Adapt or Adopt in ELA: Support for Districts & Schools on Curriculum Decision Making EngageNY.org.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Curriculum Shifts in Reading and Writing Whetstone Elementary School Literacy Night October 2013.
Advertisements

DELAC Meeting February 19, 2014 CA Common Core Standards English Language Arts.
OSSE CSSS Educator Leader Institute Secondary English Language Arts July 31 st to Aug 3 rd, 2012 Day 1 Facilitated by Heidi Beeman.
First Administration: June 3, 2014 Presented by Brenna Farrell, RCSD.
Common Core State Standards (CCSS) Nevada Joint Union High School District Nevada Union High School September 23, 2013 Louise Johnson, Ed.D. Superintendent.
Annie Michaelian Jill Okurowski Stephen Toto. Tri-State Quality Review Rubric.
Created by NWRESD Data Quality Project CCSS Stewardship Committee 2013 Created by NWRESD Data Quality Project EQuip Network Common Core Stewardship Committee.
Tri-State Quality Review Rubric & Process ELA/Literacy Lessons/Units EQuIP Collaborative Fall 2012.
Close Reading Preparing for the arrival of Common Core Standards in Social Studies.
Educators Evaluating Quality Instructional Products (EQuIP) Using the Tri-State Quality Rubric for Mathematics.
Tri-State Quality Review Rubric & Process Mathematics and ELA/Literacy Lessons/Units June 2012.
The Importance of Technology in High School Science Amy Roediger.
EQuIP Rubric & Quality Review Training Session: ELA/Literacy Grades
Literacy to Learn Science NSTA Regional Conference November 7, 2013.
EngageNY.org Planning Common Core Professional Development for Teachers.
Common Core State Standards Professional Learning Module Series
INTRO TO THE NOVELLA OF MICE AND MEN. MONDAY OCTOBER 21, 2013 What is setting? How can it affect a story? Give an example. 4-5 sentences.
Welcome and thank you for coming!
Louisiana Reading Association Update April 21, 2012.
EngageNY.org Bringing the Common Core to Life An Introduction to the 3-8 NYS ELA Modules.
EngageNY.org Adopt or Adapt in Math: Support for Districts and Schools on Curriculum Decision Making.
Fall Conference - Keynote Speaker Sunday, September 25 th, 2011 – Don Shalvey from the Gates Foundation 3 Ambitious Goals of the Gates Foundation 1.80%
Keeping KUD’s Concise What do your students need to KNOW, UNDERSTAND and DO to master unit content?
Language Arts Florida Standards (LAFS) EQuIP Rubrics Training
Honors Level Course Implementation Guide [English Language Arts]
How do we evaluate the quality of existing and newly created text-based lessons and units of study???? Please refer to the Tri-State Review Rubric for.
Aligning Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessments
EQuIP Rubric & Quality Review Training Session: ELA/Literacy Grades 6 – 8 1.
Common Core Standard Implementation Our Students... Prepared for success after high school Our Promise... Leadership, Advocacy, & Support Our Future… Strong.
English Language Arts Common Core Lesson Alignment NCAGT/PAGE Conference March 1, 2013 Lisa L. McIntosh.
Common Core State Standards
ELA Common Core Shifts. Shift 1 Balancing Informational & Literary Text.
INSTRUCTIONAL SHIFTS FOR THE COMMON CORE BECOMING AGENTS OF REFORM IN OUR OWN CLASSROOMS.
Session 2: Informational Text Audience: 6-12 ELA Teachers.
1 An Overview of the 6 Shifts in ELA Literacy.
