the new illinois learning standards

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1 The New Illinois The New Illinois Learning Learning Standards Standards Incorporating the Common Core Kevin Seymour, Director, ROE SchoolWorks Diane Beedy, Director, Macon-Piatt Regional Office of Education D

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The New Illinois Learning Standards. Incorporating the Common Core. Kevin Seymour, Director, ROE SchoolWorks Diane Beedy, Director, Macon-Piatt Regional Office of Education. D. What do you know about the Common Core State Standards (CCSS)?. D. Anticipation Guide. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The New Illinois Learning Standards

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The New Illinois Learning The New Illinois Learning StandardsStandards

Incorporating the Common Core

Kevin Seymour, Director, ROE SchoolWorksDiane Beedy, Director, Macon-Piatt Regional Office of Education

D

Page 2: The New Illinois Learning Standards

What do you know about

theCommon Core

State Standards

(CCSS)?D

Page 3: The New Illinois Learning Standards

Anticipation Guide

Read each of the statements related to the Common Core State Standards.

For each statement, decide if you believe it

IS or IS NOT a true statement.

Write Y (true) or N (false)in the column to the left of each

statement.D

Page 4: The New Illinois Learning Standards

What are the Common Core

State Standards

(CCSS)?K

Page 5: The New Illinois Learning Standards

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Page 6: The New Illinois Learning Standards

Illinois Learning Standards The Illinois State Board of Education

adopted new Math and ELA standards for K-12 education aligned to college and career readiness.

Agency Goal #1:Every student will demonstrate academic achievement and be prepared for success

after high school.

Illinois State Board of Education

6D

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According to ACT in Ed Leadership…

• Only one-third to one-half of 11th graders are reaching a college-and-career ready level of achievement.

•Only 31% of students understand complex texts.

•Only 25% of students performed at college-and-career-ready levels in their abilities to use language skillfully, use a rich vocabulary, and differentiate among different language varieties (such as formal and informal English).D

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According to ACT…

•Only 24% of students fully comprehend science texts.

•Only 34% of students met the benchmarks for Number and Quantity, skills that build the foundation for success in math.

•For each of the eight Common Core Mathematical Practices standards- such as “making sense of problems and persevering at them” and “reasoning abstractly and quantitatively”- only one-third reached the college-and-career-ready level.

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National Governors Association Center for Best

Practices (NGA Center)

Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO)

Developed in collaboration with teachers, school

administrators, and education experts.

Where did the CCSS come from?

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Why are a Common Set of Why are a Common Set of Standards Important?Standards Important?

• Preparation: These standards are designed for students to be college and career ready upon completing secondary education.

• Quality: Teachers are given more flexibility to teach standards in depth and across disciplines that can be tailored to fit the students needs.

• Skilled Workforce: These standards emphasize skills and application, in addition to content, to prepare students for working in the current workforce.

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Why are a Common Set of Why are a Common Set of Standards Important?Standards Important?

• Clarity: The standards are designed to help teachers, students, and parents understand what is expected of them to be ready to enter the workforce or college.

• Consistency: These standards will level the playing field so all students will be held to the same rigorous expectations.

• Global Society: The standards are internationally benchmarked to high performing countries to help our students succeed in a global economy.

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What does What does College and College and Career ReadyCareer Ready Mean? Mean?

The College and Career Ready descriptions are notstandards themselves but instead offer a portrait ofstudents who meet the new standards.

As students advance through the grades and master the

standards in reading, writing, speaking, listening, andlanguage, they are able to exhibit with increasingfullness and regularity these capacities of the literate individual.

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What does What does College and College and Career ReadyCareer Ready Mean to Mean to

you?you?Take a couple of minutes to think what you

consider to be skills necessary to thrive beyond high school. Jot down three to five of your ideas on the back of the Anticipation Guide. Begin each statement with “They” and a verb.

Example: “They understand that there is always more than one way to look at a situation.”

