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Common Core State Standards: Reading and Writing Standards for Literacy in History/Social Studies Grade 9 – Grade 12 Greece Central School District - Office of Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment. What are the Common Core Standards?.
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\Common Core State Standards:Reading and Writing Standards for Literacy in History/Social StudiesGrade 9 – Grade 12Greece Central School District - Office of Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment
What are the Common Core Standards? • The goal of the CCSS is the prepare students to be college and career ready. • These standards are research based, align with college and career expectations, are rigorous, and meet international standards. • There are four major strands that span K-12 education: • Reading • Writing • Speaking and Listening • Language Development
A Focus on Humanities • In social studies classrooms, the essence of the Common Core State Standards is a focus in humanities – connecting social studies skills and content with English/Language Arts curriculum. • For our social studies lessons, units and classrooms, the reading and writing strands are central to instruction and student learning. • Information contained here will focus on the standards for reading and writing, in grades 9-12 for social studies.
Common Core Standards in Social Studies - Reading • There are four standards for the Common Core Reading strand: • Key Ideas and Details:Read the text closely to make inferences, and to cite specific textual evidence to support conclusions. • Craft and Structure: Interpret text to determine technical, connotative and figurative meaning; assess how point of view shapes content and style. • Integration of Knowledge and Ideas: Integrate and evaluate content visually and quantitatively; delineate and evaluate claims in a text; compare how different texts address similar themes. • Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity: A progression of complexity in text and theme in order to build independence and proficiency.
CCSS: Reading in Grades 9-10Key Ideas/Craft and Structure • Key Ideas: • Cite specific textual evidence for analysis of both primary and secondary sources, including features such as origin and date. • Analyze a series of events in a text, but be able to determine whether earlier events caused later ones or simply preceded them. • Provide summaries from primary and secondary sources that accurately describe how key events and ideas progress and develop through a text. • Craft and Structure: • Determine the meaning and purpose of words and phrases used in text as related to the political, economic, and social concepts of social studies. • Analyze how a text uses structure to focus on key points. • Compare the point of view of two or more authors (primary and/or secondary sources) for how they treat the same topics, including the details, evidence and conclusions that each author presents.
CCSS: Reading in Grades 9-10Integration of Knowledge/Range of Reading • Integration of Knowledge and Ideas: • Integrate technical and quantitative texts (charts, research data) with qualitative information in both print or digital text. • Assess the success to which an author uses reasoning and evidence to support claims and argument in a text. • Compare and contrast the same topic, concept or theme through multiple primary and secondary source documents (Ex – Document Based Question analysis). • Range of Reading and Text Complexity: • By the end of grade 10, students should be able to read and comprehend history/social studies primary and secondary source texts that include the grades 9-10 complexity band vocabulary. Examples include most district textbooks and ancillary materials (secondary sources).
CCSS: Reading in Grades 11-12Key Ideas/Craft and Structure • Key Ideas: • Cite specific textual evidence for analysis of both primary and secondary sources and connect the evidence to a central theme or claim that spans the multiple texts. • Evaluate various explanations for events or actions and determine which text best supports the event/action with evidence, and which source(s) leaves the content unexplained. • Provide summaries from primary and secondary sources that connect the multiple sources of text and make clear the relationships that exist among key events, people, concepts or themes. • Craft and Structure: • Determine the meaning and purpose of words and phrases used in text as related to social studies content, and analyze how an author uses a key term or concept throughout a text (Ex. How James Madison uses “faction” in Federalist 10; how Adam Smith uses “commodity” in Wealth of Nations, how Abraham Lincoln uses “dedicate” in The Gettysburg Address). • Describe the relationships between sentence structure, paragraphs, and overall text organization in various types of sources. • Evaluate different authors’ points of view on the same topic by analyzing claim, evidence and interpretation.
CCSS: Reading in Grades 11-12Integration of Knowledge/Range of Reading • Integration of Knowledge and Ideas: • Answer a question or solve a problem using multiple sources and diverse formats (text, graphs, video, online, etc.). • Assess an author’s claims and evidence by challenging or reinforcing them with other information from different texts. • Compare and contrast the same topic, concept or theme through multiple primary and secondary source documents and note discrepancies between texts. • Range of Reading and Text Complexity: • By the end of grade 12, students should be able to read and comprehend history/social studies primary and secondary source texts that include the grades 11-CCR (college and career ready) complexity band vocabulary. Examples include most district textbooks and ancillary materials (secondary sources).
CCSS and Text Complexity Bands • Common Core State Standards have selected various texts as examples for each grade level. • These exemplars are given a text complexity band – based on qualitative and quantitative measures of text difficulty. • Increasing complexity of text and task K-12 helps students prepare for college and careers. • The lexile scores of most textbooks, scientific journals, newspapers and magazines all increased or remained steady from 1930-1990. • In 2008-09, only 53% of students achieved appropriate reading benchmark scores or higher. • Workplace reading regularly exceeds the grade 12 complexity band. • In college, students are expected to read complex text independently and are held more accountable to those readings than students in high schools.
