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Overview of the 3-8 ELA Curriculum Modules
Session 1A, February 2014 NTI EngageNY.org
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Who We Are Expeditionary Learning (EL) is a non-profit network of practitioners, with 165 schools in 30 states, 4,000 teachers and 40,000 students. We have been working with schools and teachers for 20 years to create rigorous classrooms in which develop strong literacy, numeracy, and critical thinking skills. We have a proud history of working in New York State and have engaged teams of teachers from high-performing classrooms throughout the state to help develop our curriculum modules. EngageNY.org
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A Deep Partnership We have always viewed every teacher - regardless of subject area, grade or specialization - as a teacher of readers, writers, and content. This was a natural connection for us. Via intensive collaboration with Student Achievement Partners (SAP) and with the input of teachers from across the country, we have created a curriculum that engages students and supports teachers in building students’ capacity to read, think, talk, and write about complex texts.
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Effective Collaboration Norms and Guidelines
Seven Norms of Collaboration 1. Promoting a Spirit of Inquiry and Balancing Advocacy 2. Pausing 3. Paraphrasing 4. Probing 5. Putting Ideas on the Table 6. Paying Attention to Self and Others 7. Presuming Positive Intentions Participants will have a copy of the norms EngageNY.org
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The Norms for Collaboration
We ask you to process thinking with each other often and hope that you will be thoughtful about your own development of relational trust with your NTI colleagues. Use the Norms Inventory to think about the strengths you will bring to collaborative discussions and places where you might need to be more conscious of being your best self. EngageNY.org
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NTI Learning Targets EngageNY.org
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NTI Focus The effective use of the available time for additional literacy instruction Research-based recommendations Explore strategies for adapting the modules including looking at module assessments EngageNY.org
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Learning Target I can describe the structure and content of the 3-8 ELA Modules. EngageNY.org
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Structure of the EL Curriculum Modules
Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 8/9 weeks 16/19 weeks 24/26 weeks 32/34 weeks Each module is approximately 8 weeks of linked instruction, comprised of 3 units. 6 modules will be provided so that teachers can make choices. Teaching four modules results in deep teaching and assessment of all of the RL, RI, and W standards in 3-5 and all of the standards in their entirety in 6-8. Each module is anchored around one or more central text – books from a variety of publishers, chosen to be the best for the subject and standards. These books are complemented by rigorous, authentic informational text embedded within the curriculum itself. EngageNY.org
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Each Module Contains Three Units
Extended Writing (2-2.5 weeks) Extended Reading and Research (2-2.5 weeks) Building Background Knowledge (2-2.5 weeks) In addition to instruction linked to the central text(s), each unit includes a text list of suggested classroom resources at all levels, which can be used with students at other times of the day. EngageNY.org
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Performance Assessment
On-demand and Performance Assessment Module 1 Module 2 Module 3 Module 4 Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Mid-Unit Assessments Mid-Unit Assessments Mid-Unit Assessments Mid-Unit Assessments End of Unit Assessments End of Unit Assessments End of Unit Assessments End of Unit Assessments Culminating Performance Task Culminating Performance Task Culminating Performance Task Culminating Performance Task Incorporates multiple modes, or types, of writing (e.g., argument, informative / explanatory text, and narrative) Always involves writing from sources and citing evidence Requires research to build and present knowledge EngageNY.org
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Curriculum Plan- A Year at a Glance
Please note this has been UPDATED. The “B” modules (not shown on this plan) are still being finalized, although 2B will be released very soon. Please check that your school is using this most recent version – October 2013. EngageNY.org
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Curriculum Plan- A Year at A Glance
Notice the headings: “Becoming a Close Reader” “Researching to Build Knowledge” Standards are arranged in this manner to provide focus on a coherent set of standards at a time. Not all standards are taught in all the modules-they are strategically clumped. EngageNY.org
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Curriculum Map- Notice and Wonder
EngageNY.org
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Become an “Expert” Form a group of 4.
Assign each member one of the following sections: Module Overview Unit Overview(s), Assessments and/or Assessment Lesson First Week of Lessons EngageNY.org
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Become an “Expert” Continued
As you read your section(s), list: 3- characteristics 2- surprising or interesting elements 1- most important point Share your with other members of your group (2 minutes each.) EngageNY.org
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The Module Overview Provides an overview of the entire Module
Shows how the texts and activities progress toward the final performance task Describes what students will read and write and the assessments that teachers will use to measure progress. Central texts are the texts that lessons are specifically designed around. Alignment to CC Standards is described in the “English Language Arts Outcomes table.” EngageNY.org
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Unit Overviews Each one goes into depth about the scope of each unit.
Helps you understand on a day-to-day basis the learning targets each lesson will address. EngageNY.org
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Module Assessments There are assessments embedded in each unit (mid and end). Excellent potential for grade level conversation, professional collaboration. Students are practicing assessment all year long. EngageNY.org
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The agenda shows the lesson “at a glance…
Lesson Plans The agenda shows the lesson “at a glance… …and the teaching notes provide some coaching for teachers as they think about delivering the lesson. -Respect teachers as professionals -View this curriculum as PD, “show” CCLS-aligned instruction at granular level -Dual purpose of each lesson: building skills and building knowledge -Title conveys this dual purpose: literacy: content -Long-term target again -Supporting target: the “bite” out of the standard that we will take today EngageNY.org
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Universal Terms EngageNY.org
Each lesson is broken down into sections: Opening, Work Time, and Closing. -Lesson details there for those who need it -Honor teachers’ existing schema, how they use time -Need to engage, support, hold students accountable -Opening: activate prior knowledge, set purpose, get them curious -Work time: actively reading and writing, with teacher modeling and support -Closing: synthesize, reflect, next steps EngageNY.org
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Adapt Lessons to Meet Students’ Needs
Each lesson offers recommendations for supporting all learners. Use your professional judgment to incorporate these and many more “moves” to match these lessons to your students’ needs. -Equity issue: reach all students -Multiple means (UDL) -ELL specific, but many generalizable -Struggle and stretch -Hope this segment has begun to give you a sense of how you might apply this work in your own district, school or classroom EngageNY.org
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Reflect What is your “best” learning from this session?
Whip around the table and share this final thought. EngageNY.org
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