K

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What does What does College and College and Career ReadyCareer Ready Mean to Mean to

you?you?Take a couple of minutes to think what you

consider to be skills necessary to thrive beyond high school. Jot down three to five of your ideas on the back of the Anticipation Guide. Begin each statement with “They” and a verb.

Example: “They understand that there is always more than one way to look at a situation.”

Compare your list with someone else in the room.

K

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What does What does College and College and Career ReadyCareer Ready Mean to Mean to

you?you?

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What does What does College and College and Career ReadyCareer Ready Mean to Mean to

you?you?

K

Page 18: The New Illinois Learning Standards

What are College and Career

Readiness Skills?• They demonstrate independence.• They build strong content knowledge.• They respond to varying demands of audience, task, purpose discipline.• They comprehend as well as critique. • They value evidence.• They use technology and digital media strategically and capably.• They come to understand other perspectives and cultures. 18K

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What do the CCSS look like?

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Overview of theOverview of the K-12 K-12 ELA ELA StandardsStandards

• The standards are separated into four strands: Reading, Writing, Speaking and Listening, and Language.

• K-8 standards are listed by grade level.

• Standards in grades 9-12 are listed in two year bands to allow flexibility in course design.

• The K-12 ELA standards are benchmarked to College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards.

• Grades 6-12 are covered in two content-area specific sections:– English Language Arts Teachers– Teachers of history/social studies, science, and technical

subjects

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Time to examine the ELA standards…

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What are some key points regarding the ELA Standards?

• Text complexity addressed at each level • Balance of literature and informational

texts• Direct link to college and work readiness• Literacy standards for science/technical

and history/social studies

D

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What are some key points regarding the ELA Standards?

• Clear vertical progressions across grades• Emphasis on writing, writing applications,

and presentation • Anchor standards established for college

and career readiness in reading, writing, language, and speaking and listening, with anchors for each grade level

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•Appendix A provides definitions of key writing types

•Appendix B includes text exemplars and sample performance tasks

•Appendix C includes student writing samples at various grade levels.

Take Note of Appendices

24D

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Standards for Mathematical Practice

• Standards for mathematical proficiency: reasoning, problem solving, modeling, decision making, and engagement .

• Describe mathematical “habits of mind”

Common Core State Standards for Mathematics

Grade Level Standards• K-8 grade-by-grade standards

organized by domain.• 9-12 high school standards

organized by conceptual categories.

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Habits of MindCosta & Kallick

• Persisting• Thinking and Communicating• Thinking Flexibly• Striving for Accuracy• Questioning and Posing Problems• Applying Past Knowledge to New

Situations

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The K-8 Math Standards are organized byDomain, Clusters, and Standards.

• Domain: Overarching ideas that connect topics across the grade levels.

• Clusters: Demonstrate the grade by grade progression of task complexity.

• Standards: Define what a student should be able to know and do at that grade level.

Overview of Math StandardsOverview of Math Standards

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Design of the 9-12 Math Standards

The standards are organized by conceptual categories: •number and quantity •algebra•functions •modeling •geometry•statistics and probability

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Time to examine the Math standards…

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Overview of K-8 Mathematics Standards

• The K-5 standards provide students with a solid foundation in whole numbers, addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, fractions and decimals.

• The 6-8 standards describe robust learning in geometry, algebra, and probability and statistics.

• Modeled after the focus of standards from high-performing nations, the standards for grades 7-8 include significant algebra and geometry content.

• Students who have completed 7th grade and mastered the content and skills will be prepared for algebra in 8th grade or after.

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Overview of 9-12 Mathematics Standards

• Grades 9-12 require the application of mathematics to real world situations and issues.

• High school math focus on using math and solving messy problems, similar to what students would see in the real world

• Problem-solving and communication emphasized

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Additional Points on the K-12 Math Standards

• The K-12 standards stress conceptual knowledge and understanding in addition to procedural skills.

• Modeling is a requirement under the Standards for

Mathematical Practice.

