Post on 07-Nov-2014
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EngageNY.org
Teaching the Hudson Valley: Uncommon Approaches to the
Common Core
August 1st, 2013
For every 100 ninth graders…
65 graduate from high school37 enter college
24 are still enrolled in sophomore year12 graduate with a degree in six years
Why does this matter? Because it’s what our students need
Conley, David. 2012, “The Complexities of College and Career Readiness.” https://epiconline.org/files/pdf/07102012_Keene_NH.pdf
… and only 6 get a good job after graduation
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Conley, David. 2012, “The Complexities of College and Career Readiness.” https://epiconline.org/files/pdf/07102012_Keene_NH.pdf
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Our Common Purpose and Resolve
* 2007 cohort, four-year outcomes through JuneSource: NYSED Office of Information and Reporting Services
New York State Graduation Rates*
74%
85%
58% 58%
35%
48%
12% 15%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
All White Black Hispanic
Student Subgroup
Gra
duat
ion
Rat
e
Graduation Rate
ELA/Math Aspirational PerformanceMeasure (APM)
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Regents Reform AgendaA Strategic Response to the Program Challenges
College and
Career Ready
Students
Highly EffectiveSchool Leaders
Highly Effective Teachers
Implementing Common Core standards and developing curriculum and assessments aligned to these standards to prepare students for success in college and the workplace
Building instructional data systems that measure student success and inform teachers and principals how they can improve their practice in real time
Recruiting, developing, retaining, and rewarding effective teachers and principals
Turning around the lowest-achieving schools
These Standards are not intended to be new names for old ways of doing business. They are a call to take the next step. … It is time to recognize that standards are not just promises to our children, but promises we intend to keep.
CCSSM, p. 5
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6 Shifts in ELA/Literacy
Balancing Informational and Literary TextBuilding Knowledge in the DisciplinesStaircase of ComplexityText-based AnswersWriting from SourcesAcademic Vocabulary
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Instructional Shifts Demanded by the Core
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ELA/Literacy Shift 1: Balancing Informational and Literary Text
What the Student Does… What the Teacher Does…Build content knowledge
Learn about the world through reading
Apply strategies
Balance informational & literary text
Scaffold for informational texts
Teach “through” and “with” informational texts
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Uncommon Approaches to Shift 1
ELA/Literacy Shift 2: Knowledge in the Disciplines
What the Student Does… What the Teacher Does…Build content knowledge through
text
Handle primary source documents
Find evidence
Shift identity: “I teach reading.”
Stop referring and summarizing and start reading
Slow down the history and science classroom
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Uncommon Approaches to Shift 2
ELA/Literacy Shift 3: Staircase of Complexity
What the Student Does… What the Teacher Does…Re-read
Read material at own level to enjoy
Tolerate frustration
More complex texts at every grade level
Give students less to read, let them re- read
More time on more complex texts
Provide scaffolding & strategies
Engage with texts w/ other adults
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Uncommon Approaches to Shift 3
ELA/Literacy Shift 4: Text Based Answers
What the Student Does… What the Teacher Does…
Find evidence to support their argument
Form own judgments and become scholars
Conducting reading as a close reading of the text
Engage with the author and his/her choices
Facilitate evidence based conversations about text
Plan and conduct rich conversations
Keep students in the text
Identify questions that are text-dependent, worth asking/exploring, deliver richly
Spend much more time preparing for instruction by reading deeply.
