common core irl: in real libraries 2014

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Common Core IRL: In Real Libraries -- presentation to the American Library Association Annual Conference 2014. Libraries can play an essential role in helping students, teachers and families find nonfiction that gradually increases in text complexity. But what does the ladder of complexity really mean? How do we evaluate reading complexity in nonfiction texts? And how do librarians engage with their communities to provide their expertise?

TRANSCRIPT

ALA Annual ConferenceJune 29, 2014

MaryAnn Scheuer
add photos, so people can attach faces to name?
Alyson Beecher
I uploaded a picture of me and an image from the blog. Use whichever seems appropriate.
MaryAnn Scheuer
Iceberg, Right Ahead! The Tragedy of the Titanic, by Stephanie S. McPherson (Twenty First Century Books, 2011)
MaryAnn Scheuer
Caring for Your Cat, by Derek Zobel (Blastoff Readers, level 4) (Bellwether Media / Scholastic, 2011)
MaryAnn Scheuer
Girls Soccer: Going for the Goal, by Lori Coleman (Capstone, 2007)
MaryAnn Scheuer
I can ask Jennifer Glidden at Capstone for a high quality image
Alyson Beecher
Did you want me to delete this slide? I was unclear from your email?
MaryAnn Scheuer
Yes, I think so -- what do you think?Sent from my iPad
Alyson Beecher
I like how the other way works with the other slides. So I guess we can remove this slide?
MaryAnn Scheuer
Aly - I thought these might be good examples to use talking about how important it is to teach kids about why words are in bold.

Meet the CC IRL TeamMary Ann Scheuer: School Librarian, Emerson Elementary School (California) greatkidbooks.blogspot.com

Alyson Beecher: Literacy Specialist, Pasedena Unified School District (California) kidlitfrenzy.com

Louise Capizzo: Youth Services Librarian, Scarborough Public Library (Maine) nonfictiondetectives.com

Cathy Potter: School Librarian, Falmouth Elementary School (Maine) nonfictiondetectives.com

Online access to presentation

http://bit.ly/ccirl2014

Our Goal in Starting CC: IRL● add library expertise to evaluating

educational resources● deepen our understanding of the

ladder of complexity● provide an alternative to prescriptive

curriculum kits

Informational Reading

“50-50 balance between informational and literary reading”

"Key Shifts in English Language Arts." Common Core State Standards Initiative. Web. June 2014.

Informational Text...“Includes biographies and autobiographies; books about history, social studies, science, and the arts; technical texts... and digital sources on a range of topics.”"English Language Arts Standards » Standard 10: Range, Quality, & Complexity » Range of Text Types for K-5." Common Core State Standards Initiative. Web. June 2014.

Expository - explains, describes, informs

MaryAnn Scheuer
font size: header 48, subtext 32 or 36

Narrative - reads like a story

Persuasive - argues a position

Descriptive - uses sensory details

Poetic - presents information through poems

Understanding Reading Levels

Comparing different systems:

● What do they measure?

● Which do our schools use?

● How do we estimate with new books?

Smith III, Malbert, Anne Schiano, and Elizabeth Lattanzio (2014). “Beyond the Classroom: How Lexile Measures are Being Used in the Library to Achieve College and Career Readiness.” Knowledge Quest. 42(3):20-29.

Understanding Reading Levels

“No tool can replace the professional judgment of a teacher, parent or librarian in helping students select books”

Ladder of Complexity

read alouds

digital resources

Factors that Contribute to Complexity

Print Factors

● Size of print

● Style of font

● Space between lines

● Width of margins

Elizabeth Carney, Frogs! (National Geographic, 2009) Copyrighted material. All rights reserved.

Print Factors

Pamela S. Turner, The Frog Scientist (Houghton Mifflin, 2009)

Layout

● visually conveys information

● uses plenty of white space

● eye flows in natural line

Pamela S. Turner, The Frog Scientist (Houghton Mifflin, 2009)

MaryAnn Scheuer
Cathy -- Frog Scientist has a great diagram for the scientific process. Or are you thinking more of overall layout, with images, captions, etc?
Cathy Potter
Great example. I had a copy of the book at home, so I scanned the page
MaryAnn Scheuer
I wonder if HMH or Pam could give us a better quality image
Cathy Potter
Yes, maybe HMH or Pam could help us out. The page is too large for my home scanner.
MaryAnn Scheuer
Lisa at HMH is working to get a high quality scan of this page.
MaryAnn Scheuer
is this better?

Vocabulary

Definitions - Vocabulary - Glossary

Don’t they just mean the same thing?

Book Looking by Nemo

Alyson Beecher
any thoughts for a creative image for this page?
Cathy Potter
Could you combine this slide with the next slide that shows the definitions of words on the page?
Alyson Beecher
I was thinking of keeping this simple - kind of like the thought provoking question. Basically my ELLs think it is all the same thing, hence the question but I thought I would add an image. The next three slides will show examples of each one but on separate slides. Unless everyone thinks it should be different.

Some books create a separate box for key terms and the corresponding definitions.

