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anonymous

Education Week: Districts Gear Up for Shift to Informational Texts - 2 views

  • choose books about those real-world topics as part of a unit on truth. Students are dissecting the sources, statistics, and anecdotes the authors use to make their arguments
    • anonymous
       
      Notice how the emphasis is on "dissecting" the information in the text, not necessarily on the text itself as a "good example" of informational text. It's more about getting students to be critical consumers of the "truthfulness" of the author's message based on quality resources to back up the author's viewpoint. Excellent point about what "close reading of the text really is!"
  • Often, our nod to nonfiction is the autobiography or true-story version of something,"
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  • But there's a real gap in other kinds of nonfiction
  • I'm relying on different kinds of strategies and a lot more explicit teaching,
  • We spend a lot of time talking about attributes of nonfiction, like how to read an interview. Or how to tell the difference between fact and opinion."
  • Using fiction has many positive and useful values, and it shouldn't be lost or pushed so far to the sidelines that it disappears."
  • The common standards' emphasis on informational text arose in part from research suggesting that employers and college instructors found students weak at comprehending technical manuals, scientific and historical journals, and other texts pivotal to their work in those arenas.
  • The common core's vision of informational text includes literary nonfiction, as well as historical documents, scientific journals and technical manuals, biographies and autobiographies, essays, speeches, and information displayed in charts, graphs, or maps, digitally or in print.
  • vocabulary
  • professional development aimed at helping teachers think through how to craft instructional units and tasks reflecting the shift in the standards
  • district set up a digital "common-core library" that includes 13 "bundles" of sample activities, lesson plans, and other resources for instruction based on informational text
  • The immediate challenge of the informational-text emphasis, however, lies more in training than in materials,
  • [it's] actually figuring out how to structure classrooms so we speak to text and kids are using text in conversations with each other and are grappling with the meaning of text.
  • we need to make sure that by the end of high school, students are reading science journals,
  • right now, just simply the act of reading the science textbook and absolutely making the textbook—rather than the teacher—generate the answers.
  • It's one thing to tell school districts that we must do close reading of informational text," he said. "It's very different to say, 'Here is what's involved with a close reading.' "
  • Treasures does include some informational text, "but not sufficiently, we would say. We wanted something that would supplement that."
  • elementary reading coaches have met with Nell K. Duke, the Michigan State University professor who wrote Buzz About IT, and are meeting monthly to study her research, Ms. Acquavita said
  • Funding for materials and professional development that reflect the standards could prove to be an issue for states, and, as a result, for companies that produce them
  • We have been unpleasantly surprised that a number of states are only now starting to wrestle with the cost of this,
  • New criteria for adoptions of basal instructional materials for the bridge year, approved by the state in January, specify that materials must include "high-quality, complex informational text" in the ratios specified by the standards.
  • Its statewide literacy plan delves into explanations of six major shifts in the English/language arts standards, and the state has also produced an online "toolkit" offering teachers instructional videos and other resources on those shifts.
  • The biggest concern state officials are hearing from teachers is that they be assured of having adequate lesson plans, curriculum maps, and other resources to teach the standards once that begins in 2012-13
  • o convey its expectations for new materials, the state has hosted a webinar for publishers, pointing them to the "publishers' criteria" developed by the common-standards writers for grades K-2 and 3-12, which describe what is required for materials to align well with the standards.
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    information text- actions by districts to prepare for CCSS changes
anonymous

Common Core: 7 Recommendations for Effective Implementation -- THE Journal - 4 views

  • , "Fulfilling the Promise of the Common Core State Standards: Moving from Adoption to Implementation to Sustainability," identified challenges and best practices for Common Core implementation and offered recommendations for easing the transition from state to common standards
  • "Educators are unclear about where to focus their instructional efforts, and many school leaders are overwhelmed by trying to lead multiple, major reform efforts and uncertain about where to direct professional development. Furthermore, the simultaneous reforms have exceeded the capacity of most state and local education agencies, compromising educators' ability to best implement any reform." according to the report.
  • As a consequence, the report's authors argued, teachers are "charging ahead" with their own inadequately informed approaches to blending state and common standards, such as the "crosswalk approach," in which educators try to correlate verbiage in the Common Core standards with their own state standards to determine whether the standard has been taught.
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  • according to the report, this approach "fails to adequately capture the level of content mastery, rigor, and depth of change necessary to meet the expectations of college and career readiness in the Common Core standards."
  • the report identified several other challenges affecting implementation:
  • Ongoing budget crises at the state and local level;
  • The misconception that the Common Core State Standards are federal standards;
  • Initiative fatigue on the part of teachers in the midst of simultaneous and sometimes conflicting educational policy shifts;
  • The need to modify teacher preparation programs;
  • The need for colleges and universities to adapt their admissions practices based on the changes happening at the K-12 level; and
  • Communications between state agencies and educators.
  • Educators themselves also identified several concerns, including the need for:
  • Information about how Common Core implementation will affect policies governing their careers and teaching practices;
  • Access to model lessons, resources, and professional development;
  • Time for planning; and
  • Information about Common Core assessments and the technologies that will be required to implement them.
Colleen Broderick

Introducing ... The Common Core: ELA by Kevin Hodgson on Prezi - 4 views

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    Prezi overview - targeted, good information.
anonymous

Open or Save PDF - 4 views

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    very detailed information on RFI for using Artificial Intelligence capabilities in the new CCSSI assessments
anonymous

