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SAMPSON COUNTY SCHOOLS CURRICULUM AND INSTRUCTION MARCH 2013
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WHY COMMON CORE? We are improving public education with a new curriculum that goes beyond standards and multiple choice assessments to help teachers create well- rounded students who are prepared for life. Why “Common” - Excelling Curriculum Ensuring public schools are the best way to prepare children for life. Sampson County Schools GOAL: We Advance Everyone: from the bottom to the top and everyone in between, to make sure that every child moves forward.
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THE VALUE OF PUBLIC EDUCATION Public education is necessary to ensure each child gets the instruction and attention he/she needs to be fully prepared for success in life. Sampson County can not afford merely adequate public education; the future of our children and the state depends on consistent support for preparing each and every child for success and to be College and Career READY. School Safety We are updating cameras, doors, fences, lighting Working closely with Sheriff’s Department Special Drills Budget requests – increase SROs (create our own police department)
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THE COMMON CORE STANDARDS English/Language Arts and Math standards adopted by the N.C. State Board of Education in June 2010 – effective for 2012-2013 Are aligned with college and work expectations Are focused and coherent Include rigorous content and application of knowledge through higher-order skills Build upon strengths and lessons of current state standards Are internationally benchmarked so that all students are prepared to succeed in our global economy Are based on evidence and research Are state led – coordinated by 45 states and the National Governors Association and Council of Chief State School Officers
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ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS (ELA) SHIFT 1: BUILD KNOWLEDGE THROUGH CONTENT-RICH NONFICTION AND INFORMATIONAL TEXTS Students must: Read more nonfiction Know the ways nonfiction can be put together Enjoy and discuss the details of nonfiction Increase knowledge in Science and Social Studies through reading Handle “primary source” documents Parents can: Supply more nonfiction text Read nonfiction texts aloud or with your child Have fun with nonfiction in front of them Supply nonfiction texts on topics of interest and discuss ideas within Find books that explain
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SHIFT 2: READ, WRITE AND DISCUSS USING EVIDENCE FROM TEXT Students must: Find evidence to support their arguments through discussion and writing Form judgments Become scholars Discuss what the author is “up to” Compare multiple texts in writing Write well: Three types- Opinion/Argument, Informational/Explanatory, and Narrative Parents can: Talk about text and encourage writing at home Demand evidence in everyday discussions/disagreements Read aloud or read the same book and discuss with evidence Write “books” together and use evidence/details Encourage different types of writing at home, samples are at http://www.corestandards.org/assets /Appendix_C.pdf CLICK
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SHIFT 3: REGULAR PRACTICE WITH COMPLEX TEXT AND ITS ACADEMIC VOCABULARY Students must : Re-read Read material at comfort level AND work with more challenging material Unpack text Handle frustration and keep pushing Learn the vocabulary that they can use in college and careers http://www.lexile.com/using- lexile/summer-reading/ Parents can: Provide more challenging texts AND provide texts that they want to read and can read comfortably Know what is grade level appropriate Read often and constantly with babies, toddlers, preschoolers and children Read multiple books about the same topic Let your kids see you reading Expose them to lots of oral language: talking and singing through rhymes and word games and a variety of content areas
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THE MORE WE READ, THE MORE WE CAN READ! By age 3, children from affluent families have heard 30 million more words than children from parents living in poverty. (Hart and Risley, 1995). Children who have larger vocabularies and greater understanding of spoken language do better in school (Whitehurst and Lonigan). If children aren’t reading on grade level by third grade, they are four times more likely to leave high school without a diploma (Hernandez, 2011).
