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Standards That Count: Reading, Discussion, Writing, and Presentation
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Introduction Current standards do not dictate how many readings or papers students should have each year.
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Reading Allington suggests that students should engage in 60 minutes of reading and 40 minutes of writing across the curriculum daily.
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Reading: Strategies for Success According to David Conley, English departments should agree upon an established minimum number of readings to ensure that all courses have “common quality curriculum.”
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Reading: Strategies for Success Conley makes these recommendations to achieve this goal: Teams should agree upon a specific number of quality “core texts” for every grade level on which students learn to master the core skills of “annotation and close reading.”
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Reading: Strategies for Success Most reading should be in the argumentative/interpretive mode. Teachers should agree upon the general purposes or kinds of analysis to be done for some of the basic texts. To achieve this, teachers should develop common questions or sets of questions.
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Reading: Types of Works Readings should be divided in this way: Fiction: 40-60% Nonfiction: 40-50% Self-selected nonfiction: 25-40% Readings should be organized by grading periods.
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Constructed Responses: You Can Help All departments can help our students to respond to open response questions by using the “Yes, M.A.A.M.” model for constructing open responses. ○○○ Students should be able to complete the following tasks: Restate the question while providing an answer, idea, or opinion.
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Constructed Responses: You Can Help Tie the response directly to the reading by citing specific details from the text that support their answers, ideas, or opinions. Explain how the text details actually support their answers, ideas, or opinions. This is called "interpreting" the answer. - See more at: http://www.smekenseducation.com/targeting- reading-skills-on-state-assessments.
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Reading: Conclusions The more children read, the more they will develop a love for reading. Schools should allot for more reading time in class. Students need everyday practice in writing constructed responses.
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Discussion Discussion is a critical counterpart to reading. During discussion, students learn to support their arguments and provide evidence for their claims or opinions.
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The Importance of Discussions Students should be given plenty of opportunities to share these aspects of their learning: personal experiences and values opinions interpretations
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Recommended Frequency of Discussions Frequent literary discussions help students to learn important life and college- preparation skills. Students should discuss their readings- books, poems, articles- at least three (3) times per week.
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The Quality of Discussions To ensure that discussions are engaging and successful, teachers and teams should develop, refine, and share good questions and prompts.
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The Quality of Discussions For the greatest benefit to students, teachers should incorporate these two steps: Provide a simple rubric as described in Chapter 3 of the Focus book. Establish clear criteria and ground rules for discussion.
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Writing Schools should determine the minimum number of writing assignments that all students will complete in a course.
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Writing: Criteria for Success There should be at least one “exemplar” paper for each agreed-upon written assignment. Exemplar papers, or example papers, help teachers to guide students before and during the writing process.
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Writing: Criteria for Success There should be a “common scoring guide” with adaptations for specific writing assignments. In keeping with the “college knowledge” study, writing should also have an argumentative focus.
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Writing: Criteria for Success Students should write several of their papers in two drafts. The second draft is where students learn the “craft” of writing.
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Writing: Criteria for Success Students should be required to write several formal papers of one-and-one-half to three handwritten pages beginning in 2 nd grade and three to five handwritten pages in middle and high school. These formal papers should be required monthly.
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Writing: Criteria for Success Students should also be required to write one longer research paper of 10 to 15 pages in their senior year.
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Writing: Criteria for Success Students should make presentations of their written works. Students should make one to two presentations per semester. Students improve speaking and presenting skills when they make presentations.
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Handling the Paper Load
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Paper Load: Goal One Increase the amount of writing and writing instruction while reducing the amount of time teachers spend grading students’ papers.
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Goal One: Rubrics, Peer Editing, and Exemplars Teach students to use rubric-based checklists before they hand in their work. Teach students to do conscientious peer editing. Both writers and editors benefit. Use exemplars.
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Goal One: Evaluation, Good Lesson Components Evaluate for only one area of scoring at a time. Examples: organization, use of transitions, varying sentence type and length, etc. Incorporate “routine components” of good lessons: multiple iterations of modeling guided practice checks for understanding
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Goal One: Collecting Student Work, Walk Arounds Collect only some of students’ work. Good quality work should come as a result of teaching most of the time. Walk around and scan student work while they are working.
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Conclusions Students don’t learn the craft of writing from comments on their papers. They learn more from carefully designed lessons which are built around exemplars and rubrics that clarify good writing. More Information: “Write More, Grade Less” at www. mikeschmoker.com
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TAKE AWAY: Standards that Count: Reading, Discussion, Writing, and Presentation!
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Check Your Email! Sheron A. Stocker, M.Ed. 9-10 Regular English
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