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Diocese of Houma Thibodaux Catholic Schools Common Core Standards Unpacking the Six Shifts For ELA/Literacy,K-12 and Math

Diocese of Houma Thibodaux Catholic Schools

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Diocese of Houma Thibodaux Catholic Schools. Common Core Standards Unpacking the Six Shifts For ELA/Literacy,K-12 and Math. COMMON CORE STANDARDS Unpacking the Six Shifts For ELA/Literacy,K-12. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Diocese of Houma Thibodaux Catholic Schools

Common Core Standards

Unpacking the Six Shifts For ELA/Literacy,K-12

andMath

Page 2: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

COMMON CORE STANDARDSUnpacking the Six Shifts For ELA/Literacy,K-12

• Edited and adapted from Powerpoint presentation-Module 2-How Will We Prepare Students for “College and Career Readiness”?; The Common Core Institute, January 2013

Page 3: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

ELA/Literacy Shifts

Staircase of Text

Complexity

Text-based Answers

Write from Sources

Build Knowledge in

the Disciplines

Common Core Fundamental

Shifts

Balance Literacy and

Informational Text

Build Academic

Vocabulary

Page 4: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Shift #1: Balancing Informational and Literary Text

Goals of the CCSS

The text that students read daily should include:• Kindergarten - 5: 50% Literary – 50% Informational

• Middle School: 45% Literary - 55% Informational

• High School: 30% Literary – 70% Informational

Page 5: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

What is informational text?

• Text designed to convey factual information, rather than tell or advance a narrative

• Examples include:

Science Text Social Studies/History Text Health Text Technical Texts: directions, manuals, forms Digital Sources Biographies, memoir, journal Graphs, Maps, and Charts Personal Essays, Speeches, Opinion Pieces

Page 7: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Shift #2: Building Knowledge in the Disciplines.

•Literacy standards for the content areas – not content standards

•Embedded expectations for grades K – 5 –Applicable for a range of subjects •Grades 6—12 are divided into two sections –English Language Arts –History/social studies, science, and technical

subjects

Page 8: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

A Multi-disciplinary Approach

Content-area teachers are not being asked to be English teachers.

•Each discipline requires unique forms of reading and writing.

•The way knowledge is acquired, developed and shared in a given field often requires discipline-specific skills.

Page 9: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Shift #3: Staircase of Complexity

We must systematically expose students to increasingly complex texts.

Page 10: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Preparing Our Students For College and Careers

Page 11: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

History/Social Studies & Science Literacy Common Core Standards

APPENDIX A: FINDINGS

•Students who fall short of ACT's college readiness benchmarks have the greatest difficulty with the test items involving the most complex text.

•K–12 reading assignments have become much less demanding in the last half-century, with an especially large drop-off in high school expectations.

Weston, S.P. (2010). “The giant text complexity challenge inside the new literacy standards.” The Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence.

Page 12: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

History/Social Studies & Science Literacy Common Core Standards

CCSS APPENDIX A: FINDINGS

•College reading assignments have moved in the opposite direction, becoming a bit harder over the same fifty years.

•High school teachers commonly give students many kinds of support and coaching to help them figure out the material, but college teachers expect students to pull the knowledge from the text on their own, making the gap in practical ability even wider than the gap in the texts themselves.

History/Social Studies & Science Literacy Common Core Standards

Page 13: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Text complexity: Appendix A

Reading Standards include exemplar texts (stories and literature, poetry, and informational texts) that illustrate appropriate level of complexity by grade

Text complexity is defined by: 1.Qualitative measures – levels of meaning, structure, language

conventionality and clarity, and knowledge demands 2.Quantitative measures – readability and other scores of text

complexity (word length or frequency, sentence length, text cohesion)

3.Reader and Task – background knowledge of reader, motivation, interests, and complexity generated by tasks assigned

Page 14: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Quantitative: rigor increases 2-3 grade levels

LEXILE® LEVELS TODAY AND WITH COMMON CORE

*COMMON CORE STATE STANDARDS FOR ENGLISH, LANGUAGE ARTS, APPENDIX A (Additional Information) NGA and CCSSO 2012

Page 15: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Typical Lexile text measures by grade

Page 16: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Qualitative features of text complexity

