Literacy Design Collaborative: Planning Tools and Resources for Teaching Literacy Skills in All Content Areas.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
ELA Common Core – What We Know So Far….
Advertisements

Understanding the Common Core Standards and Planning Lessons to Address The Standards.
OSSE CSSS Educator Leader Institute Secondary English Language Arts July 31 st to Aug 3 rd, 2012 Day 1 Facilitated by Heidi Beeman.
Family Literacy Night. Why revise? Align with Common Core State Standards Reflect the current Reading and Writing Workshop philosophy as well as the Mathematics.
Common Core State Standards (CCSS) Nevada Joint Union High School District Nevada Union High School September 23, 2013 Louise Johnson, Ed.D. Superintendent.
Common Core State Standards Professional Learning Module Series
Foreign language and English as a Second Language: Getting to the Common Core of Communication. Are we there yet? Marisol Marcin
A framework to move from common core to classroom practice Louisiana Leadership Session 1 of 3 1 C-3 Leadership 1 Powerpoint Reach Associates Literacy.
Saluda County Schools  Will CCSS cause a shift in administrator behaviors?  Will CCSS cause a shift in teacher behaviors?  Will CCSS cause.
Educator’s Guide Using Instructables With Your Students.
Welcome to Implementing the Common Core State Standards
Elementary Teaching & Learning Moving Forward with Literacy Plymouth Church.
WORLD LANGUAGES : A Year of Transition. Today’s Outcomes  Celebrate the start of the school year  Greet new teachers  Explore areas of focus.
Moving to LDC in Chemistry. What is LDC? An Instructional Framework that builds in the instructional shifts that move us toward common Core Implementation.
Unbridled Learning Next Steps in the Content Leadership Networks.
A framework to move from common core to classroom practice Puget Sound ESD December
Revisiting LDC, Day 2 Elementary Bowling Green, Kentucky – Reach Associates November 15,
ELA Common Core Shifts. Shift 1 Balancing Informational & Literary Text.
Session 2: Informational Text Audience: 6-12 ELA Teachers.
Introduction to LDC! Presented by: Kelly Philbeck
Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts and Literacy in History/ Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects.
Common Core National State Standards Math Language Arts Science, Social Studies, and other subject areas. Two foci: Reading and Writing.
Twilight Training October 1, 2013 OUSD CCSS Transition Teams.
Got Citizenship? September 12, 2013 Common Core: Close Reading.
Introduction to LDC: Mini-Tasks & Modules! Presented by: Kelly Philbeck
Examining the Modules: Instructional Practices related to Finding and Using Evidence LT 2a. I can describe the impact of content-rich curriculum on students’
KLC October 7, Mathematical Practices ELA cognitively complex skills 1.Analyze how and why individuals, events, and ideas develop and interact.
Close Reading of Complex Texts in the 3-8 Modules
2010 AZ English Language Arts Standards Southern Arizona Summer Institute 2011 Pima County Regional Support Center Claudia Gaxiola.
COUNCIL OF CHIEF STATE SCHOOL OFFICERS (CCSSO) & NATIONAL GOVERNORS ASSOCIATION CENTER FOR BEST PRACTICES (NGA CENTER) JUNE 2010.
Anchor Standards ELA Standards marked with this symbol represent Kansas’s 15%
Putting the Pieces Together
Health Sciences Alignment to English Language Arts and Mathematics Common Core State Standards Lori Matyjas CT State Department of Education November 12,
A framework to move from common core to classroom practice CCSS Regional Conference June
1 TEXT-BASED SYNTHESIS WRITING: INFORMATIVE / ARGUMENT OPINION NARRATIVE Silver Shores Elementary.
Looking for Rigor? Try Project-Based Learning Ramsey JHS Media Center June 1, 2012 Deborah Chapman Ines Robles Michele Walker.
EXAMINING THE MODULES: Instructional practices related to finding and using evidence LT 2a. I can describe the impact of content-rich curriculum on students’
ELACC7W1 Write arguments to support claims with clear reasons and relevant evidence.
Argumentative Writing Grades College and Career Readiness Standards for Writing Text Types and Purposes arguments 1.Write arguments to support a.
Greenbush. An informed citizen possesses the knowledge needed to understand contemporary political, economic, and social issues. A thoughtful citizen.
COMMON CORE CONTENT STANDARDS Module 1: Read and Know the Standard.
Exploring the Literacy Standards: CCSS & Main Idea.
Instructional Practice Guide: Coaching Tool Making the Shifts in Classroom Instruction Ignite 2015 San Diego, CA February 20, 2015 Sandra
Common Core.  Find your group assignment.  As a group, read over the descriptors for mastery of this standard. (The writing standards apply to more.
Literacy Design Collaborative: Planning Tools and Resources for Teaching Literacy Skills in All Content Areas.
Embracing Common Core Standards: Igniting Creative Curriculum David Noskin New Trier High School, Winnetka IL Lisa Lukens Bill Fritz Stevenson High School,
Literacy Design Collaborative: Planning Tools and Resources for Teaching Literacy Skills in All Content Areas.
Applying the Reading Anchor Standards: Spring 2016 Instructional Leadership College and Career Ready Standards for Literacy.
As class begins… Please select one of the versions of Cinderella that captures your interest. You will use this for tonight’s homework assignment.
Professional Development: Imagine Difference Shapes and Sizes
6 + 1 Writing Traits Selma City Schools Summer Conference
Best Practices in Implementing the 2010 ELA Standards
Common Core Strategies with Primary Texts
Balanced Literacy How our instructional practices will support the implementation of Common Core.
Balanced Literacy How our instructional practices will support the implementation of Common Core.
Bottom Lines Teachers need to make their own reading lives transparent for kids. A classroom is a place where readers live and a reading community.
Writing - Grade 3.
By Pam Rumage and Carmen Carr White Station Middle School
Texts Worth Reading Problems Worth Solving Tests Worth Taking
AVID and The Common Core
Michigan Reading Standards
Connecticut Core Standards for English Language Arts & Literacy
LDC as a Professional Learning System: Assessing and Spreading Instructional Quality in Schools LDC Partner Convening | June 2016.
Common Core State Standards
Team Composition Group Director: Cooperation and Time Management Group Artist: Conceptualization and Design Group Stenographer: Copying Standards Atop.
Your Standards TODAY’S FLOW MORNING: Standards & 1st Unit Curriculum
CCRS Quarterly Meeting # 2 English Language Arts Grades 6-12
Connecticut Core Standards for English Language Arts & Literacy
Using the 7 Step Lesson Plan to Enhance Student Learning
The ELA Common Core Standards in Your Classroom (6-12)
Presentation transcript:

Literacy Design Collaborative: Planning Tools and Resources for Teaching Literacy Skills in All Content Areas

Introductions 3 Please use this powerpoint as a template to adapt and insert your own contact information and professional details here and on slides 3, Insert your information here! Jane Doe Principal

Goals and Agenda 3 1. Introductions 2. Learn about the Literacy Design Collaborative (LDC’s) planning resources ●Revisiting the shifts of the CCSS ●Writing strong assignments/tasks ●Planning standards-driven literacy instruction ●Teaching discipline-specific literacy skills 3. Experience the LDC planning tools ●LDC CoreTools 4. LDC’s i3 Grant - The LDC i3 Grant is provided as an example; insert your project ●What schools get ●Expectations for schools/teachers

Common Core Instructional Shifts and Demands 3 ▪Increasing rigor and relevance ▪Sharing responsibility of teaching reading across content areas ▪Building knowledge through content-rich nonfiction and informational text ▪Reading, writing, speaking and listening grounded in evidence from texts ▪Practicing regularly with complex text and academic vocabulary ▪Emphasizing 3 modes of academic writing: narrative, informational/explanatory and argumentative ▪Addressing grade level literacy outcomes

What is the content I want to teach with my assignment? What cognitive “work” do I want my students doing with that content? Which CCSS are driving the reading and writing work I want my students doing with this assignment? LDC’s Planning Tools: Teaching Literacy Responsively By Planning Intentionally 2 Now that I have a strong assignment, how can I design a responsive instructional plan for it? LDC began with teachers who created planning tools to develop assignments that address the CCSS shifts and help students write well about what they read. These tools help teachers address these questions: What are discipline-specific literacy skills? Which skills am I teaching with my assignment?

What is the content I want to teach with my assignment? What cognitive “work” do I want my students doing with that content? Which CCSS are driving the reading and writing work I want my students doing with this assignment? LDC’s Planning Tools: Teaching Task Templates LDC’s Teaching Task templates help teachers make assignment prompts that answer the following questions:

Using LDC’s Teaching Task Templates to Build Your Writing Assignment Prompts 3 The Teaching Task templates provide a structure for students to write in response to reading.

Using LDC’s Teaching Task Templates to Build Your Writing Assignment Prompts 3 The CCSS ask students to become proficient in writing informational/explanatory, argumentative, and narrative products. LDC’s Task Templates support you in developing assignments for your students to write in two of those modes: informational/explanatory and argumentative.

LDC Teaching Task Templates 3 Next, the Task Templates ask you to determine the cognitive demand of your assignment. These are aligned with the demands of the CCSS.

Exploring the Task Prompt: Gr. 2 ELA 3 Gr. 2 ELA Prompt: Why do characters respond differently to events and challenges in a story? After reading and examining illustrations from Grandpa's Corner Store, write an essay in which you compare Steven and Lucy's reactions to the new supermarket being built and explain why you think they reacted differently. Support your response with evidence from the text/s.