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SAMPSON COUNTY SCHOOLS CURRICULUM AND INSTRUCTION
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MATHEMATICS SHIFT 1: FOCUS on fewer topics Students Must Spend more time on fewer concepts to build strong foundational understanding Parents Can Know what the priority work is for your child for their grade level Spend time with your child on priority work Ask your teacher about your child’s progress http://www.sampson.k12.nc.us/education/district/district.php?sectionid=1
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SHIFT 2: SKILLS across grades Students Must Keep building on learning year after year Parents Can Be aware of what your child struggled with last year and how that will affect learning this year
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SHIFT 3: RIGOR – SPEED AND ACCURACY Students Must Spend time practicing problems on the same idea Parents Can Push children to know/memorize basic math facts Know all of the fluencies your child should have and prioritize learning the ones they don’t
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SHIFT 3: RIGOR – FLUENCY GradeRequired Fluency KAdd/subtract within 5 1Add/Subtract within 10 - Add/Subtract within 20 2Add/Subtract within 100 3Multiply/divide within 100 – Add/subtract within 1000 4Add/Subtract within 1,000,000 5Multi-digit multiplication – Multi-digit division 6Multi-digit decimal operations 7Solve px=q = r, p (x+q) = r 8Solve simple 2 x 2 systems by inspection
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SHIFT 3: RIGOR – APPLICATION Students Must Understand why the math works Prove that they know why and how the math works Apply math in real world situations Parents Can Ask “Why” and “How” to determine whether your child really knows the answer Ask your child to “do the math” that comes up in your daily life
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ASSESSMENTS NC Assessments – 2012-2014 Problem solving/critical thinking 1/3 to 1/2 calculator inactive Gridded responses (5 th grade and up) No retest this year Computer enhanced – Online test https://data.ncsu.edu/nctest/NCTestRel.html#StudentSignIn https://data.ncsu.edu/nctest/NCTestRel.html#StudentSignIn
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ASSESSMENTS Smarter Balanced Assessments – 2014-2015 http://www.smarterbalanced.org/sample-items-and- performance-tasks/
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MATH RESOURCES Khan Academy ://www.khanacademy.org/math/algebra/linear_inequalities www.quantiles.com/summer-math
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SAMPSON COUNTY SCHOOLS CURRICULUM AND INSTRUCTION
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NC ESSENTIAL STANDARDS Social Studies, Science, World Languages, Arts Education, Healthful Living, Guidance, English As a Second Language, Information and Technology, and CTE Creating, Evaluating, Analyzing, Applying, Understanding, and Remembering Do more than memorization with an increased level of rigor http://www.findingdulcinea.com/g uides/Education/High-School- Biology.html http://www.findingdulcinea.com/g uides/Education/High-School- Biology.html NC Essential Standards Written under Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy Curriculum supports complex thinking that is expected of 21 st Century graduates
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WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR INSTRUCTION? An increased level of rigor Higher expectations for students New instructional strategies (Paideia, Less Lecture, more Student Centered) More Problem Based Learning – incorporating more real world applications Less dependence on textbooks
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NC ESSENTIAL STANDARDS ASSESSMENTS? Measures of Student Learning(MSLs)/Common Exams(CE) Common exams are selected for specific subjects and grades that are not part of the NC State Testing Program Substitutes for local final exams Designed with input from teachers Multiple Choice Constructed Response No retest this year http://www.ncpublicschools.org/docs/effectiveness-model/measures/msl- timeline.pdf http://www.ncpublicschools.org/docs/effectiveness-model/measures/msl- timeline.pdf Click
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WHERE CAN MORE INFORMATION BE FOUND? Sampson County Schools: (LiveBinders) http://www.sampson.k12.nc.us/education/district/district.php?sect ionid=1 http://www.sampson.k12.nc.us/education/district/district.php?sect ionid=1 Curriculum & Instruction * Find ALL of your LiveBinders (Curriculum standards, NCDPI materials and Pacing Guides) for 2012-2013 under each Divisions Website High School: http://www.livebinders.com/play/play?id=377277http://wwwihttp://www.livebinders.com/play/play?id=377277 Middle School Elementary PTA http://pta.org/parents/content.cfm?ItemNumber=2910http://pta.org/parents/content.cfm?ItemNumber=2910 CTE: www.ncpublicschools.org/docs/cte/curriculum/essential- standards.pdf CTE: www.ncpublicschools.org/docs/cte/curriculum/essential- standards.pdf
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QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Thank you!
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