session 5 3-5 english language arts

49
Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts Common Core State Standards

Upload: didier

Post on 24-Feb-2016

44 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Common Core State Standards. Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts. Day 1 – Session 2:45-4:15. OUTCOMES Participants will increase their knowledge of: t he structure of the Common Core State Standards (CCSS); t he implications of the CCSS Anchor Standards; t he new Course Descriptions; - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Session 53-5 English Language Arts

Common Core State Standards

Page 2: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

2

Day 1 – Session2:45-4:15

OUTCOMESParticipants will increase their knowledge of:1. the structure of the Common Core State

Standards (CCSS);2. the implications of the CCSS Anchor Standards;3. the new Course Descriptions;4. text complexity.

Page 3: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

3

ANCHOR STANDARDS

Page 4: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

4

Key Ideas and Details

1. Read closely to determine what the text says explicitly and to make logical inferences from it; cite specific textual evidence when writing or speaking to support conclusions drawn from the text.

2. Determine central idea or themes of a text and analyze their development; summarize the key supporting details and ideas.

3. Analyze how and why individuals, events, and ideas develop and interact over the course of a text.

Evidence Standard

Main Idea Standard

Interaction Standard

Page 5: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

5

Craft and Structure4. Interpret words and phrases as they are used in a

text, including determining technical, connotative, and figurative meanings, and analyze how specific word choices shape meaning or tone.

5. Analyze the structure of texts, including how specific sentences, paragraphs, and larger portions of the text (e.g. a section, chapter, scene, or stanza) relate to each other and the whole.

Structure Standard

Interpretation Standard

Page 6: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

6

Craft and Structure

6. Assess how point of view or purpose shapes the content and style of a text.

Point of View/Purpose Standard

Page 7: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

7

Integration of Knowledge and Ideas7. Integrate and evaluate content presented in diverse media and

formats, including visually and quantitatively, as well as in words.

8. Delineate and evaluate the argument and specific claims in a text, including the validity of the reasoning as well as the relevance and sufficiency of the evidence.

9. Analyze how two or more texts address similar themes or topics in order to build knowledge or to compare the approaches the authors take.

Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity10. Read and comprehend complex literary and informational texts

independently and proficiently.

Multimedia Standard

Argument Standard

Multi-text standard

Complexity Standard

Page 8: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

8

COGNITIVE DEMAND AND RIGOR

Page 9: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

9

Webb’s Depth of Knowledge and Bloom’s Taxonomy

The CCSS standards incorporate Webb’s Depth of Knowledge and Bloom’s Taxonomy.

The cognitive demand of the standards rises across the grades.

Page 10: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

10

The “Demands” of the Standards

The cognitive demand of the standards incorporates Bloom’s Taxonomy and Webb’s Depth of Knowledge.

How is this accomplished?

The standards “ramp up” the demands made on student thinking.

Page 11: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

11

Kindergarten 1st Grade 2nd Grade 3rd Grade

READING STANDARDS FOR LITERATURE, Key Ideas and Details

2. With prompting and support, retell familiar stories, including key details.

2. Retell stories, including key details, and demonstrate understanding of their centralmessage or lesson.

2. Recount stories, including fables and folktales from diverse cultures, and determine their central message, lesson, or moral.

2. Recount stories, including fables, folktales, andmyths from diverse cultures; determine the central message, lesson, or moral and explain how it is conveyed through key details in the text.

How is the demand of this standard rising across the grades?

Page 12: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

12

3rd Grade 4th Grade 5th Grade 6th Grade2. Recount stories, including fables, folktales, andmyths from diverse cultures; determine the central message, lesson, or moral and explain how it is conveyed through key details in the text.

2. Determine a theme of a story, drama, or poemfrom details in the text; summarize the text.

2. Determine a theme of a story, drama, or poemfrom details in the text, including how characters in a story or drama respond to challenges or how the speaker in a poem reflects upon a topic; summarize the text.

2. Determine a theme or central idea of a text and how it is conveyed through particular details;provide a summary of the text distinct from personal opinions or judgments.

