Transcript Document

Common Core State Standards
General Overview
Presentation for
Partners in Education
December 3, 2012
by
Betsy Knox and Nancy Pollack
HCS Literacy and Math Coordinators
Common Core: Standards for Proficiency
Preparing All Students for Success
in College and Career Readiness
• Developed in collaboration with: • National Organization feedback
received from:
o Teachers
o School Administrators
o Education experts
• Advisory Group includes experts
from:
o
o
o
o
Achieve, Inc.
ACT
The College Board
The National Association of State
Boards of Education
o The State Higher Education Executive
Officers
o Teachers
o Post secondary Educators (including
Community Colleges)
o Civil Rights groups
o English Language Learners
o Students with disabilities
• 10,000 responses received during
public feedback period
VT-DOE Common Core in VT:
VPDNetwork Leaders
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Specifically….
Common Core Standards define the knowledge and skills
students should have within their K-12 education careers so
that they will graduate high school able to succeed in entrylevel, credit-bearing academic college courses and in
workforce training programs.
The standards are:
 aligned with college and work expectations;
 clear, understandable and consistent;
 rigorous in content and application of knowledge through highorder skills;
 built upon strengths and lessons of current state standards;
 informed by other top performing countries, so that all students
are prepared to succeed in our global economy and society; and
 evidence-based.
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What do the Common Core State
Standards, including the College &
Career-Readiness Standards, mean
for
students?
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Adaptability
Greater emphasis on
understanding
will better prepare
students to our
changing world.
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5
Competitiveness
High standards such as those of high-achieving
countries will enable student to compete in the
global work force.
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Consistency
Having the same expectations as their grade-level
peers across the country ensures consistency for
students who must move during their school
years.*
*Pre-service teachers across
the country will use
the same set of standards.
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Transitions
Consistent standards
enable colleges and
universities to better
understand incoming
student entry points.
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Common Core Transition Timeline
CC = Common Core State Standards
GE = Grade Expectations
NECAP = New England Common Assessment Program
SBAC = SMARTER Balanced Assessment Consortium
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A Closer Look at
Mathematics
Standards
Previous Structure of K-12 Mathematics
Common Core Implications:
Mathematical Practices & Math Content
Work Together to Create Depth
Content
Standards
Depth
Mathematical
&
Practices
Rigor
Standards for Mathematical Practice
1. Make sense of complex problems and persevere in solving
them.
2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively
3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of
others.
4. Model with mathematics.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Use appropriate tools strategically.
Attend to precision
Look for and make use of structure
Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.
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Common Core Mathematics
Domains & Conceptual Categories
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K-5
6-8
High School
8 Mathematical Practices
8 Mathematical Practices
8 Mathematical Practices
Content
Content
Content
Counting and Cardinality (K)
Operations & Algebraic
Thinking (K-5)
Number & Operations in
Base Ten (K-5)
Number & Operations –
Fractions (3-5)
Measurement & Data (K-5)
Geometry (K-5)
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Ratios & Proportional
Relationships (6-7)
The Number System (6-8)
Expressions & Equations(6-8)
Functions (8 only)
Geometry (6-8)
Statistics & Probability (6-8)
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Number & Quantity
Algebra
Functions
Modeling
Geometry
Statistics & Probability
Best Practices/Coaching
Bugs
Elephants
Giraffes
and More…
Standards for Mathematical Practice
1. Make sense of complex problems and persevere in solving
them.
2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively
3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of
others.
4. Model with mathematics.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Use appropriate tools strategically.
Attend to precision
Look for and make use of structure
Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.
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A Closer Look at
Literacy
Standards
Common Core ELA/Literacy Standards
Reading
Writing
College and
Career
Readiness
Speaking,
Listening &
Language
Students who are College and Career Ready in
ELA/Literacy Can… (p.7 CCSS-ELA)
 Demonstrate independence.
 Build strong content knowledge.
 Respond to varying demands of audience, task,
purpose, and discipline.
 Comprehend as well as critique.
 Value evidence.
 Use technology and digital media strategically
and capably.
 Come to understand other perspectives and
cultures.
Big Ideas from CCSS ELA writers
David Coleman & Sue Pimentel
Students should be able to -… closely read complex texts,
… evaluate and gather evidence, and
… integrate information into clear,
coherent writing that
demonstrates critical thinking.
-- “Publisher’s Criteria for the CCSS in ELA & Literacy.” June 2011.
Instructional Shifts …..
• Depth of instruction in Comprehension &
Collaboration
• Increased Emphasis on Presentation of
Knowledge & Ideas
• Increase in complexity of texts at all grade levels
• Use of short, challenging texts for explicit instruction in
vocabulary, comprehension, and critical thinking
• “Gradual release of responsibility” and assessment of
independence and proficiency
• Research & evidence (writing)
• Vocabulary
A Closer look at:
Anchor Standard #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.
Transition to Common Core State Standards:
What are the HCS Coordinators’ Roles?….
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Members of the CSSU Common Core Implementation Committee
Attend ongoing training so we can, in turn, support our teachers.
Plan and implement CSSU in-service trainings
Through coaching and collaboration, support HCS teachers with
content alignment and instructional planning
• Coaching & Partnership with teachers working to embed
Content and Practice Standards
• Collaborative planning, reflection, and dialogue
• Shared Learning
• Focus on student achievement
Assessment: What’s New?
Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium
(SBAC)