LDC Teaching Task and CCCS Alignment 3 ReadingWriting 1. Read explicitly, make logical inferences, use evidence from text 1. Write arguments to support claims using valid reasoning and evidence 2. Determine themes, central or main ideas & analyze development 2. Write informative/explanatory texts to examine & convey complex ideas and information 3. Analyze development over course of text (ideas, individuals, events) 3. Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences 4. Interpret & analyze words and phrases as used in text4. Write with development, organization, purpose & audience 5. Analyze structure of texts5. Plan, revising, editing, rewrite, write anew 6. Assess how point of view or purpose shape content & style of text 6. Use technology to produce & publish writing 7. Integrate & evaluate content in diverse media formats7. Conduct short and sustained research projects 8. Trace & evaluate arguments & claims through texts8. Gather relevant information & evidence;source texts 9. Analyze two or more texts to build knowledge & to compare9. Use textual evidence to support analysis, reflection, research 10. Read & comprehend grade level texts10. Write routinely over short and extended time Why do characters respond differently to events and challenges in a story? After reading and examining illustrations from Grandpa's Corner Store, write an essay in which you compare Steven and Lucy's reactions to the new supermarket being built and explain why you think they reacted differently. Support your response with evidence from the text/s.

12 Gr. 2 ELA Prompt: Why do characters respond differently to events and challenges in a story? After reading and examining illustrations from Grandpa's Corner Store, write an essay in which you compare Steven and Lucy's reactions to the new supermarket being built and explain why you think they reacted differently. Support your response with evidence from the text/s. Focus CCSS Reading and Writing Standards: RL.2.3: Describe how characters in a story respond to major events and challenges. RL.2.6: Acknowledge differences in the points of view of characters, including by speaking in a different voice for each character when reading dialogue aloud. W.2.2: Write informative/explanatory texts in which they introduce a topic, use facts and definitions to develop points, and provide a concluding statement or section. Cognitive Demand: Comparison Text-Dependent: Prompt requires reading the text to answer (must cite character reactions)

What is the content I want to teach with my assignment? What cognitive “work” do I want my students doing with that content? Which CCSS are driving the reading and writing work I want my students doing with this assignment? Building the Instructional Plan for Your Assignment: The LDC Module 2 Now that I have a strong assignment, how can I design a strong instructional plan for it? LDC’s module template helps you to build the instructional plan for your writing assignment. It helps teachers answer the following questions: What are discipline-specific literacy skills? Which am I teaching with my assignment?

A Teacher’s Example: Gr. 2 ELA Module 3 Comparing Characters’ Responses to Events Handout: Module One-Pager

LDC CoreTools ●Over 50,000 teachers online ●Teachers and LDC partners (UC Berkeley, Facing History, Battelle STEM) share their modules and mini-tasks for you to copy, adapt, and use ●Quality review system created by Stanford Center for Assessment, Learning and Equity (LDC Peer Review rubric) CoreTools is a free online platform to find, adapt, or create your own daily lessons and larger writing assignments.

Your Turn to Explore CoreTools 3 Search LDC CoreTools to explore mini- tasks and modules specific to your grade level or content area! Be sure to use the search filters to explore content easily.

Understanding Disciplinary Literacy 3 ●The LDC module template helps you build an assignment that teaches the literacy skills key to a content area. (Reading a novel is different from reading a lab report!) ●LDC mini-tasks are daily lesson plans to teach each skill. Check out Facing History and Battelle mini-tasks for history and science lessons! Handout: Disciplinary UnderstandingsDisciplinary Understandings

Let’s Discuss! 3 1.How might the LDC planning tools support you in addressing the Common Core standards? In teaching your students to read and write well? 2. What are you wondering?

LDC’s i3 Grant: What Schools Get - i3 Grant information provided as an example 3 Virtual and In-Person Coaching for Teachers ●In September: ○Coach joins first planning meeting ●Every week: ○Coach provides written feedback on instructional plans ●Every other week: ○Coach facilitates planning meeting via video conference ●In spring: ○In-person LDC peer review training Coaching for LDC Project Liaison (Teacher Leader) ●Monthly virtual meetings with coach ●Optional coach-facilitated online discussions with other teacher leaders using private Teaching Channel Team group ●In September: 1 day paid training with coach Support for Principals ●Initial goal and benchmark setting ●Quarterly support visits from district LDC Specialist Additional Virtual Professional Learning Experiences ●Free enrollment to LDC’s online courses (can lead to salary credit) ●Access to national learning community and content experts (such as Facing History and Ourselves webinars) Handout: LDC Supports and RequirementsLDC Supports and Requirements

LDC’s i3 Grant: Expectations of Schools - i3 Grant information provided as an example 3 Teacher Responsibilities 1.Teach at least two modules each school year. 2.Participate in weekly collaborative planning meetings with team, which include: a.Instructional planning (using LDC CoreTools); b.Analysis of student work from mini-tasks and modules; c.Discussion of classroom implementation of mini-tasks and modules; d.Revision of instruction based on student outcomes. 3.Participate in weekly online coach-led discussions (using Teaching Channel). Project Liaison Responsibilities 1.All same as teacher 2.Monthly 30-min meeting/call with coach to plan PLC work and develop instructional leadership skills 3.Facilitate communication between planning team, coach, and principal 4.Participate in summer training (paid)

3 Next Steps 1.Create a free CoreTools account at Explore modules and mini-tasks for your grade level/content area 1.Insert your steps here!