Summer 2012 Day 2, Session 6 10/13/2015R/ELA.EEA.2012.©MSDE1 Educator Effectiveness Academy English Language Arts And the journey continues… “Transitioning.
EngageNY.org The Common Core Implications for Teacher Educators.
Got Citizenship? September 12, 2013 Common Core: Close Reading.
Examining the Modules: Instructional Practices related to Finding and Using Evidence LT 2a. I can describe the impact of content-rich curriculum on students’
English Language Arts/Literacy Louisiana Textbook Adoption Publisher’s Orientation March 1, 2012.
MARY NEWTON CAMILLE HOUSE Common Core for English Language Arts.
LEARNING RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTER © 2013 University of Pittsburgh The CCSS & Close Reading 1.
Look at the book cover. Predict what you think the story is going to be about and write a synopsis in 50 words? What does this image suggest about -Plot.
Shelby County Schools Common Core Modules for Social Studies/History Grades 6-12.
LEARNING RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTER © 2013 University of Pittsburgh Supporting Rigorous English Language Arts Teaching and Learning Tennessee Department.
EQuIP Rubric & Quality Review Training Session: ELA/Literacy Grades 9 – 12 1.
The California ELD Standards Part 2 Rowland Unified School District Presented by Annabel Dannemann and Danielle Caro.
Anchor Standards ELA Standards marked with this symbol represent Kansas’s 15%
Shifting Our Practice so that every student grows each day.
12/16/2015MSDE1 “Transitioning to the CCSS by Making Strategic and Informed Choices in the Classroom” Day 1 Principals Only Session.
NYS Common Core English Language Arts Grades 9 – 12.
Common Core State Standards (CCSS) Instructional Materials Quality Review Rubric Winter 2013 Presenters: Drew Hinds, ODE Jeff Coleman, Clackamas ESD Marta.
Crossing the Bridge Day 3 Heidi Elmoustakim & Eileen Hartwell Secondary Literacy Specialists.
The EQuIP Rubric Evaluating Quality Instructional Products.
Pelham Memorial High School THE COMMON CORE AND NEW STATE EXAMINATIONS.
Building Effective Content Literacy Tasks. The Cycle of Assessment Teach: Does the instruction and the tasks align to the identified learning target(s)?
New ELA Guidelines Shifts in ELA Common Core  Rise in Nonfiction Texts.  Content Area Literacy Close and careful reading of text  Increase Complexity.
NEW JERSEY COMMON CORE STATE STANDARDS INSTRUCTIONAL SHIFTS KEY IDEAS.
Casimir Middle School TUSD Transition to the Common Core.
In the Age of Common Core. Close Reading of text involves an investigation of a short piece of text, with multiple readings done over multiple instructional.
Instructional Practice Guide: Coaching Tool Making the Shifts in Classroom Instruction Ignite 2015 San Diego, CA February 20, 2015 Sandra
Shifts in ELA/Literacy
New York State Learning Standards 2011 (Common Core State Standards)
How do these images make you feel?
The Importance of Technology in High School Science
Common Core State Standards and Disciplinary Literacy
Instructional Shifts for the Common Core
Your Standards TODAY’S FLOW MORNING: Standards & 1st Unit Curriculum
Tri-State Quality Review Rubric & Process
Rigorous Texts, Tasks, and Talk: Creating This Reality in Your Classrooms Keith Oswald Diana Fedderman Palm Beach County, Fl.
Presentation transcript:

