common core state standards in ela: a parent’s perspective love k. foy coordinator, secondary ela...
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Common Core State Standards in ELA: A Parent’s Perspective
Love K. FoyCoordinator, Secondary ELA and Reading
What is Common Core? A response to
the concerns of the college and business communities in regards to college and career preparation
A philosophy about how to best prepare students for the demands of a globalized, highly technical world
A shift in how teachers craft instruction and engage students in meaningful learning
What is Common Core?
History
What is Common Core?A Nation at Risk:The Imperative for
Educational Reform
April 1983 Commission Report on reforms needed in American schools.
Stated five areas to improve in American schools: Content, Standards and Expectations, Time, Teaching, and Leadership and Fiscal Support
A Nation at Risk:The Imperative for Educational Reform
Content: Years of study per subject area
Standards and Expectations: Concerns over grade inflation; suggests colleges raise admissions standards and standardized tests of achievement at “major transition points from one level of schooling to another...”
Time: Longer school day and year
Teaching: Competence in discipline; competitive, performance based salaries
Leadership and Fiscal Support: Federal government plays a key role in equity and educational civil rights
A Nation at Risk:The Imperative for Educational Reform
What does it say about the study of English language arts?
“The teaching of English in high school should equip graduates to: (a) comprehend, interpret, evaluate, and use what they read; (b) write well-organized, effective papers; (c) listen effectively and discuss ideas intelligently; and (d)
know our literary heritage and how it enhances imagination and ethical understanding, and how it relates
to the customs, ideas, and values of today's life and culture.”
No Child Left Behind (NCLB)
2001 reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Act (April 1965)
Required states to develop assessments in basic skills. States must give these assessments to all students at select grade levels in order to receive federal funding.
The Act does not assert a national achievement standard. Standards set by each individual state.
Race to the Top
Part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009
Contest to spur innovation and reforms in school districts
Led 48 states to adopt common standards, which led to the Common Core Standards
How does Common Core change instruction?
Balancing Informational and Literary Texts: Students read a balance of informational and literary texts.
Knowledge in the Disciplines: Students build knowledge about the world THROUGH text rather than the teacher or activities.
Staircase of Complexity: Students read the central, grade appropriate text around which instruction is centered. Teachers are patient, create more time and space and support in the curriculum for close reading.-
How does Common Core change instruction?
Text Based Answers: Students engage in rich and rigorous evidence based conversations about text.
Writing from Sources: Writing emphasizes use of evidence from sources to inform or make an argument.
Academic Vocabulary: Students constantly build the transferable vocabulary they need to access grade level complex texts. This can be done effectively by spiraling like content in increasingly complex texts.
How will the Common Core Standards affect New York State Assessments?
NYSED Sample Assessments
NYSED Sample AssessmentsPassages:Teachers use them to help guide their own text choices for instructional materials and expose students to similarly complex, diverse texts.
http://www.p12.nysed.gov/assessment/common-core-sample-questions/
NYSED Sample AssessmentsELA Questions:Teachers will analyze the reading comprehension, argumentation, and marshaling of evidence called for in the constructed response questions.
Teachers will help students identify the text-based distractors in each multiple-choice question.
http://www.p12.nysed.gov/assessment/common-core-sample-questions/
What can parents do at home to help?
ELA/Literacy Shift 1: Read as much fiction as nonfiction.
Students Must... Parents Can...
Read more nonfiction Supply more non-fiction texts
Know the ways nonfiction can be put together
Read nonfiction texts aloud or with your child
Enjoy and discuss the details of nonfiction
Have fun with nonfiction in front of them
ELA/Literacy Shift 2: Learn about the world by reading.
Students Must... Parents Can...
Get smart in science and social studies through reading
Supply series of texts on topics of interest
Handle primary source documents
Find books that explain
Get smarter through texts
Discuss non-fiction texts and the ideas within
ELA/Literacy Shift 3: Read more complex material carefully.
Students Must... Parents Can...
reread Provide more challenging texts AND provide texts they WANT to read and can read comfortably
Read material at comfort level AND work with more challenging stuff
Know what is grade level appropriate
Unpack text Read challenging stuff with them
Handle frustration and keep pushing
Read challenging stuff with them and show that challenging stuff is worth unpacking
ELA/Literacy Shift 4: Discuss reading using evidence.
Students Must... Parents Can...
Find evidence to support their arguments
Form judgments
Become scholars
Discuss the author’s purpose
Talk about text
Demand evidence in every day discussions/ disagreements
Read aloud or read the same book and discuss with evidence
ELA/Literacy Shift 5: Writing from Sources
Students Must... Parents Can...
Make arguments in writing using evidence
Encourage writing at home
Compare multiple texts in writing
Write “books” together and use evidence/ details
Write well Look at Appendix A: http://www.corestandards.o rg/assets/Appendix_C.pdf
ELA/Literacy Shift 6: Academic Vocabulary
Students Must... Parents Can...
Learn the words that they can use in college and career
Get smarter at using the “language of power”
Read often and constantly with babies, toddlers, preschoolers, and children
Read multiple books about the same topic
Let your kids see you reading
Talk to your children; Read to your children; Listen to your children; Sing with your children; Make up silly rhymes and word games with your children
Questions?