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California Common Core Standards (CCCS). Get the whole picture Walnut Valley Unified School District. Two New Acronyms. CCCS/CCSS California Common Core Standards These are now our “official” standards But we have 3 or 4 years for transition Also known as CCSS (Common Core State Standards).
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California Common Core Standards (CCCS) Get the whole picture Walnut Valley Unified School District
Two New Acronyms CCCS/CCSS California Common Core Standards These are now our “official” standards But we have 3 or 4 years for transition Also known as CCSS (Common Core State Standards)
What are the benefits of the CCSS? Internationally benchmarked Student expectations are clear to parents, teachers, and the general public Allows for collaboration with other states on best practices, instructional materials, and professional development Reduces costs to the state
The Common Core State Standards To date, forty-six states and the District of Columbia have adopted the Common Core State Standards (CCSS), a consistent set of English language arts (ELA) and mathematics expectations that students need to meet to succeed in college and careers States have committed to implement the new standards by the 2014-15 school year This is an aggressive timeline that will require a strategy that draws on state policymakers, district and school officials, and classroom teachers to ensure a successful and efficient implementation and transition
Schools are Improving Changing World School Improvement
Goal for School Improvement Changing World School Improvement
Overarching Goals for K-12 CCSS Ensure that our students are: • Meeting college and work expectations • Prepared to succeed in our global economy and society • Provided with rigorous content and applications of higher knowledge through higher order thinking skills.
The CCSS Build Upon the Strengths and Lessons of Current State Standards
California’s Additional 15% Based on the following criteria: Substantively enhance Address a perceived gap Be defensible to classroom practitioners Keep the original standard intact Ensure the rigor of California’s existing standards is maintained
Why did we make this change? • To ensure that our students are • Meeting college and work expectations • Prepared to succeed in a global economy and society • Provided with rigorous content and application of higher knowledge thinking through higher order thinking skills
Gradual Release of Responsibility Focused Lesson Guided Instruction Teacher Responsibility Collaborative Learning Independent Tasks I do it We do it You do it together You do it alone Student Responsibility
Answers are Part of the Process, They are Not the Product The product is the student’s knowledge and know-how. The ‘correctness’ of answers is also part of the process. Yes, an important part.
Wrong answers are part of the process, too What was the student thinking? Was it an error of haste or a stubborn misconception
CCCS Student Thinking Matters!!
College, Career Readinessand Citizenship Survival Skills • Critical thinking and problem solving • Collaboration • Agility and adaptability • Initiative and entrepreneurism • Effective oral and written communication • Accessing and analyzing information • Curiosity and imagination From The Global Achievement Gap: Why Even Our Best Schools Don’t Teach the New Survival Skills our Children Need – And What We Can Do About it by Tony Wagner (Basic Books, 2008)
ENGLISH/LANGUAGE ARTS Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science and Technical Subjects + 6.5% The Common Core and California’s 6.5%
Design and Organization Sections include: English Language Arts K-5 English Language Arts 6-12 Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects
Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects College and Career Readiness (CCR) anchor standards Reading 10 Standards Reading Foundational Skills 4 Standards (Grades K-5 only) Writing 10 Standards Speaking and Listening 6 Standards Language Standards 6 Standards Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects (Grades 6–12 only)
What’s Different in ELA? Current ELA domains: reading, writing, listening and speaking, and written and oral language conventions. CCCS strands: reading, writing, speaking and listening, and language
What did CA add to ELA CCSS? Formal presentations, Grades 1-12 Penmanship, Grades 2-4 Career and consumer documents for writing in Grade 8 Analysis of text features in informational text, Grades 6-12
CCCS Advances for ELA Balance of literature and information text Text complexity Emphasis on argument and explanatory writing Writing about sources Inclusion of formal and informal talk Stress on vocabulary—general academic and subject specific
What did CCSS add to CA ELA? • Vocabulary standards • Standards for “collaborative discussions” • Literacy standards for history/social studies, science, and technical subjects • Embedded in K-5 • In Grades 6-12 these are a separate set--expectation is these will be shared between ELA teachers and teachers in history/social studies and science
Emphasis on Informational Text • Distribution of Literary and Informational Passagesby Grade in the 2009 NAEP Reading Framework
Mathematics + 15% Common Core and California’s 15%
The Standards for Mathematical Practices • Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them • Reason abstractly and quantitatively • Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others • Model with mathematics • Use appropriate tools strategically • Attend to precision • Look for and make use of structure • Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning
CCSS for Mathematics • Standards for Mathematical Practice • Carry across all grade levels. • Describe habits of mind of a mathematically expert student. • Standards for Mathematical Content • K-8 standards are presented by grade level • High school standards are organized by conceptual themes: • Number and Quantity • Algebra • Functions • Modeling • Geometry • Statistics and Probability
High School Arranged by cluster (not course) Number and quantity Algebra Functions Modeling Geometry Probability and Statistics
What’s different in math? • More similarities than differences • Some shifts in grade level for some skills • Organization of the standards • By grade level through Grade 8 • Algebra 1 • Clusters of standards for 9-12 • Two options for eighth graders • 8th grade math • Algebra I
What did CA add to Math CCSS? Calculus and AP Probability and Statistics Operations and Algebraic Thinking additions in Grades 2 and 5 Measurement and data additions in Grades 2 Grade 6--the Number System
What did CCSS add to CA Math? • 2 Options for Eighth Graders • Algebra 1 • Eighth Grade CC Math Standards • K-7 standards augmented to prepare for either option • Clearer grade-to-grade organization
Assessment Timeline Two assessments are being developed Current STAR was scheduled to sunset in 2012-13 Budget constraints pushed STAR extension to 2013-2014 New assessment could be administered in 2014-15 and piloted the year before California is now part of the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium -- SBAC
The SBAC System English Language Arts and Mathematics, Grades 3 – 8 and High School Optional Interim assessment system — no stakes Summative assessment for accountability Last 12 weeks of year* DIGITAL CLEARINGHOUSE of formative tools, processes and exemplars; released items and tasks; model curriculum units; educator training; professional development tools and resources; scorer training modules; and teacher collaboration tools. INTERIM ASSESSMENT INTERIM ASSESSMENT • PERFORMANCE • TASKS • Reading • Writing • Math END OF YEAR ADAPTIVE ASSESSMENT Computer Adaptive Assessment and Performance Tasks Computer Adaptive Assessment and Performance Tasks Scope, sequence, number, and timing of interim assessments locally determined
Testing Item Types • Constructed-response • Selected response (End-of-year) • Performance tasks • Computer-enhanced • Video, multimedia, interactive text
How can I get the CCCS? • Download them at • http://www.scoe.net/castandards/index.html
Timelines • Timeline 1 • Frameworks: May 2013 • Instructional Materials: November 2014 • Timeline 2 • Frameworks: May 2015 • Instructional Materials: November 2017
Next Steps for Implementation • Standards Messaging and Awareness – Build understanding • Impacting the Teaching and Learning Cycle • Teachers need time and space to work collaboratively across grade levels and curricular areas to make meaning of the new standards-based learning expectations • Standards-Based Reporting • Align systems for staff evaluation and support
Resources Full text of the Common Core California Standards: http://www.scoe.net/castandards/index.html (Outside Source) Information about the common core: http://www.corestandards.org/ (Outside Source) Information about the common core including implementation timelines: http://www.cde.ca.gov/ci/cc/ SBAC information: www.k12.wa.us/SMARTER (Outside Source) Center for K-12 and Performance Management at ETS: http://www.k12center.org/publications.html (Outside Source) Orange County Department of Education: http://commoncoreca.ocde.us/Standards/CDE.htm