Adapt or Adopt in ELA: Support for Districts & Schools on Curriculum Decision Making EngageNY.org

Context for Curriculum Work Vendor Partners: P-2 ELA: Core Knowledge 3-8 ELA: Expeditionary Learning 9-12 ELA: PCG & Odell Education Regents Research Fund/ SED Teacher Reviewers = 50 teachers @ 10 hrs/wk Intensive Review Cycles with SAP SAP calibration and gradual release to RRF/ SED Introduce ourselves, the team Get a sense of people who have been here since Monday Get a sense of people who have been in 9-12 ELA sesssions EngageNY.org

Curriculum Modules: P-2 ELA NYSED is partnering with Core Knowledge Phased implementation: Year 1: Listening and Learning modules Ongoing professional development with educators Year 2: Student skills development modules K-2 modules—in each strand on ENY All done by Nov-Dec PK coming in Fall/Winter 2013, finished by following year EngageNY.org

Curriculum Modules 3-12 ELA We are partnering NYSED is partnering with Expeditionary Learning and Public Consulting Group to develop comprehensive materials in Grades 3-12 that progress across the school year and across the grades. Talk module structure for 3-8/ 4 mods+alts 3-8: four modules by end of summer EngageNY.org

Curricular Support: 6-12 ELA 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. Units for those wanting to dip their toes into the work—will eventually be incorporated into the 6-12 modules We’ve been spending two days reading Hemmingway and forming evidence-based claims, geeking out. EngageNY.org

Publisher’s Criteria EngageNY.org Created by Student Achievement Partners—for P-2, and 3-12 For today focus on Do a quick skim of these (read in depth later—essential. Rich informational text) I. Key Criteria for Text Selection II. Key Criteria for Questions and Tasks EngageNY.org

Shifts in ELA/Literacy Instructional Shifts Demanded by the Core Shifts in ELA/Literacy Shift 1 Balancing Informational & Literary Text Students read a true balance of informational and literary texts. Shift 2 Knowledge in the Disciplines Students build knowledge about the world (domains/ content areas) through TEXT rather than the teacher or activities Shift 3 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. Shift 4 Text-based Answers Students engage in rich and rigorous evidence based conversations about text. Shift 5 Writing from Sources Writing emphasizes use of evidence from sources to inform or make an argument. Shift 6 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. Shift 1: Texts worth reading: literature, and non-fiction Speak to what informational text is (biography, memoir, essay, LNF written to a general audience. NOT a technical manual) Shift 2: nose deep in texts about the world/content—including Seminal U.S documents such as declaration of independence, Bill of rights.) Shift 3: progression towards CCR text Shift 4: Keeping the instruction centered in and through TEXT, de-emphasis on text-to-self connectionc Shift 5: Manifestation of other shifts in writing, towards CCR Shift 6: Building the vocab via shift 3 and 1 towards CCR 7 EngageNY.org 7

TriState/EQUIP Rubrics –ELA/ Literacy Collaboratively built tools informed and approved by the authors of the CCSS, which evaluate the Common Core alignment of curricular materials Actualize the Publishers Criteria A means of giving feedback for lessons/units Tool for determining alignment EngageNY.org 8

Using the TriState/EQUIP Rubric to evaluate Lessons and Units Read the Sample Grade 8 Lesson Evaluate the lesson on dimensions I-IV of the TriState/EQUIP Rubric First read the poem Then read the lesson EngageNY.org

SCORE OF SAMPLE LESSON RATING:1 Alignment to the Depth of the CCSS The lesson/unit aligns with the letter and spirit of the CCSS:  Targets a set of grade-level CCSS ELA/Literacy standards.  Includes a clear and explicit purpose for instruction.  Selects text(s) that measure within the grade-level text complexity band and are of sufficient quality and scope for the stated purpose (i.e., presents vocabulary, syntax, text structures, levels of meaning/purpose, and other qualitative characteristics similar to CCSS grade-level exemplars in Appendices A & B). RATING:1 Meets some of the criteria in the dimension While the purpose for instruction is clear, it isn’t clear how the purpose connects to the listed standards. The level of focus manifested in this lesson does not reflect the rigor of the Standards The text measures within the grade-level text complexity band and are of sufficient quality and scope for the stated purpose EngageNY.org

SCORE OF SAMPLE LESSON II. Key Shifts in the CCSS The lesson/unit addresses key shifts in the CCSS:  Reading Text Closely: Makes reading text(s) closely, examining textual evidence, and discerning deep meaning a central focus of instruction.  Text-Based Evidence: Facilitates rich and rigorous evidence-based discussions and writing about common texts through a sequence of specific, thought-provoking, and text-dependent questions (including, when applicable, questions about illustrations, charts, diagrams, audio/video, and media). EngageNY.org

