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Tracy Watanabe

achievethecore.org :: Text-Dependent Questions - 1 views

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    The Common Core State Standards expect students to use evidence from texts to present careful analyses, well-defended claims, and clear information. A central tool to help students develop these skills is text-dependent questions: questions that can only be answered by referring back to the text. On this page teachers can find tools to help write and evaluate text-dependent questions, as well as a link to lesson materials with examples of text-dependent questions included.
Tracy Watanabe

Teaching Higher Order Thinking Skills In Middle School - 1 views

  • Higher Order Questions: A Path to Deeper Learning Grades 6-8, ELA, Literature Common Core Standards: ELA.RL.6.1 ELA.RL.6.5 ELA.SL.6.1c
  • Create higher order questions in order to analyze and discuss a text
  • Questions to Consider How does Ms. Francisco help her students develop higher order questions? What do students learn from both writing and discussing questions? How do students test the validity of their questions? Why is this step important?
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  • ELA.RL.6.1, ELA.RL.6.5, ELA.SL.6.1c
Tracy Watanabe

Grounded in evidence. Part 2: Informational text | The Common Core Classroom by Emily S... - 1 views

  • Creating Text-Dependent Questions for Close Reading Step One: Identify the core understandings and key ideas of the text Step Two: Start small to build confidence Step Three: Target vocabulary and text structure Step Four: Tackle tough sections head‐on Step Five: Create coherent sequences of text-dependent questions Step Six: Identify the standards that are being addressed Question Stems for Close Reading of Informational Texts (Adapted from Race to the Top/Strategies for Close Reading) What clues show you … Point to the evidence … How does the author describe X in paragraph X? What are the exact words? What reasons does the book give for X? Where are they? Share a sentence that (tells you what the text is about, or describes X, or gives a different point of view) What is the purpose of paragraph X? What are the clues that tell you this? What does the author think about X? Why do you think so — what is your evidence? What do you predict will happen next? What are the clues that make you think so?
  • Examples of Text-Dependent Questions Could people live on Earth if there were no Sun? Why or why not? Use evidence from the text to support your answer. Explain why conditions on a distant planet like Neptune are so different than those on Earth. In the end, our task is unwavering: create questions that provide opportunities to teach strategies to our kids so they feel successful when they search for evidence and key words to answer text-dependent questions. Don't allow our students to answer a question without evidence and proof. Hold our students to high expectations, and constantly use those magic words, "Tell me more.""
Tracy Watanabe

achievethecore.org / Basal Alignment Project - 2 views

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    Text Dependent questions -- 3rd-5th grades for Harcourt Trophies There's also a 6th-8th grade group too. These groups rewrite the questions of the book. -- We can always look at the quality and bump it up if needed. But, much of the work is done as a starting point. Just join on Edmodo using the codes listed on these pages.
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    I just joined their group and looked at one example. I think this is definitely something that is worth looking into further and possibly sharing out with teachers.
Tracy Watanabe

ELA Lesson Planning: Evidence And Arguments - 0 views

  • Lesson Objective Plan a lesson about identifying main ideas and developing arguments Length 6 min Questions to Consider How does Mr. Hanify integrate the different Common Core standards into this lesson? Notice the varied opportunities for student discussion throughout the lesson. How does Mr. Hanify design activities that scaffold student learning? Common Core Standards ELA.RI.9-10.2, ELA.W.9-10.6, ELA.SL.9-10.1a
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    Part 1 -- lesson planning argumentative writing writing for an authentic audience through blog
Tracy Watanabe

At an East San Jose high school, students react to new Common Core test | EdSource Today - 0 views

  • “With this test, you had to make your point and explain your answer,” said Desiree Jones. “In the future, you may have to do the same thing – back up your claim –where you work. You can’t just say, ‘That’s good.’ You’ll need to say what you think and why.”
  • Citing evidence, defending a position Desiree was referring to the performance assessment part of the test. It represents the biggest change from the state tests.
  • They were asked to take a position, using evidence based on what they read. They could use a split screen to cut and paste from the articles – a task that some students found difficult to do, especially for math problems, using their portable Chromebooks  – and they could write as much and take as much time as they wanted.
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  • Students said there were annoying aspects to doing a test on a computer, but overall they said they preferred it. They said it was cumbersome to type out a formula; they complained there was no scratch paper to solve math problems (actually, scratch paper is allowed, but a proctor on the first day misread the rules).
  • “Geometry concepts are hard to remember,” said Daisy De La Cruz, who is now taking Calculus. Desiree said, “In the past, questions went gradually from easy to hard. This one was jumbled.” Field tests are designed to test the validity of questions, not simulate actual tests that students will take starting next year. As a result, there was an intentional randomness in the question selection and order that caught students by surprise. Questions ranged from pre-algebra they took in middle school to graphing problems in pre-calculus, students said.
Tracy Watanabe

