to support one’s assertions. • Analytic Reading + Analytic Writing = Analytic Thinking!

Page 24: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Six Shifts

1. Balance of Literary & Informational Text

2. Literacy in Content Areas 3. Increasing Complexity of Texts 4. Text-based Questions and Answers5. Writing Using Evidence 6. Academic Vocabulary

Page 25: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Three Types of Writing Argumentative Informational/

Explanatory/ExpositoryNarrative

•Support a claim •Sound reasoning •Relevant evidence

•Increase subject knowledge•Explain a process•Enhance understanding

•Conveys experience•Tells a story

Page 26: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

NAEP 2011 Writing Framework

Grade To Persuade To Explain To Convey Experience

4 30% 35% 35%

8 35% 35% 30%

12 40% 40% 20%

Page 27: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Reflection on Writing

• What types of writing are your students doing?

• Does it meet the standards?• What might you need to consider?

Page 28: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Rigor Activity

• Collect assessments/assignments for one week.

• Collectively sort using Bloom’s Taxonomy: – EvaluationCreating – SynthesisEvaluating– AnalysisAnalyzing– ApplicationApplying– ComprehensionUnderstanding– KnowledgeRemembering

Page 29: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Assessments: Spring 2015

• # 1 Goal = Create high quality assessments

• PARCC and Smarter Balance: assessment consortiums

• PARCC Goal: “ Our intent is not to create another punitive test- but to create a valuable diagnostic that can tell us what is working well and what is not.”

Page 30: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Assurances for Assessment Quality• Texts Worth Reading• Questions Worth Answering • Better Standards Demand Better

Questions• Fidelity to the Standards

Page 31: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Assessments focus on the shifts!• Complexity of texts and the

academic language of texts. • Reading and writing grounded in

evidence from texts.• Building knowledge through content

rich nonfiction.

Page 32: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Innovations in Item Types

• Evidence-Based Selected Response (EBSR)

• Technology-Enhanced Constructed Response (TECR)

• Range of Prose Constructed Responses (PCR)

Page 33: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Grade 3 Sample ERBCPart A What is one main idea

of “How Animals Live ?”

a. There are many types of animals on the planet.

b. Animals need water to live.

c. There are different ways to sort animals.*

d. Animals begin their life cycles in different forms.

Part B

Which sentence from the article best supports the answer to Part A?

e. “Animals get oxygen from air or water.”

f. Animals can be grouped by their traits.”*

g. “Worms are invertebrates.”

h. “All animals grow and change over time.

Page 34: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

Grade 6 Sample TECR

Drag the words from the word box into the correct

locations on the graphic to show the life cycle of a

butterfly as described in “How Animals Live.”

Words:

Pupa Adult

Egg Larva

Page 35: Common Core State Standards: What’s the Story? October 15, 2012

PARCC Assessments

• Moving beyond multiple choice questions as they are hard to write to assess the rigor of the CCSS. Focus on production not just identification to determine mastery.

• Currently:– 2 PARCC provided assessments in 2014-

2015• Summative and near end of year• 1= machine scored• 1= written responses