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Session 2: Overview of Core Knowledge Language Arts (CKLA). How CKLA Relates to the Three pillar model. 2. What is Reading?. D ecoding. C omprehension. R eading. D x C = R. 3. What is the Significance of this Number?. 270. 4. Pillar 1: Explicit Instruction in the Code . 26 Letters
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Session 2: Overview of Core Knowledge Language Arts (CKLA) How CKLA Relates to the Three pillar model EngageNY.org 2
What is Reading? Decoding Comprehension Reading D xC =R EngageNY.org 3
What is the Significance of this Number? 270 EngageNY.org 4
Pillar 1: Explicit Instruction in the Code • 26 Letters A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T … • 52 Total with Upper- and Lowercase a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x … • 16 Distinctly Different Uppercase A B D E F G H I J K L M N Q R T • 44 sounds 26 consonant, 18 vowel • 150 spellings /ie/ =ie|i_e|igh | y | ye|y_e • Directionality EngageNY.org 5
Overview of Skills Materials Student Decodable Readers Teacher Guides Assessment & Remediation Guides Chaining Boards Student Workbooks EngageNY.org 6
Accessing the Skills Materials on EngageNY Step Step Step Step Step • Kindergarten CKLA-NY revised Core Knowledge Curriculum - Skills Strand EngageNY.org
What Will Students Read? EngageNY.org 8
What Will Students Read? A Carousel Walk • On 4 sides of the room are posted a “Trajectory of Reading” gallery • Line up and peruse the gallery closest to where you are sitting. • Be sure to review from K – 2 (left to right) EngageNY.org 9
Let’s Take a Closer Look Materials • G1 U1 Review Lesson • Snap Shots Stories • Snap Shots Code Load Pages Use the Stories to Look for: • Evidence of lesson content in the reader text • Tricky words “where” and “who” • Quotation marks • Vocabulary “posh” • Evidence of Previously Taught Spellings in the reader text • /i/ as in skim; /e/ as in bed; /a/ as in tap; /u/ as in up; /o/ as in flop • /m/ as in swim; /n/ as in run; /t/ as in bat; etc. EngageNY.org 10
Reflect • I used to think… • Now I think… • Now I wonder… EngageNY.org 11
What Will Students Write? EngageNY.org 12
What evidence do you seeof the following? Early Asian Civilizations Grammar Spelling Handwriting Content What Will Students Write? EngageNY.org 13
Summary of the Writing Process Genre Introduction As a Class Plan for a Shared Writing in the Genre As a Class Draft a Shared Writing in the Genre Students Individually Plan their Own Writing Students Individually Draft their Own Writing Students Edit their Writing Students Publish their Writing (sometimes) EngageNY.org 14
Genre Writing Descriptive Writing Fictional Narrative Personal Narrative Friendly Letter Opinion Piece Persuasive Writing “What if…” Writing Taking Notes Report Writing EngageNY.org 15
Activity: Personal Narrative EngageNY.org 16
Writing Content: Skills Strand EngageNY.org 17
Pillar 2: The Listening & Learning Strand Supporting Language and Knowledge Development through Shared Interactive Reading EngageNY.org 18
Anchor Standards for Reading and Writing • If you are sitting on the RIGHT side of the room, write one word or phrase that comes to mind when you consider what the Common Core writing standards call for. • If you are sitting on the LEFTside of the room, write one word or phrase that comes to mind when you consider what the Common Core reading standards call for. EngageNY.org 19
Anchor Reading Standards EngageNY.org 20
Kindergarten Reading Standards EngageNY.org 21
Grade 1 Reading Standards EngageNY.org 22
Grade 2 Reading Standards EngageNY.org 23
Anchor Writing Standards EngageNY.org 24
Kindergarten Writing Standards EngageNY.org 25
Grade 1 Writing Standards EngageNY.org 26
Grade 2 Writing Standards EngageNY.org 27
Liben & Liben, 2013 Expanding students’vocabulary and developing the vocabulary of all students cannot be done from texts early readers are able to read themselves in these younger grades. It must come from rich texts read aloud.Exposure to varied and sophisticated syntax – the other ingredient of academic language – must also come from excellent works heard read aloud. Though both syntax and word work can and should also be addressed in other ways, high quality and diverse texts read aloud, enjoyed, discussed and analyzed, are the richest pathway to develop robust language capacity in all students. EngageNY.org 28
CKLA Materials Teacher Anthology Flip Book Supplemental Guide Image Cards EngageNY.org 29
Accessing the Skills Materials on EngageNY Step Step Step Step Step • Kindergarten CKLA-NY revised Core Knowledge Curriculum – Listening and Learning Strand EngageNY.org
Listening and Learning Lessons Review of Prior Knowledge Prediction Purpose for Listening EngageNY.org 31
Listening and Learning Lessons Image to display Story Text Guided Listening Support EngageNY.org 32
Listening and Learning Lessons Comprehension Questions EngageNY.org 33
Listening and Learning Lessons Word Work EngageNY.org 34
Listening and Learning Lessons Extension Activities EngageNY.org 35
Learning to Read: The 6 Shifts for K - 2 Students HEAR read aloud a balance of informational and fictional texts Read-alouds address cross-curricular domain-specific texts on science, history, & the arts Phonemic & syntactic complexity (SKILLS) Read-aloud text complexity (L&L) Oral conversations around a common text draw students attention to key details Drawing and dictating, leading to short written works with increasing details. Oral exposure, through read-alouds to academic and domain-specific vocabulary PLUS explicit, sequential, phonics instruction that begins orally EngageNY.org EngageNY.org 36 36
Activity: Annotated Lesson 6 Shifts In your handouts, fill in each call out box to indicate the Common Core Shift demonstrated by the text referenced by the call out box. e.g., Core Content Objectives demonstrate Shift 2 EngageNY.org 37