3 Digital Tools to Encourage Close Reading - 0 views

  • Dr. Doug Fischer defines close reading this way: “Close reading is a careful and purposeful re-reading of the text.”
  • (PARCC) defines it this way:
  • ... and explains its importance:
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  • Close reading is a great approach to turning “complex” into “simple” by providing concrete steps to decode material.
  • Here are three approaches to evaluating whether students have closely-read the complex text: Ask questions that are open-ended and require evidence. Ask questions that require students to think and understand what they're reading. Ask questions that plumb the depths of the text being read .while considering only information contained there, not from outside sources
  • Three digital tools make close reading happen: iAnnotate Snap! Learning Reading A-Z
Tracy Watanabe

wwwatanabe: High-Level Thinking, DOK, and Shifts Needed in Schools - 1 views

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    Walks through math example for creating DOK Level 1-4 questions/tasks, and thinking routines to help promote it.
Tracy Watanabe

From Common Core Standards to Curriculum: Five Big Ideas by Jay McTighe and Grant Wiggins - 2 views

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    Big Idea # 1 - The Common Core Standards have new emphases and require a careful reading. Big Idea # 2 - Standards are not curriculum. Big Idea # 3 - Standards need to be "unpacked." When working with the Common Core, we recommend that educators "unpack" them into four broad categories - 1) Long term Transfer Goals, 2) Overarching Understandings, 3)  Overarching Essential Questions, and 4) a set of recurring Cornerstone Tasks. Big Idea # 4 - A coherent curriculum is mapped backwards from desired performances. Big Idea #5 - The Standards come to life through the assessments.
Tracy Watanabe

Teaching Students To Use Textual Evidence - 0 views

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    "Lesson Objective Identify, discuss, and apply textual evidence Length 6 min Questions to Consider: How does each part of the lesson prepare students for writing? What skills do students develop in the lesson? How could the scaffolds Ms. Norris puts into place be taken away as students gain fluency? Common Core Standards ELA.RI.6.1, ELA.SL.6.1a, ELA.W.6.2a"
Tracy Watanabe

Literary Analysis Using Evidence And Analysis For Students - 0 views

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    Part 2 -- the lesson *Day 1 -- close read, discussion, -- differentiated , and 1 side presentation back to group to sum up discussion *Day 2 -- Socratic Seminar & Blogging Lesson Objective: Identify the main idea and make arguments about a text Length 12 min Questions to Consider: Notice the distinct parts to this lesson. How does Mr. Hanify scaffold and differentiate this lesson? How does the fishbowl strategy promote rich discussions? Why does Mr. Hanify choose to have students write a blog? Common Core Standards ELA.RI.9-10.2, ELA.W.9-10.6, ELA.SL.9-10.1a Close read with annotation = "Thinking Notes" Differentiation during close read and their small group tasks based on their strengths Socratic Seminar Blogging to write to authentic audience
Tracy Watanabe

Tips For Grading Students With The Common Core - 0 views

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    "Lesson Objective Assess learning using the Common Core Standards Length 1 min Questions to Consider How does the Common Core help Ms. Wu communicate with families and students? How could you educate families about the Common Core Standards? What can you learn from Ms. Wu about using the Common Core during planning and assessment?"
Tracy Watanabe

achievethecore.org :: Close Reading Exemplars - 3 views

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    "Common Core Close Reading Sample Lessons These exemplars contain full materials for two to five lessons each, including: Readings with teacher and student instructions Text dependent questions Student discussion activities Vocabulary and syntax tasks for challenging words and phrases Writing-based formative assesments Fiction and non-fiction lessons, searchable by grade levels. "
Tracy Watanabe

Technology & Engineering Passages | ReadWorks.org | The Solution to Reading Comprehension - 0 views

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    Great STEM reading passages with CCSS questions -- Click on link to see passage and click on links for Teacher's Guide K-8th grade passages (Scroll down for middle school science) - Reading passages for students (STEM) -- with Teacher Guide (click on links to see) for Common Core
Tracy Watanabe

Apache Junction man's volcano expertise called into question - 0 views

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    True story -- great for teaching writing standard #8 regarding validity and credibility of the source! And to think, it's a local!
Tracy Watanabe

Odell Education | Resources - Odell Education - 2 views

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    The one sample lesson I looked at was very complete. Worth looking at.
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