Education Week Teacher: Four Myths About the ELA Common-Core Standards - 0 views
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CommonCore CCSS Common Core ELA Common Core Standards standards

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Text complexity is a fixed number.
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"In the meantime, the Standards recommend that multiple quantitative measures be used whenever possible and that their results be confirmed or overruled by a qualitative analysis of the text in question."
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Common-core training materials (like this exemplar, for instance) include some not-so-subtle suggestions that "prereading" activities and discussions are a bad idea.
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we began referring to the "just start reading" strategy as a "cold read," and we struggled with whether cold reading was always an effective instructional approach.
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I tried to understand the meaning behind this message about prereading activities. Ultimately, it was about making sure students built comprehension by actually reading a text rather than listening attentively to what others are saying about that text.
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a teacher who says, "We've read memoirs before. What are some of the rhetorical devices we might find in a memoir? Ok, now let's read the first two pages of this memoir together. When you see one of these devices, put a checkmark beside it. Then we will stop to discuss what is going on in this text. Be ready to discuss at least one spot you've marked."
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the first teacher's preview of the plot doesn't create a need to read, and actually makes it easy for students not to read. That teacher is also missing an opportunity to set up the expectation that students should read closely, to analyze the text.
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the second teacher activates students' background knowledge and provides students with a beginning framework to help them read closely and analyze the structure of the text. Neither of these teachers is choosing to do a "cold read," but only one of them is setting students up to do a "close read." Over time, the second teacher's approach is much more likely to develop students with the capacity to "just start reading."
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"Cold reading" is an instructional approach, not a standard. Experiment with cold reading for the sake of building independence in your students,
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we want students to be able to demonstrate their comprehension by responding to questions that drive them back to the text for answers. But let's not forget the steps that teach students how to answer text-dependent questions.
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The focus on text-dependent questions in the instructional shifts documents that accompany the core seems to affirm that approach. But these documents omit modeling and processing, which should come in between assigning and assessing.
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invite students to the reading through purpose and show students how to read for that purpose through a think-aloud or other modeling strategy.
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It's the middle—the modeling and processing—where students actually get a clue as to how to be better readers. The questions tell us that they got there (or not).
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long before the common-core standards came on the scene, reading specialists like Harvey and Goudvis were already arguing that we have wandered too far from analytic, nonfiction reading and writing.
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The standards even recommend a full 50/50 split between fiction and nonfiction in the elementary grades, giving way to an 80/20 proportion in the secondary grades.
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the common core is clear that its recommendations span the reading expectations for all core subjects. As a result, it is not advocating for us ELA teachers to dump poetry and novels except for, say, two months out of the 10 in our school year. Rather, we’re encouraged to partner with our colleagues in a substantive way, and work together to help kids approach nonfiction texts with critical and active minds.
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the common core does make some mystifying genre distinctions. All creative reading and writing is lumped under the "narrative" umbrella, implying it is always a description of logical, sequential events, usually personal
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Teachers will need to approach this particular facet of the core with the same critical thinking that the core itself advocates.
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The standards are pushing us to examine our practices, and examine them we must. We must push ourselves in the same way we are being expected to push our students. We educators must thoughtfully read the complex common-core documents in their entirety, write rigorous lesson plans, and listen critically to those who are trying to help us learn and change.