CCSS and Text Complexity BandsGrades 9-10 • Examples of Grades 9-10 Text Complexity Readings: • The Grapes of Wrath - John Steinbeck • In the Time of the Butterflies - Julia Alvarez • Animal Farm - George Orwell • A Tale of Two Cities - Charles Dickens • Anne Frank In the World - The Anne Frank House • 1984 - George Orwell • Shadow Life - Barry Denenberg • Machu Picchu - Elizabeth Mann
CCSS and Text Complexity BandsGrades 11-CCR (College/Career Ready) • Examples of Grades 11-CCR Text Complexity Readings: • The Tragedy of Hamlet - William Shakespeare • A Raisin in the Sun - Lorraine Hansberry • Common Sense - Thomas Paine • Black Boy - Richard Wright • Politics and English Language - George Orwell • Democracy in America - Alexis de Tocqueville • Declaration of Sentiments - Seneca Falls Convention • 1776 - David McCullough • “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?” - Frederick Douglass
Literacy in Social Studies - Writing • There are four standards for the Common Core Writing strand: • Text Types and Purposes: Write arguments to support claims using relevant and substantive evidence from text; write narratives to develop real or imagined events with rich detail and structure. • Production and Distribution of Writing: Production of writing pieces, including revision, editing and publication and the use of technology to interact and collaborate with others. • Research to Build and Present Knowledge: Students conduct both short-term and long-term research, gather evidence from informational and literary texts to support research while assessing the credibility of sources. • Range of Writing: Students learn to write for different audiences, purposes and tasks.
CCSS: Writing in Grades 9-10Text Types/Production of Writing • Text Types and Purposes: • Introduce precise claims about a topic and distinguish from alternate or opposing claims over several writing pieces. • Develop claims, and counterclaims fairly, supplying data and evidence for both, as well as an analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of both. • Use words, phrases and sentences to create cohesion in writing, and to clarify pieces of evidence that support claims. • Establish and maintain a formal, objective style of writing. • Develop a topic in writing with relevant facts, extended definitions, quotations and examples. • Use precise language and domain specific vocabulary to manage the complexity of different writing tasks. • Production and Distribution of Writing: • Produce clear writing pieces that are organized for the purpose of specific audiences, peers, and tasks. • Plan, revise, edit, rewrite, or try a new approach to writing with both teacher and peer support and guidance. • Use technology (internet, computers, multimedia) to produce, publish and present information.
CCSS: Writing in Grades 9-10Research/Range of Writing • Research to Build and Present Knowledge: • Conduct short, as well as sustained, research projects (including self-generated questions) to answer a question drawing on several sources or texts. • Gather relevant information from multiple authoritative print and digital sources; narrow or broaden the topic when appropriate; select text as evidence to maintain the progression of ideas. • Learn standard formats for citations (in-text and works cited page) • Draw evidence from additional, student selected texts, to support analysis, reflect on evidence, and enhance research. • Range of Writing: • Write over extended time frames (time for revision, editing, and reflection), as well as over shorter time frames in order to expand understanding and development of discipline-specific tasks.
CCSS: Writing in Grades 11-12Text Types/Production of Writing • Text Types and Purposes: • Introduce claims about a topic and distinguish one claim from another in different texts; establish significance of claims and logically sequence claims and counterclaims. • Develop claims, and counterclaims fairly, supplying data and evidence for both, as well as an analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of both, including point of view and bias. • Establish and maintain a formal style of writing, using varied syntax and tone. • Develop a topic thoroughly by selecting the most significant facts, definitions and quotations. • Production and Distribution of Writing: • Produce clear writing pieces that are organized for the purpose of specific audiences, peers, and tasks. • Plan, revise, edit, rewrite, or try a new approach to writing by focusing on what is most significant for a purpose or audience. • Use technology (internet, computers, multimedia) to produce and publish writing; introduce new arguments and information in conclusions.
CCSS: Writing in Grades 11-12Research/Range of Writing • Research to Build and Present Knowledge: • Conduct short, as well as sustained, research projects (including self-generated questions) to answer a question drawing on several sources or text and synthesize several sources on the same topic. • Gather relevant information from multiple authoritative print and digital sources; narrow or broaden the topic when appropriate; select text as evidence to maintain the progression of ideas and avoid overreliance on one source or text. • Avoid plagiarism and follow and standard format for citation. • Draw evidence from additional, student selected texts, to support analysis, reflect on evidence, and enhance research. • Range of Writing: • Write over extended time frames (time for revision, editing, and reflection), as well as over shorter time frames in order to expand understanding and development of discipline-specific tasks.
Resources for the Common Core State Standards • http://www.corestandards.org – Common Core State Standards Initiative Website. • Common Core State Standards for ELA and Literacy - A Video Overview