Informational Text

• Levels of Purpose • Structure • Language

Conventionality and Clarity

• Knowledge Demands

Literary Text

• Levels of Meaning • Structure • Language

Conventionality and Clarity

• Knowledge Demands

Page 17: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

The reader and task influences

Reader’s Influence• Cognitive Capabilities • Motivation • Knowledge • Experiences

Consider the Task• Teacher-Led Tasks • Individual Tasks • Question Types

Page 18: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Shift #4- Text-based Answers

•Far longer amounts of classroom time spent on text worth reading and rereading carefully

•Base answers on what has been read, not opinions or experience

•Recent study found that 80% of the questions students are asked when they are reading are answerable without direct reference to the text itself.

“Bringing the Common Core to Life," David Coleman, Student Achievement Partners, April 28, 2011.

Page 19: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Emphasis on Citing Textual Evidence

• Reading Anchor 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.

• Writing Anchor Standard 9 • Draw evidence from literary or informational texts to

support analysis, reflection, and research. • Emphasis on citing textual evidence

Page 20: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Emphasis on argument & evidence

Writing Anchor Standard 1 –Write arguments to support claims in an analysis of substantive

topics or texts, using valid reasoning and relevant and sufficient evidence.

Speaking & Listening Anchor Standard 3 –Evaluate a speaker’s point of view, reasoning, use of evidence and

rhetoric.

Speaking & Listening Anchor Standard 5 –Present information, findings, and supporting evidence….

Page 21: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Emphasizing text-based answers

•Model close reading. •Sequence questions to draw students into the texts. •Pre-teach vocabulary and/or background to scaffold without pre-teaching the

content of the texts. •“Step back” and allow the readers space and time to experience the texts

unmediated. •Rich and rigorous student conversations dependent on reading a central text. •Set up questions so students draw their own conclusions and back them up

with evidence from the text.

Source: Oregon Dept of Ed

Page 22: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Shift #5: Writing From Sources

To build a foundation for college and career readiness, students need to learn to use writing as a way of offering and supporting opinions, demonstrating understanding of the subjects they are studying, and conveying real and imagined experiences and events.

Source: Competency Model and Provisional Learning Progressions

Page 23: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Three text types

• Argument • Informational/Explanatory • Narrative

Page 24: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Argument

Page 25: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Video

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jt_2jI010WU&feature=related

Page 26: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Shift #6: Build Academic Vocabulary

•Academic vocabulary – the language of power across all content areas

•Use vocabulary to express understanding of the content (not just memorize)

•Vocabulary: –Tier 1 - Everyday Words (implicit) –Tier 2 - Academic Vocabulary –Tier 3 - Domain Specific Words

Page 27: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Three tiers of words

Tier 1– Basic, concrete, encountered in conversation/ oral vocabulary; words most student will know at a particular grade level ◦e.g., school, house, walk, eat, animal, road

Tier 2–Abstract, general academic (across content areas); encountered in written language; high utility across instructional areas ◦e.g., consistent, expectation, observation, relative, accumulate

Tier 3– Highly specialized, subject-specific; low occurrences in texts; lacking generalization ◦e.g., trapezoid, tonsillectomy, carburetor, lava

Source: Oregon Dept. of Ed.

Page 28: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Why is “academic vocabulary” important?

• Are critical to understanding academic texts • Appear in all sorts of texts and are highly generalizable • Require deliberate effort to learn • Are far more likely to appear in written texts than in

speech • Often represent subtle or precise ways to say otherwise

relatively simple things • Are seldom heavily scaffolded by authors or teachers,

unlike Tier 3 words Source: Oregon Dept of Ed

Page 29: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Math Common Core Shifts

MathCommon

CoreShifts

Dual Intensity

Focus

Coherence

Application

DeepUnderstanding

Fluency

Page 31: Diocese of Houma Thibodaux  Catholic Schools

Jigsaw ActivityMaterials:

Literacy Shifts: 2 documents per shiftMath Shifts: 1 document per shiftGroup assignment

Task:1. Read all materials, including the essential questions.2. Through discussion and collaboration, identify key

concepts.3. Create a graphic organizer which includes these key

concepts.4. Present to the faculty.