How is the demand of this standard rising across the grades?

Page 13: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

13

7th Grade 8th Grade 2. Determine a theme or central idea of a text and analyze its development over the course of the text; provide an objective summary of the text.

2. Determine a theme or central idea of a text andanalyze its development over the course of the text, including its relationship to the characters, setting,and plot; provide an objective summary of the text.

How is the demand of this standard rising across the grades?

Page 14: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

14

9th -10th Grade 11th -12th Grade 2. Determine a theme or central idea of a text and analyze in detail itsdevelopment over the course of the text, including how it emerges and isshaped and refined by specific details; provide an objective summary of thetext.

2. Determine two or more central ideas of a text and analyze their developmentover the course of the text, including how they interact and build on one anotherto provide a complex analysis; provide an objective summary of the text.

How is the demand of this standard rising across the grades?

Page 15: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

15

BREAK 3:30-3:45

Page 16: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

16

TEXT COMPLEXITY

Page 17: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

17

One hot summer's day a famished fox was strolling through an orchard until he came to clusters of grapes just ripening on a trellised vine. "Just the thing to quench my thirst," quoth he. Drawing back a few paces, he took a run and a jump, and just missed the bunch. His mouth was watering and he could feel gnawing hunger pains. Again and again he tried after the tempting morsel, but at last had to give up.

Once a fox walked through the woods. He came upon a grape orchard. There he found beautiful grapes hanging from a high branch. “Boy those sure would be tasty,” he thought to himself. He backed up and took a running start and jumped. He did not get high enough.

Complex Simple

Page 18: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

18

One hot summer's day a famished fox was strolling through an orchard until he came to clusters of grapes just ripening on a trellised vine. "Just the thing to quench my thirst," quoth he. Drawing back a few paces, he took a run and a jump, and just missed the bunch. His mouth was watering and he could feel gnawing hunger pains. Again and again he tried after the tempting morsel, but at last had to give up.

Once a fox walked through the woods. He came upon a grape orchard. There he found beautiful grapes hanging from a high branch. “Boy those sure would be tasty,” he thought to himself. He backed up and took a running start and jumped. He did not get high enough.

Page 19: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

19

What is right with “simplified” text?

• Provides for scaffolding for ELL students, students with disabilities.

• They can become a foundation for understanding complex text as long as students have the opportunity to read complex texts as well.

• Gradated Text Collection – a collection of texts on a topic that advance in degrees of complexity. Some students may read simpler texts first, then move on to complex text (a form of instructional support).

Page 20: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

20

What’s wrong with the simplifiedtext approach?

• Simplified usually means limited, restricted, and thin in meaning.

• Academic vocabulary can only be learned from complex texts - by noticing how it works in texts, engaging with, thinking about, and discussing their more complex meanings with others.

• Mature language skills needed for success in school and life can only be gained by working with demanding materials.

• No evidence that struggling readers - especially at middle and high school - catch up by gradually increasing the complexity of simpler texts.

Page 21: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

21

Gradated Texts

Article: Breathing and Its True Role in Our Life, Health and Longevity

A collection of texts that increase in difficulty from simple to moderate to complex, around a common topic.

Page 22: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

22

WHY TEXT COMPLEXITYMATTERS

Page 23: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Text Complexity - ACT Study• Purpose: Determine what distinguished the

reading performance of students likely to succeed in college and not.

• Process:• Set benchmark score on the reading test

shown to be predictive of success in college (“21” on ACT composite score). • Looked at results from a half million students.

23

Page 24: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Performance on the ACT Reading Test by Comprehension Level

24

Page 25: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Performance on the ACT Reading Test by Textual Element

(Averaged across Seven Forms)

25

Page 26: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

26

Text Complexity Matters

Texts used in the ACT Reading Test reflect three degrees of complexity: uncomplicated, more challenging, and complex.