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Uncommon Approaches to Shift 4
ELA/Literacy Shift 5: Writing from Sources
What the Student Does… What the Teacher Does…Generate informational texts
Make arguments using evidence
Organize for persuasion
Compare multiple sources
Spending much less time on personal narratives
Present opportunities to write from multiple sources
Give opportunities to analyze, synthesize ideas
Develop students’ voice so that they can argue a point with evidence
Give permission to reach and articulate their own conclusions about what they read
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Uncommon Approaches to Shift 5
ELA/Literacy Shift 6: Academic Vocabulary
What the Student Does… What the Teacher Does…Use high octane words across content
areas
Build “language of power” database
Develop students’ ability to use and access words
Sequence texts so that students encounter high-octane words within a particular domain over and over in increasingly complex contexts
Be strategic about the new vocab words
Work with words students will use frequently
Teach fewer words more deeply
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Uncommon Approaches to Shift 6
Mathematics Shift 1: FocusWhat the Student Does… What the Teacher Does…Spend more time on fewer
conceptsExcise content from the
curriculum
Focus instructional time on priority concepts
Give students the gift of time
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Uncommon Approaches to Shift 1
Mathematics Shift 2: Coherence
What the Student Does… What the Teacher Does…Build on knowledge from year to year, in a coherent learning progression
Connect the threads of math focus areas across grade levels
Connect to the way content was taught the year before and the years after
Focus on priority progressions
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Uncommon Approaches to Shift 2
Mathematics Shift 3: Rigor -
Fluency
What the Student Does… What the Teacher Does…
Spend time practicing, with intensity, skills (in high volume)
Push students to know basic skills at a greater level of fluency
Focus on the listed fluencies by grade level
Uses high quality problem sets, in high volume
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Uncommon Approaches to Shift 3
Mathematics Shift 4: Rigor -
Deep Understanding
What the Student Does… What the Teacher Does…
Show mastery of material at a deep level
Articulate mathematical reasoning
Demonstrate deep conceptual understanding of priority concepts
Create opportunities for students to understand the “answer” from a variety of access points
Ensure that EVERY student GETS IT before moving on
Get smarter in concepts being taught
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Uncommon Approaches to Shift 4
Mathematics Shift 5: Rigor-
Application
What the Student Does… What the Teacher Does…
Apply math in other content areas and situations, as relevant
Choose the right math concept to solve a problem when not necessarily prompted to do so
Apply math including areas where its not directly required (i.e. in science)
Provide students with real world experiences and opportunities to apply what they have learned
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Uncommon Approaches to Shift 5
Mathematics Shift 6: Rigor -
Dual Intensity
What the Student Does… What the Teacher Does…Practice math skills with an intensity that results in fluency
Practice math concepts with an intensity that forces application in novel situations
Find the dual intensity between understanding and practice within different periods or different units
Be ambitious in demands for fluency and practice, as well as the range of application
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Uncommon Approaches to Shift 6
Common Core State Standards for ELA & Literacy in History/SocialStudies, Science, and Technical
Subjects-10 Reading Standards- 10 Writing Standards
Common Core State Standards for Literacy in Technical Subjects
Purpose for CC Literacy Standards in
Technical Subjects
Every teacher is responsible to support and instruct students in reading informational
text within each of their own content areas.
Common Core State Standards for Literacy in Technical Subjects
Common Core Literacy Standards are used in coordination with each
content area’s NYS Learning Standards
Steps for Implementing Common Core Literacy Standards
10 Reading &10 Writing
Standards for Technical Subjects
•Identify existing connections
•Modify lessons to incorporate •literacy standards
The National Arts Standards Revisionhttp://nccas.wikispaces.com/
The revised National Arts Standards will:• extend PK -12• be grade-by-grade from PK-8 in each arts discipline and include:
Media Arts as a discreet fifth arts discipline.Cornerstone Assessment models: authentic performance assessments
organized to include all aspects of the learning and instructional process, including student work samples.
The first draft Prek-8 was released in spring for public review and comment with PreK - 12 draft standards due to be released in Jan.
Final revised arts standards will be issued in March, 2014.
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6 Shifts in ELA/Literacy
Balancing Informational and Literary TextBuilding Knowledge in the DisciplinesStaircase of ComplexityText-based AnswersWriting from SourcesAcademic Vocabulary
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Instructional Shifts Demanded by the Core
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Six Shifts in ELA/Literacy & Math: What Do They Means in the Visual Art Classroom?
The Shifts in the visual arts are understood with the following premise:
Visual Art is a form of communication. The primary definition of “Text” in visual art is imagery in its most inclusive form (the art itself).
Just as in other forms of communication, “Text” in art is layered, metaphoric, symbolic, and open to interpretation. Therefore, when referring to imagery as “Text” in Visual Art, we will use the term, Art (text). When referring to “Text” as the written word, we will use the term, “Text.”
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Shift 4
Text-
Based Answers
Students have rich and rigorous conversations, which are dependent on a common text. Teachers insist that classroom experiences stay deeply connected to the text on the page and that students develop habits for making evidentiary arguments both in
conversation, as well as in writing to assess comprehension of a
text.
Students will analyze Art (text), including their own art, using a variety of perspectives: Historic, Contemporary, Pluralism, etc.
Teachers will guide students to write, discuss, and make art in response to primary and secondary sources: Art (text) and text.
Shift 5
Writing from Sources
Writing needs to emphasize use of evidence to inform or make an argument rather than the personal narrative and other forms of decontextualized prompts. While the narrative still has an important role, students develop skills through written arguments that respond to the ideas, events, facts, and arguments presented in the texts they read.
Students will discover connections to ideas about the world by creating Art (text), writing, and discussing primary and secondary sources.