SCORE OF SAMPLE LESSON RATING:1 II. Key Shifts in the CCSS The lesson/unit addresses key shifts in the CCSS:  Writing from Sources: Routinely expects that students draw evidence from texts to produce clear and coherent writing that informs, explains, or makes an argument in various written forms (notes, summaries, short responses, or formal essays).  Academic Vocabulary: Focuses on building students’ academic vocabulary in context throughout instruction RATING:1 Meets some of the criteria in the dimension This lesson does focus reading the poem closely, but does not examine textual evidence and discerning deep meaning The lesson includes rich evidence-based discussions grounded in the text that are sequenced strategically. There is some writing around summarizing stanzas, but there is little to no synthesis/analysis built from that activity There is some attempt to build academic vocabulary, but instead of focusing on words such as “lunar” and/or “foretells”, the lesson focuses only on “glutinous.” EngageNY.org

SCORE OF SAMPLE LESSON RATING: 1 III. Instructional Supports The lesson/unit is responsive to varied student learning needs:  Cultivates student interest and engagement in reading, writing, and speaking about texts.  Addresses instructional expectations and is easy to understand and use.  Provides all students with multiple opportunities to engage with text of appropriate complexity for the grade level; includes appropriate scaffolding so that students directly experience the complexity of the text.  Focuses on challenging sections of text(s) and engages students in a productive struggle through discussion questions and other supports that build toward independence.  Integrates appropriate supports in reading, writing, listening and speaking for students who are ELL, have disabilities, or read well below the grade level text band.  Provides extensions and/or more advanced text for students who read well above the grade level text band. RATING: 1 Meets some of the criteria in the dimension Does cultivate student interest and engagement in reading and writing Provides students with opportunities to engage with text of appropriate complexity Lacking scaffolds of any kind, as well as extensions EngageNY.org

SCORE OF SAMPLE LESSON RATING: 1 IV. Assessment The lesson/unit regularly assesses whether students are mastering standards-based content and skills:  Elicits direct, observable evidence of the degree to which a student can independently demonstrate the major targeted grade level CCSS standards with appropriately complex text(s).  Assesses student proficiency using methods that are unbiased and accessible to all students.  Includes aligned rubrics or assessment guidelines that provide sufficient guidance for interpreting student performance. RATING: 1 Meets some of the criteria in the dimension Includes some evidence of student learning via the exit ticket, but the assessment does not match the rigor of the targeted standards and lacks a rubric for interpreting student performance. EngageNY.org

Using the TriState/EQUIP Rubric to evaluate Lessons and Units Read the Expeditionary learning Unit 1, Lesson 2 Evaluate the lesson on dimensions I-IV of the TriState/EQUIP Rubric Add talking points They can skim the text for gist EngageNY.org

SCORE OF EL LESSON RATING: 3 I. Alignment to the Depth of the CCSS The lesson/unit aligns with the letter and spirit of the CCSS:  Targets a set of grade-level CCSS ELA/Literacy standards.  Includes a clear and explicit purpose for instruction.  Selects text(s) that measure within the grade-level text complexity band and are of sufficient quality and scope for the stated purpose (i.e., presents vocabulary, syntax, text structures, levels of meaning/purpose, and other qualitative characteristics similar to CCSS grade-level exemplars in Appendices A & B). RATING: 3 Meets most to all of the criteria in the dimension Targets grade-level ELA standards for reading, Speaking/listening and Language. Includes very clear purpose for instruction and focuses on students “owning” their learning via Learning Targets Text is appropriately complex. EngageNY.org

SCORE OF EL LESSON II. Key Shifts in the CCSS The lesson/unit addresses key shifts in the CCSS:  Reading Text Closely: Makes reading text(s) closely, examining textual evidence, and discerning deep meaning a central focus of instruction.  Text-Based Evidence: Facilitates rich and rigorous evidence-based discussions and writing about common texts through a sequence of specific, thought-provoking, and text-dependent questions (including, when applicable, questions about illustrations, charts, diagrams, audio/video, and media). This lesson focuses on reading the poem closely and examining textual evidence and discerning deep meaning The lesson includes rich evidence-based discussions grounded in the text that are sequenced strategically. EngageNY.org