Page 27: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

27

Performance on the ACT Reading Test by Degree of Text Complexity

(Averaged across Seven Forms)

In this figure, performance on questions associated with uncomplicated and morechallenging texts both above and below the ACT College Readiness Benchmark forReading follows a pattern similar to those in the previous analyses. Improvement on each of the two kinds of questions is gradual and fairly uniform.

27

Page 28: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Text Complexity

Text complexity is defined by:

Quali

tativ

e

Qualitative measures – levels of meaning, structure, language conventionality and clarity, and knowledge demands often best measured by an attentive human reader. Quantitative

Quantitative measures – readability and other scores of text complexity often best measured by computer software.

Reader and TaskReader and Task considerations – background

knowledge of reader, motivation, interests, and complexity generated by tasks assigned often best made by educators employing their professional judgment.

28

Page 29: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Recap of ACT FindingsQuestion type and level (main idea, word meanings, details) is NOT the chief differentiator between student scoring above and below the benchmark.

The degree of text complexity in the passages acted as the “sorters” within ACT. The findings held true for both males and females, all racial groups and was steady regardless of family income level.

What students could read, in terms of its complexity - rather than what they could do with what they read - is greatest predictor of success. FCAT has complex passages and highly cognitive demanding questions.

29

Page 30: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Guiding Questions

What do the Common Core Learning Standards mean by text complexity?

What is a text complexity band?and

How do we ensure the texts our students are reading are in the appropriate text complexity band?

30

Page 31: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

31

The Common Core Standards' three equally important components of text complexity

Quantitative measures – readability and other scores of text complexity often best measured by computer software.

Qualitative measures – levels of meaning, structure, language conventionality and clarity, and knowledge demands often best measured by an attentive human reader.

Reader and Task considerations – background knowledge of reader, motivation, interests, and complexity generated by tasks assigned often best made by educators employing their professional judgment.

Page 32: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Where do we find texts in the appropriate text complexity band?

Choose an excerpt of text from Appendix B as a starting place:

32

We could….

or…

Use available resources to determine the text complexity of other materials on our own.

Page 33: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Determining Text Complexity

A Four-step Process:

33

QuantitativeQuali

tativ

e

Reader and Task

4. Recommend placement in the appropriate text complexity band.

3. Reflect upon the reader and task considerations.

2. Analyze the qualitative measures of the text.

1. Determine the quantitative measures of the text.

Page 34: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Step 1: Quantitative Measures

34

Measures such as:• Word length• Word frequency• Word difficulty• Sentence length• Text length• Text cohesion

Quantitative Measures

Page 35: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

35

Page 36: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Step 2: Qualitative Measures

Measures such as:• Structure• Language Demands and

Conventions• Knowledge Demands• Levels of Meaning/Purpose

36

Page 37: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Common Core StandardsQualitative Features of Text Complexity

Structure

Simple ComplexExplicit ImplicitConventional UnconventionalEvents related in chronological order Events related out of

chronological order (chiefly literary texts)Traits of a common genre or subgenre Traits specific to a particular

discipline (chiefly informational texts)Simple graphics Sophisticated graphicsGraphics unnecessary or merely supplemental to understanding the

text Graphics essential to understanding the text and may provide information not elsewhere provided

37

Page 38: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Common Core StandardsQualitative Features of Text Complexity

Language Demands: Conventionality and Clarity

Literal Figurative or ironicClear Ambiguous or purposefully misleadingContemporary, familiar Archaic or otherwise unfamiliarConversational General Academic and domain specificLight vocabulary load: few unfamiliar or academic words Many words

unfamiliar and high academic vocabulary presentSentence structure straightforward Complex and varied sentence

structuresThough vocabulary can be measured by quantifiable means, it is still a

feature for careful consideration when selecting texts Though sentence length is measured by quantifiable means, sentence

complexity is still a feature for careful consideration when selecting texts

38

Page 39: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Common Core StandardsQualitative Features of Text Complexity

Knowledge Demands: Life Experience • Simple theme Complex or sophisticated themes• Single theme Multiple themes• Common everyday experiences or clearly fantastical situations Experiences distinctly different from one’s own

