Transcript Slide 0

The Common Core State
Standards….
What are they?
How will they inform instruction?
What are the assessments going to be like?
What does this mean for teachers next year?
The Common Core State Standards
Initiative….
Beginning in the spring of 2009, Governors
and state commissioners of education from
48 states, 2 territories and the District of
Columbia committed to developing a
common core of state K-12 EnglishLanguage Arts (ELA) and Mathematics
standards.
www.corestandards.org
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Standards Development Process

College and career readiness standards
developed in summer 2009
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Final Common Core State Standards
released on June 2, 2010
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Adopted by the Board of Regents in NYS
on January 10, 2011
What are the Common Core State
Standards (CCSS)?

Aligned with college and work expectations

Include rigorous content and application of
knowledge through higher-order thinking
skills

Build upon strengths and lessons of
current state standards

Internationally benchmarked so that all
students are prepared to succeed in our
global economy and society
The CCSS….

Articulate what students should know
and be able to do (i.e., content and skills)

Are organized to be fewer and clearer

Provide for greater depth of learning

Reflect college and career readiness

Emphasize coherence, focus, and rigor
Why is this important?

Currently, every state has its own set of
academic standards, meaning public
education students in each state are
learning to different levels

All students must be prepared to
compete with not only their American
peers in the next state, but with
students from around the world
Key Advances: ELA
Reading


Balance of literature and informational texts
“Staircase” of increased text complexity
Writing

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Emphasis on argument and informative or
explanatory writing, which begins as opinion in the
earliest grades
Emphasis on writing that references sources
Speaking and Listening

Inclusion of formal and informal talk
Language
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Stress on general academic and domain-specific
vocabulary
Key Advances: ELA
Standards for reading and writing in history/
social studies, science, and technical subjects

Complement rather than replace content
standards in those subjects

Responsibility of all teachers to focus on reading
and writing in all content areas
Alignment with college and career readiness
expectations
Key differences between existing state
standards and the CCSS….click below to view.
https://www.communityoflearning.org/bbcswebdav/library/Library%20Content
/CCSS%20Video%20Presentations/4_Jaime_KeyDifferences/4_Jaime_KeyDi
fferences.html
Key Advances: Mathematics
Focus and coherence
 Focus on key topics at each grade level.
 Coherent progressions across grade levels
Balance of concepts and skills
 Content standards require both conceptual
understanding and procedural fluency.
Mathematical practices
 Foster reasoning and sense-making in
mathematics.
College and career readiness
 Level is ambitious, but achievable.
What the Standards do NOT define:
How teachers should teach
 All that can or should be taught
 The nature of advanced work beyond the
core
 The interventions needed for students well
below grade level
 The full range of support for English
Language Learners and students with
special needs
 Everything needed to be college and
career ready

What about the assessments?
The goal for 2014-2015 is to have….

“Through-course” assessments developed by the
Achieve Partnership in ELA and Math (grades 3- 11)

Assessments will be given at three points during the
school year near the end of quarters with an
end-of-year comprehensive assessment
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Results within 2 weeks
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Computer-delivered and computer-based
ELA Assessment:
Mode of Administration

All of the through-course components will
be administered in an online, computerbased mode in grades 6–11. Students
will type their responses, in alignment
with the CCSS, which explicitly require
students to develop keyboarding skills
sufficient to this task.
Promises for the Assessments
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Teachers will be able to focus their
instruction on clear targets rather than
guessing which standards the tests
might cover, and those targets will
represent meaningful progress toward an
evidence-based standard of college and
career readiness.

The assessments will include
challenging performance tasks and
innovative, computer-enhanced items
that elicit complex demonstrations of
learning and measure the full range of
knowledge and skills necessary to
succeed in college and 21st-Century
careers.

Assessments will take place throughout
the school year so that assessment of
learning can take place closer in time to
when key skills and concepts are taught.
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The assessments will provide information that
is useful in informing:
◦ Teaching, learning, and program
improvement;
◦ Determinations of school effectiveness;
◦ Determinations of principal and teacher
effectiveness for use in evaluations and the
provision of support to teachers and
principals; and
◦ Determinations of individual student college
and career readiness, such as
determinations made for high school exit
decisions, college course placement to
credit-bearing classes, or college entrance.
(US Department of Education, 2009)
Just introducing new standards and
assessments will not transform instructional
practice.

Teaching practices must transform to:
◦ Foster students’ higher-order thinking
skills.
◦ Engage students through problem-based
or project-based learning.
◦ Prepare students for distributive and
performance-based assessments.
Professional Development Needs…

Teachers will need assistance with….
◦ Developing an understanding of the Common
Core content standards.
◦ Understanding the structure of the common
assessments.
◦ Creating and scoring performance tasks and
assessments that employ higher ordering
thinking skills.
◦ Learning to interpret and use data to inform
instruction.
Implementation Timeline
Implementation Timeline 2011-12
NYS Professional Development Institute
for District Network Teams – August
2011
 CCSS professional development turnkey
training for teachers and principals – Fall
2011
 Recommendation that all teachers deliver
at least one unit of study aligned with the
CCSS each semester during the 2011-12
school year.

A unit of study aligned with the CCSS in ELA &
Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science and
Technical Subjects would include:
•a focus on close readings of texts for
understanding
•a series of text-dependent questions
•extensive writing opportunities that require
students to draw information from multiple
sources of information
•a focus on notetaking and summarizing of texts
•opportunities for students to share their work
orally with their peers
Sample core curriculum maps in
ELA and units of study….
To view Common Core Curriculum maps click here
The Promise of Standards
The CCSS are not intended to be new
names for old ways of doing business. It
has been recognized that it is time for
states to work together to build on lessons
learned from two decades of standards
based reforms.
Challenges lie ahead for instructional
leaders and teachers…..
There will be no major changes to
curriculum next year. We will proceed
thoughtfully and deliberately to align
curriculum and instruction with the CCSS
over the course of the next several years!
Thank you. Enjoy your summer vacation!

Please e-mail questions that you may have as a
result of this presentation to Carol Gold in the
Curriculum and Instruction Office.