SCORE OF EL LESSON RATING: 3 II. Key Shifts in the CCSS The lesson/unit addresses key shifts in the CCSS:  Writing from Sources: Routinely expects that students draw evidence from texts to produce clear and coherent writing that informs, explains, or makes an argument in various written forms (notes, summaries, short responses, or formal essays).  Academic Vocabulary: Focuses on building students’ academic vocabulary in context throughout instruction. RATING: 3 Meets most to all of the criteria in the dimension This lesson capitalizes on opportunities to build academic vocabulary in context (“Lunar”, “foretells”) The lesson could benefit from including writing from sources activities in the lesson. EngageNY.org

SCORE OF EL LESSON III. Instructional Supports The lesson/unit is responsive to varied student learning needs:  Cultivates student interest and engagement in reading, writing, and speaking about texts.  Addresses instructional expectations and is easy to understand and use.  Provides all students with multiple opportunities to engage with text of appropriate complexity for the grade level; includes appropriate scaffolding so that students directly experience the complexity of the text. EngageNY.org

SCORE OF EL LESSON RATING: 3 III. Instructional Supports The lesson/unit is responsive to varied student learning needs:  Focuses on challenging sections of text(s) and engages students in a productive struggle through discussion questions and other supports that build toward independence.  Integrates appropriate supports in reading, writing, listening and speaking for students who are ELL, have disabilities, or read well below the grade level text band.  Provides extensions and/or more advanced text for students who read well above the grade level text band. RATING: 3 Meets most to all of the criteria in the dimension Addresses instructional expectations in a manner that both students and teachers can understand. Cultivates student interest and engagement in reading and speaking about texts. Students have multiple opportunities to engage a text of appropriate complexity; includes appropriate scaffolding so that students directly experience the complexity of the text. Includes integrated supports for ELLs/SWDs, Does not provide extensions/more advanced texts EngageNY.org

SCORE OF EL LESSON RATING: 1 IV. Assessment The lesson/unit regularly assesses whether students are mastering standards-based content and skills:  Elicits direct, observable evidence of the degree to which a student can independently demonstrate the major targeted grade level CCSS standards with appropriately complex text(s).  Assesses student proficiency using methods that are unbiased and accessible to all students.  Includes aligned rubrics or assessment guidelines that provide sufficient guidance for interpreting student performance. RATING: 1 Meets some of the criteria in the dimension Includes ongoing assessment during the lesson during answers to Text-dependent questions and notes about the character Ha These methods are methods that are unbiased and accessible to all students. Assessments are generally informal and could use a more formal writing from sources assessment to ensure student learning. Rubrics are absent EngageNY.org

QUESTIONS? EngageNY.org

ADAPTING/BUILDING YOUR OWN LESSON Hypothetical situation: replacing Inside Out & Back Again with A different text What considerations go into Text selection? EngageNY.org

ADAPTING: Text Selection What considerations go into Text selection? At the Unit and Module level, you must consider: Coherence: Does the text fit with remaining texts and the instructional arc of your unit module? Staircase of complexity: Does the text fit into a sequence of increasingly complex texts Complexity: quantitative and qualitative Speak about qual and quan measures, texts worth reading EngageNY.org

ADAPTING: Text Selection What considerations go into Text selection? At the Unit and Module level, you must consider: Balance of texts: how the selection impacts the balance Diversity of authorship/subjects: does the selection represent other perspectives and cultures? Pacing and volume: can the text be read in the time allotted? Should it be excerpted? Can it be excerpted without sacrificing any of the other considerations? EngageNY.org