Shift 6
Academic Vocabular
y
Students constantly build the vocabulary they need to access grade level complex texts. By focusing strategically on comprehension of pivotal and commonly found words (such as “discourse,” “generation,” “theory,” and “principled”) and less on esoteric literary terms (such as “onomatopoeia” or “homonym”), teachers constantly build students’ ability to access more complex texts across the content areas.
Students will learn and employ the language andvocabulary of the Visual Art domain in response to Art (text) and text. Language in the Visual Arts is not fixed—it changes along with the developments in Visual Art.
Six Shifts in ELA/Literacy What it Means in Visual Art
Shift 4 Deep Understandi
ng
Teachers teach more than “how to get the answer” and instead support students’ ability to access concepts from a number of perspectives so that students are able to see math as more than a set of mnemonics or discrete procedures. Students demonstrate deep conceptual understanding of core math concepts by applying them to new situations. As well as writing and speaking about their understanding.
Teachers will guide students’ inquiry into how mathematical thinking is used to convey ideas about the world when aesthetics are combined with function (e.g. illusion of depth, gradation of value, weight, and structure). Students will demonstrate understanding by synthesizing information to create Art (text).Students will engage in mathematical thinking to analyze and discuss visual perception in Art (text), (e.g. Cubism, Pointillism, peripheral vision, optical, and medial color systems).
Shift 5 Applications Students are expected to use math and choose the appropriate concept for application even when they are not prompted to do so. Teachers provide opportunities at all grade levels for students to apply math concepts in “real world” situations. Teachers in content areas outside of math, particularly science, ensure that students are using math – at all grade levels – to make meaning of and access content.
Students will employ mathematical thinking and skills in creating Art (text) when utilizing media and materials in the creation of meaningful and personally significant Art (text), (e.g. digital imaging, time-based media, and traditional media).
Shift 6 Dual Intensity
Students are practicing and understanding. There is more than a balance between these two things in the classroom – both are occurring with intensity. Teachers create opportunities for students to participate in “drills” and make use of those skills through extended application of math concepts. The amount of time and energy spent practicing and understanding learning environments is driven by the specific mathematical concept and therefore, varies throughout the given school year.
Students will practice mathematical skills and thinking on practical and conceptual levels within the Visual Art Curriculum—a natural extension and application of concepts introduced in the math classroom.Teachers will provide opportunities for exercises in technique, analysis of the creative process, as well as the evaluation of the products (synthesis) of the creative process, (portfolio).
Six Shifts in Math What It Means in Visual Art
NYS Curriculum• Exemplary, Comprehensive, Optional, Free • High Quality, Rigorous, Deeply Aligned to CCSS• Addresses Needs of Students Performing Above &
Below Grade Level, Students with Disabilities, English Language Learners
• Includes Performance Tasks and other assessments which measure student growth – daily, weekly, at the end of each unit & module
• Ensures Diversity of Voices & Perspectives in Text Selection
• Contains notes for teachers, templates, handouts, homework, problem sets, overviews, etc
• Creative Commons License Approach
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P-12 Mathematics
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NYSED is partnering withCommon Core, Incto develop high quality, rigorous, and aligned materials in P-12 mathematics that progress across the school year and across the grades.
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Curriculum Modules: P-2 ELANYSED is partnering with Core Knowledge
Phased implementation:
Year 1:• Listening and Learning modules• Ongoing professional development with educators
Year 2:• Student skills development modules• Ongoing professional development with educators
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Curriculum Modules ELA
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We are partneringNYSED is partnering with Expeditionary Learning to develop comprehensive materials in Grades 3-5 that progress across the school year and across the grades.
NYSED is partnering with Public Consulting Group to develop comprehensive materials in Grades 6-12 that are aligned with those in Grades 3-5.
Curricular Support: 6-12 ELA
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NYSED has partnered with Odell Education to publish a series of exemplary units for use in secondary English language arts classrooms.
These units model at each grade level: text selection, increasing complexity, supports for evidence-based conversations, and rigorous writing.
Comprehensive curricular modules are coming by July!
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What’s New:
Revised navigational choices on the homepageUpgraded search experience
New tagging, search and filter functionality
E-Community for the field to engage, interact and share
Table Talk: What Will it Take?
• What does this look like in classrooms? At home? At museums and outdoor sites?
• What are your challenges with implementing the Common Core, and how can your colleagues in schools and cultural institutions help?
• What Uncommon Approaches do you think you will adopt?
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Thank You!
Liz Hood, Director, Office of Educational Television & Public Broadcasting lhood@mail.nysed.gov
Leslie Yolen, Associate in Arts lyolen@mail.nysed.gov
Erik Sweet, English Language Arts Associate esweet@mail.nysed.gov