• Single perspective Multiple perspectives• Perspective(s) like one’s own Perspective(s) unlike or in

opposition to one’s own• Everyday knowledge Cultural and literary knowledge• Few allusions to other texts Many allusions to other texts • Low intertextuality (few or no references to other texts) High intertextuality (many references or citations to other texts)

39

Page 40: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Common Core StandardsQualitative Features of Text ComplexityLevels of Meaning (chiefly literary texts) or

purpose (chiefly informational texts)

• Single level of meaning Multiple levels of meaning

• Explicitly stated purpose Implicit purpose, may be hidden or obscure

40

Page 41: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Common Core StandardsQualitative Features of Text Complexity

Structure

Simple ComplexExplicit ImplicitConventional UnconventionalEvents related in chronological order Events related out of

chronological order (chiefly literary texts)Traits of a common genre or subgenre Traits specific to a particular

discipline (chiefly informational texts)Simple graphics Sophisticated graphicsGraphics unnecessary or merely supplemental to understanding the

text Graphics essential to understanding the text and may provide information not elsewhere provided

41

Page 42: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Step 2: Qualitative Measures

42

Because the factors for literary texts are different from information texts, these two rubrics contain different content. However, the formatting of each document is exactly the same.

And because these factors represent continua rather than discrete stages or levels, numeric values are not associated with these rubrics. Instead, six points along each continuum is identified: not suited to the band, early-mid grade level, mid-end grade level, early-mid grade level, mid-end grade level, not suited to band.

Page 43: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Step 3: Reader and Task

Considerations such as:• Motivation• Knowledge and experience• Purpose for reading• Complexity of task assigned

regarding text• Complexity of questions asked

regarding text

43

Page 44: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

44

Vocabulary and Syntax The educational implications of the measures of text

difficulty include:

• Single biggest predictor of student achievement is vocabulary and syntax.

• Need to be addressed throughout schooling (kindergarten through 12th grade). Schools and districts should plan a coherent, intensive and systematic program for vocabulary and syntax.

• Syntax is one of the most powerful predictors of difficulty.

• Some features of text are more important than others—syntax and vocabulary are an example of two essential text features to pay particular attention to during instruction.

Page 45: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

45

What Complex Text Demands of Readers

• A Willingness to Pause and Probe• Students must be patient as they read complex texts and be willing to

devote time to contemplation of the text

• The Capacity for Uninterrupted Thinking• Time devoted to the text and thinking about the text exclusively - single-

tasking rather than multi-tasking

• A Receptivity to Deep Thinking• Contemplation of the meaning of the text and not a quick response voicing

an opinion based on a shallow interpretation(Mark Bauerlein, 2011)

Page 46: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

46

1. Make close reading and rereading of texts central to lessons.

2. Provide scaffolding that does not preempt or replace text.

3. Ask text dependent questions from a range of question types.

4. Emphasize students supporting answers based upon evidence from the text.

5. Provide extensive research and writing opportunities (claims and evidence).

Step 3: Reader and TaskTen Guiding Principles

Page 47: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

Step 3: Reader and TaskTen Guiding Principles

47

6. Offer regular opportunities for students to share ideas, evidence and research.

7. Offer systematic instruction in vocabulary.

8. Ensure wide reading from complex text that varies in length.

9. Provide explicit instruction in applied grammar and conventions.

10. Cultivate students’ independence.

Page 48: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

48

Shorter, Challenging Texts

• The study of short texts is useful to enable students at a wide range of reading levels to participate in the close analysis of more demanding text.

• Place a high priority on the close, sustained reading of complex text. Such reading emphasizes the particular over the general and strives to focus on what lies within the four corners of the text.

• Close reading often requires compact, short, self-contained texts that students can read and re-read deliberately and slowly to probe and ponder the meanings of individual words, the order in which sentences unfold, and the development of ideas over the course of the text.

Page 49: Session 5 3-5 English Language Arts

49

Reflective JournalPlease take a moment to reflect on the instructional implications of text complexity.