ADAPTING: Text-dependent Questions replacing Inside Out & Back Again with Of Mice and Men for grade 8 unit and lesson Need text-dependent questions associated with new text What are text-dependent questions? Short answer: questions that can only be answered by referring back to the text. Assuming for the purpose of this exercise the aforementioned considerations have played out EngageNY.org

ADAPTING: Text-dependent Questions Typical text dependent questions ask students to perform one or more of the following tasks: Analyze paragraphs on a sentence by sentence basis and sentences on a word by word basis to determine the role played by individual paragraphs, sentences, phrases, or words Investigate how meaning can be altered by changing key words and why an author may have chosen one word over another Probe each argument in persuasive text, each idea in informational text, each key detail in literary text, and observe how these build to a whole Examine how shifts in the direction of an argument or explanation are achieved and the impact of those shifts Question why authors choose to begin and end when they do Note and assess patterns of writing and what they achieve Consider what the text leaves uncertain or unstated* *From: www.achievethecore.org/index.php/download_file/128/133/ Assuming for the purpose of this exercise the aforementioned considerations have played out EngageNY.org

ADAPTING: Text-dependent Questions replacing Inside Out & Back Again with Of Mice and Men for grade 8 unit and lesson At your tables, read the Excerpt from Of Mice and Men and compose three text-dependent questions aligned to: 8.RL.2 Determine a theme or central idea of a text and analyze its development over the course of the text, including its relationship to the characters, setting, and plot; provide an objective summary of the text. 8.RL.3: Analyze how particular lines of dialogue or incidents in a story or drama propel the action, reveal aspects of a character, or provoke a decision. 8.RL. 4Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the impact of specific word choices on meaning and tone, including analogies or allusions to other texts. Assuming for the purpose of this exercise the aforementioned considerations have played out EngageNY.org

ADAPTING: Text-dependent Questions “On one side of the river the golden foothill slopes curve up to the strong and rocky Gabilan Mountains, but on the valley side the water is lined with trees—willows fresh and green with every spring, carrying in their lower leaf junctures the debris of the winter's flooding; and sycamores with mottled, white, recumbent limbs and branches that arch over the pool .” Opportunities for questions/activities aligned to RL.2,34 What purpose does the first paragraph serve? Academic vocab that can be determined from context: "junctures", “debris", "recumbent“ etc. Impact of this section on tone of the narrative   EngageNY.org

ADAPTING: Text-dependent Questions Shareout of table TDQs EngageNY.org

ADAPTING: Text-dependent Questions “On the sandy bank under the trees the leaves lie deep and so crisp that a lizard makes a great skittering if he runs among them. Rabbits come out of the brush to sit on the sand in the evening, and the damp flats are covered with the night tracks of 'coons, and with the spread pads of dogs from the ranches, and with the split-wedge tracks of deer that come to drink in the dark.”  Other possibilities Opportunities for questions/activities aligned to RL.2 How does the description of animals tracks (the night tracks of 'coons… split-wedge tracks of deer) develop a theme in this text?   EngageNY.org

ADAPTING: Text-dependent Questions Lennie dabbled his big paw in the water and wiggled his fingers so the water arose in little splashes; rings widened across the pool to the other side and came back again. Lennie watched them go. "Look, George. Look what I done."   Other possibilities Opportunities for questions/activities aligned to RL.3 how do these lines reveal aspects of Lennie’s character?   EngageNY.org

What we’ve learned… Highly Qualified Writers and Reviewers take up to 6 months to calibrate Devotion to/ experience in a content area does not a CCSS writer/ reviewer make A good teacher does not a curriculum writer/ reviewer make Much of what must shift is sacred Rhetorical alignment and actual alignment are two different things CCSS stickers are easy to produce; true quality, rigor, and alignment are not It often takes 6-8 revision cycles to get to necessary levels of quality/ rigor/ alignment EngageNY.org

THANK YOU David Abel dabel@mail.nysed.gov Jason Wells jwells@mail.nysed.gov http://www.engageny.org/english-language-arts EngageNY.org