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Try This: An island has no currency but instead has the following rates of exchange: 50 bananas= 20 coconuts 30 coconuts = 20 fish 100 fish = 1 hammock How many bananas do you need to buy a hammock?. A Parent ’ s Guide to Common Core Standards . Today ’ s Objectives. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Try This:
An island has no currency but instead has the following rates of exchange:
50 bananas= 20 coconuts30 coconuts = 20 fish100 fish = 1 hammock
How many bananas do
you need to buy a hammock?
A Parent’s Guide to Common Core Standards
Today’s Objectives
Become Familiar with Common Core Practices
Understand the Impact on Student Learning
Identify Strategies to Partner with Teachers and School
What is Common Core Reading and Writing?
Reading Closely and Critically Understanding Sources (Primary/Secondary)
Writing A Focus on Crafting Arguments ACROSS
DISCIPLINES Informative and Narrative
Reading and Writing in the Common Core
Not as much “Memorizing for the Test”
Analytical Reasoning
Effective Use of Information for a Variety of Purposes
California State Standards Still Apply
7th Grade History Task: Analyze the Roots of the Scientific Revolution
7th grade Task: Analyze the Roots of the Scientific Revolution
Sample Writing Rubric
7th grade Task: Analyze the Roots of the Scientific Revolution
What is Common Core Math?
A Roadmap Defining What Students Should Understand/Do
Combination of Content Standards Practice Standards
The Practice Standards:The Eight Mathematical Practices
Standards:
1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them.
2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively.
3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others.
4. Model with mathematics.
5. Use appropriate tools strategically.
6. Attend to precision.
7. Look for and make use of structure.
8. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.
7th grade Task: Toy Trains
Ten Useful Problem-Solving Strategies
1. Estimate2. Draw a picture3. Make a list4. Guess and check5. Look for a pattern6. Try easier numbers7. Work backwards8. Talk/Act it out9. Eliminate possibilities10. Call a “Study Buddy”
Fixed Versus Growth Mindsets
Fixed Mindset: “I was born good at math.” “I was born bad at math.”
Growth Mindset: “If I work hard enough, I can learn this.”
Helping your child
Show your enthusiasm Encourage Time
Be persistent
Ask the teacher
Patience
Contact a classmate
Practice Study Group
1. What do you still need to know?2. What did you try?3. Let’s use some objects to work it out.4. Do you have notes from the lesson?5. Read me the question.6. Can you draw a picture?7. Why do you think so?8. Did you try “guess and check”?
What to ask your child when helping with homework
Ways to Support Your Child
• Check your child’s agenda every night.
• Your child’s backpack is open territory.
• Instead of “Do you have homework?”, say “Show me your homework.”
• Designate a time and place for homework.
• Make sure your child is fluent in basic math skills (Number Sense and Basic Operations).
• Encourage and set aside time for your child to Read, Read, Read. Discuss themes and ideas together.
Three Ways to Stay Informed
1. Subscribe to teacher pages on the LACES website.
2. Ask about online grade resources (for example: ISIS, Engrade, Edmodo).
3. Verify that the office has correct contact information.
Resources for Parents
1. PTA Parent Guide to Student Success: http://pta.org/parents/content.cfm?ItemNumber=2583
2. Khan Academy https://www.khanacademy.org/math/arithmetic
3. Learn Zillion http://learnzillion.com/
4. Smarter Balanced Training Tests