• 5 modes of representation are common methods used within the standards to communicate mathematical knowledge and understanding.

• Concrete objects• Pictures/graphs• Symbols• Oral/written language• Real-life situations

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What aboutassessment?

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•No changes will be in place for 2011 Spring ISAT and PSAE assessments.

•Illinois is part of a 25- state consortium on assessment (PARCC flyer) focused on developing a richer more authentic evaluation of student learning.

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– More Meaningful Standards: consistent across states, clear to the public and on track for college

– Higher Quality Tests: assessments will include performance tasks to measure critical thinking, strategic problem solving, research and writing.

– Through-Course Testing: Students will take parts of the assessment at key times during the school year, closer to when they learn the material.

Assessment System Design

35

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– Maximize Technology: PARCC assessments in most grades will be computer based.

– Cross-State Comparability: States in PARCC will adopt common assessments and common performance standards.

Assessment System Design

36D

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What is the transition

timeline for the CCSS?

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Evolution not a revolution• The transition process should

begin with local review and discussion

• New assessment system in place 2014-2015.

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Phase I: Awareness, Communication andPlanning.

Phase II: Communication, Resource design, and Design of Implementation System.Phase III: Transition, Implementation, and Technical Assistance.

A new statewide assessment system will be in place for the 2014(fall) – 2015 (spring) school year.

How will the Common Core State Standards be

Implemented?

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What does Phase I look like at theWhat does Phase I look like at the local level?local level?

Adoption

Communication

Awareness

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What should I do now as I

lead my district toward

the CCSS?D

Page 42: The New Illinois Learning Standards

Top Ten Ways to Get Ready for the Common

Core

Adapted from The Leadership and Learning Center, Douglas B. Reeves, Ph.D., 12/15/2010

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Don’t wait for Washington, DC to have

final answers- take initiative now in

curriculum, assessment, and teaching.

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Do compare your present IL Standards to the CCSS. Identify what is still the

same in your curriculum.

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Do compare your present IL Standards to the CCSS.

Identify what you will delete from your

curriculum.D

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Use the identify standards that are the same and go deeper curriculum. Add

more depth and complexity.

D

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Do engage teachers in the process of

unwrapping the standards and designing

rigorous curricula and assessments.D

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Don’t settle for fiction, fantasy, and personal narrative as the majority of student writing assignments and do increase significantly the amount of informational writing by students,

starting at kindergarten.D

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Do engage teachers in professional development, particularly in the areas of early math and secondary

literacy.D

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Don’t expect English/Language Arts faculty to bear the sole responsibility

for literacy.

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Do engage every faculty member in every subject at every grade level in a universal commitment to student literacy, numeracy, and higher-order engagement.D

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Don’t try to do it all at once or all alone.

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Page 53: The New Illinois Learning Standards

These standards are not intended to be new names for

old ways of doing business. They are a call to take the

next step. It is time for states to work together to build on

lessons learned from two decades of standards-based

reforms. It is time to recognize that standards are not just

promises to our children, but promises we intend to keep.

-CCSSO and NGA Center, 201053

The Promise of the Standards

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Page 54: The New Illinois Learning Standards

Contact ROE 11 to assist you in Contact ROE 11 to assist you in this process.this process.

Unpacking the standards Articulation and Curriculum

Alignment Professional Development

Content specific Literacy Higher Order Thinking Skills Student Engagement

Information and Updates54K

Page 55: The New Illinois Learning Standards

Anticipation Guide, Revisited

Re-read each of the statements related to the Common Core State Standards.

Based upon what you’ve learned today, decide if you believe each statement

IS or IS NOT a true statement.

Write Y (true) or N (false)in the column to the right of each

statement.D

Page 56: The New Illinois Learning Standards

For Additional Information Visit

http://www.isbe.net/common_core/

For personal help in-district contact:

Regional Office of Education #11

Nancy Schaljo [email protected]

Marci Miller [email protected]

Telephone: 217.348.0151K