Education Week: Common Core Found to Rank With Respected Standards - 0 views

  • The common-core standards
  • are generally aligned to the leading state standards, international standards, and university standards at the high-school-exit level, but are more rigorous in some content areas,
  • compared the content and curriculum standards for California and Massachusetts; the Texas College and Career Readiness Standards
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  • the International Baccalaureate standards; and the Knowledge and Skills for University Success
  • The authors wanted to see how closely the content covered, the range of material included, and the depth of that material correlated with the Common Core State Standards Initiative.
  • alignment in the topics covered and the range of content between the common-core standards and the five others, the common core demanded a bit more cognitive complexity in some topics, particularly English/language arts, the report says.
  • The comparison standards lacked the depth of challenge in reading for informational texts, writing, and reading and writing for literacy, and, on the math side, in geometry. However, some of the rigor of the common core will be defined by examples of student work and can’t yet be measured for depth of knowledge required
  • the report is not meant to measure the quality of one group of standards over another, but rather to test the conclusion that the common-core standards place a strong emphasis on preparing students for postsecondary education by comparing the standards with others that also focus on college readiness.
  • The study continues a line of evidence that the core standards that states have adopted have a solid research base and will help teachers and students,”
  • The next step for states is to ensure that during the implementation of the standards, teachers have the support and tools that they need to teach the new standards.”
  • some experts ask whether having comparable international, national, and state-to-state standards means that the common core makes it more likely a student will be prepared for college.
  • States also shouldn’t focus on trying to make sure everything in their standards and all the details line up exactly with the common core as they do their own in-depth comparisons
  • Instead, they should look for broader correlations.
  • different standards have different purposes
  • the comparison and alignment of the “long-standing, well-respected” IB standards with the common core was particularly noteworthy, given that the common-core crafters have claimed that they are internationally benchmarked, and the results of the study could give some support to the claim.
  • Comparison and alignment with Texas, a state that didn’t adopt the common core, is also important,
  • Texas has been a leader in the establishment of college- and career-readiness standards, and overall received positive remarks for strong and in-depth coverage
  • what we see are findings that Texas College and Career Readiness Standards are found to be at or above the standards contained within the common-core state standards.
  • According to a related study EPIC released in August, most entry-level college professors found the common-core high school standards were relevant to college-level courses.
  • There’s a big danger if you look at these standards as everything you need to know to be ready because it’s not.
  • The common-core standards are a step in the right direction, but we still need more information on what makes a student college- and career-ready and still have a way to go toward creating stronger standards and assessments than [evaluating a student] by a cut score on a test.”
anonymous

Quick Guide to the Common Core: Key Expectations Explained - Vander Ark on Innovation -... - 5 views

  • English Language Arts The text is more complex.
  • Since the 1960s, text difficulty in textbooks has been declining (Source: CCSS Appendix A)
  • has created a significant gap between what students are reading in twelfth grade and what is expected of them when they arrive at college.
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  • the CCSS cites an ACT report called Reading Between the Line that says that the ability to answer questions about complex text is a key predictor of college success.
  • The text covers a wider range of genres and formats.
  • In order to be college-, career-, and life-ready, students need to be familiar and comfortable with texts from a broad range of genres and formats. The Common Core State Standards focus on a broader range and place a much greater emphasis on informational text.
  • The Common Core sets expectation that, in grades three through eight, 50 percent of the text be expository. Specifically, in grades three through five, there is a call for more scientific, technical, and historic texts, and in grades six through eight, more literary nonfiction including essays, speeches, opinion pieces, literary essays, biographies, memoirs, journalism, and historical, scientific, technical, and economic accounts.
  • In addition, students are expected to understand the presentation of texts in a variety of multimedia formats, such as video.
  • There is a greater emphasis on evidence-based questioning.
  • The standards have shifted away from cookie-cutter questions like, "What is the main idea?" and moved toward questions that require a closer reading of the text.
  • The questions are more specific, and so the students must be more adept at drawing evidence from the text and explaining that evidence orally and in writing.
  • Students are exposed to more authentic text.
  • The Publishers' Criteria for the Common Core State Standards, developed by two of the lead authors of the standards, emphasize a shift away from text that is adapted, watered down, or edited, and instead, focus on text in its true form. While scaffolding is still considered an important element when introducing students to new topics, it should not pre-empt or replace the original text. The scaffolding should be used to help children grasp the actual text, not avoid it.
  • The standards have a higher level of specificity.
  • There is a great amount of flexibility for educators to determine how they want to implement the new standards and the materials they choose to use and/or create; however, the standards themselves are quite specific.
  • Additional Expectations
  • Shared responsibility for students' literacy development. In grades six through twelve, there are specific standards for Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects. The message here is that content area teachers must have a shared role in developing students' literacy skills.
  • Compare and synthesize multiple sources. Students are expected to integrate their understanding of what they are currently reading with texts that they have previously read.
  • need to answer how what they have just read compares to what they have learned before.
  • Focus on academic vocabulary. One of the biggest gaps between students, starting in the earliest grades, is their vocabulary knowledge. The new standards require a focus on academic vocabulary, presenting vocabulary in context, and using the same vocabulary across various types of complex texts from different disciplines.
  • The Common Core State Standards are not "test prep" standards. They aim to teach students how to think and raise the bar on their level of comprehension and their ability to articulate their knowledge.
  • However, the depth of the standards and the significant differences between the CCSS and current standards in most states require a whole new way of teaching, so even the most experienced teachers will need to make great changes and require support in doing so.
  • A lot of publishers are repurposing old materials and saying that they are "aligned" with the Common Core.
Child Therapy

Coaching Both Parent And Child - 1 views

I want to see my kid happy and grow to his full potential. That is why, when I see him having trouble opening up to me or to other people, I feel bad as a parent. I feel that I am not doing a good ...

started by Child Therapy on 28 Sep 12 no follow-up yet
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