This book calls them “Titanic Terms.”Melissa Stewart, Titanic (National Geographic, 2012)

Copyrighted material. All rights reserved.

Definitions

Another text feature: a key word is bolded with the definition embedded in the text.

Lori Coleman, Girls' Soccer: Going for the Goal (Capstone, 2007)

Definitions

Some books include key terms or specialized vocabulary in a glossary at the end.

This National Geographic Reader uses a picture glossary.

Elizabeth Carney, Frogs! (National Geographic, 2009) Copyrighted material. All rights reserved.

Glossary

Text Features & Visual Elements

Marty Crump, The Mystery of Darwin’s Frog (Boyds Mill Press, 2013)

MaryAnn Scheuer
Kerry at Boyds Mills is working on getting a JPEG of this image for us
MaryAnn Scheuer
The Mystery of Darwin's Frog, by Martin Crump, ill. by Steve Jenkins & Edel Rodriguez (Boyds Mills, 2013)
MaryAnn Scheuer
Do we want to put up some examples and ask the audience to comment on what they’re noticing?

Nicola Davies, One Tiny Turtle (Candlewick, 2001)

Text Features & Visual Elements

Lori Coleman, Girls' Soccer: Going for the Goal (Capstone, 2007)

MaryAnn Scheuer
Girls Soccer: Going for the Goal, by Lori Coleman (Capstone, 2007)

Putting It All Together

Stephen Person, Devastated by a Volcano! (Bearport, 2010)

Look for scaffolding features like:

● captions● diagrams● headings

Melissa Stewart, Titanic (National Geographic, 2012) Copyrighted material. All rights reserved.

MaryAnn Scheuer
I'm worried we have too many slides. Should we take these out?
Cathy Potter
I don't think we need these slides.
Alyson Beecher
I do think we could use these slides to show various versions of complexity and also skip them if we were running out of time but it would still be good to have them in the powerpoint.
MaryAnn Scheuer
National Geographic Readers: Titanic, by Melissa Stewart (National Geographic, 2012)
MaryAnn Scheuer
I thought it would be interesting to have a whole group discussion about how we evaluate reading complexity in a selection of books.

Sean Stewart Price, The Kids’ Guide to Titanic (Capstone, 2012)

Stephanie S. McPherson, Iceberg, Right Ahead! The Tragedy of the Titanic (Twenty First Century Books, 2011)

MaryAnn Scheuer
Iceberg, Right Ahead! The Tragedy of the Titanic, by Stephanie S. McPherson (Twenty First Century Books, 2011)

Read AloudsProvide learners with basic knowledge and build close listening skills for texts students may not be able to read independently.

Digital ResourcesE-Books

Book Apps

Video

Supporting Teachers & Students

The school librarian arranged an author visit with nonfiction author, Melissa Stewart.

Share your expertise and

resources

Building Connections

public librarians +

school librarians

= a strong partnership

Family Comunity Patchwork by Geralt

Alyson Beecher
Might want to mention connecting with authors like Melissa Stewart or Loree Griffin Burns on twitter - great sharing of information, ideas, and resources
Amy Koester
Does anyone have any photos from your author events at your schools to add to this slide?

Book Gap Challenge

What’s missing from your collection?

What do we need to read & review more?

Puzzled people by Microsoft Clipart

Works CitedCarney, Elizabeth. Frogs! Washington, D.C.: National Geographic, 2009.

Coleman, Lori. Girls' Soccer: Going for the Goal. Mankato, MN: Capstone, 2007.

Crump, Marty, Edel Rodriguez, and Steve Jenkins. The Mystery of Darwin’s Frog. Honesdale, PA: Boyds Mill Press, 2013.

Davies, Nicola and Jane Chapman. One Tiny Turtle. Cambridge, MA: Candlewick, 2001.

"English Language Arts Standards » Standard 10: Range, Quality, & Complexity » Range of Text Types for K-5." Common Core State Standards Initiative. Web. June 2014.

"Key Shifts in English Language Arts." Common Core State Standards Initiative. Web. June 2014.

McPherson, Stephanie Sammartino. Iceberg Right Ahead!: The Tragedy of the Titanic. Minneapolis, MN: Twenty-First Century Books, 2011.

Person, Stephen. Devastated by a Volcano! New York: Bearport Pub., 2010.

Price, Sean. The Kids' Guide to Titanic. North Mankato, MN: Capstone, 2012.

Smith III, Malbert, Anne Schiano, and Elizabeth Lattanzio (2014). “Beyond the Classroom: How Lexile Measures are Being Used in the Library to Achieve College and Career Readiness.” Knowledge Quest. 42(3):20-29.

Stewart, Melissa. Titanic. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic, 2012.

Turner, Pamela S., and Andy Comins. The Frog Scientist. Boston: Houghton Mifflin for Children, 2009.

Contact InformationMary Ann Scheuer- @maryannscheuergreatkidbooks@gmail.com

Alyson Beecher-@alybee930kidlitfrenzy@gmail.com

Louise Capizzo- @lcapizzothenonfictiondetectives@yahoo.com

Cathy Potter- @cppotterthenonfictiondetectives@yahoo.com

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