This step is the most critical but most often misunderstood. What is a subject-matter essential, or "standard," and what is not? It is specific, not abstract, but it does not descend to detail. In history a typical standard asks students to understand the causes of the First World War, with an eye to the technological, economic, social, and political forces at work, together with the roles of individuals, of accident, and ordinary confusion. It does not ask students to "master the concept of conflict in world history." Nor does it ask them to memorize the names of the twenty central characters in the tragedy of the summer of 1914.
Year-Long Scope - Sequence - 0 views
Text Complexity Grade Bands and Lexile Bands - 0 views
http://www.hinsdalelibrary.info/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/Lexile-brochure-nov-12.pdf - 0 views
http://www.rasch.org/pm/pm1-09.pdf - 0 views
Publisher's Criteria - 0 views
http://commoncore.tcoe.org/content/public/doc/tcoe_continuum_grades_K_8.pdf - 0 views
Tri-State/EQuIP Rubric | EngageNY - 0 views
Illinois Common Core Resource Page - 0 views
Structure of the Model Content Frameworks for ELA/Literacy | PARCC - 0 views
Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium - 0 views
PARCC Model Content Frameworks | PARCC - 0 views
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