COMMON CORE STATE STANDARDS IN WISCONSIN MYTHS AND FACTS.

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Transcript of COMMON CORE STATE STANDARDS IN WISCONSIN MYTHS AND FACTS.

COMMON CORE STATE STANDARDS IN WISCONSIN

MYTHS AND FACTS

Topics

• Our Wisconsin Agenda 2017• Wisconsin Standards: True and False

Common Core State StandardsTrue and False

True or False?

• The Common Core State Standards are national standards.

True False

Common Core State Standards

True or False?

• The CCSS are not challenging enough.

True False

A Floor, Not a Ceiling

• Standards set a minimum bar—a floor, not a ceiling. They are designed only to help define outcomes to help ensure that all students have the opportunity to learn the content they need to succeed.

True or False?

• Wisconsin has not adopted standards in the past.

True False

Academic Standards: Not a New Idea

9

True or False?

• No teachers were involved in the writing of the CCSS.

True False

Who Wrote the CCSS?

• The NGA and CCSSO brought together content experts, teachers, and researchers in 2008 to write college and career readiness standards.

• The standards were first available for public comment in 2009.

• WI teachers and higher education faculty participated in multiple opportunities to provide feedback

• To learn more visit http://www.corestandards.org/resources/process

Wisconsin’s Leadership Team

• Comment period included meetings with professional organizations, content area leadership teams where feedback was solicited

True or False?

• The CCSS amount to a national curriculum for our schools.

True False

Standards Are Not A Curriculum

• Standards are statements about WHAT students should know/be able to do.

• States and individual school districts decide HOW students should get there.

Sample Grade 3 ELA Standard

• Determine the main idea of a text; recount the key details and explain how they support the main idea (Informational Reading, 3.2)

Sample Grade 6 Mathematics Standard

• Fluently add, subtract, multiply, and divide multi-digit decimals using the standard algorithm for each operation. (Number System, 6.3)

True or False?

• The cost of implementing the CCSS represents a huge burden for Wisconsin citizens.

True False

No Additional Funding Requested

• Each Wisconsin district selects instructional materials aligned to standards, and this process is a constantly ongoing cycle.

• The adoption of the CCSS has been worked into this curriculum adoption cycle locally, just like any other state standards adoption in the past.

True or False?

• The CCSS require collection of personal data and family information.

True False

No New Data Collection is Required as Part of CCSS

• The Family Educational Rights & Privacy Act require that all student data be highly protected, used only for agreed-upon education purposes, and not be further disclosed.

• In WI, student data is owned by districts and state laws exceed federal requirements.

True or False?

• The CCSS doesn’t require students to learn mathematical facts.

True False

Rigor EQUAL intensity in conceptual understanding,

procedural skill/fluency and application

Conceptual Understanding: Standards call for conceptual understanding of

key concepts.

Procedural Skill & Fluency: Students use procedures efficiently with

understanding. For example, 8x7 is one more 7 than 7x7.

Application: Students are able to apply mathematics skills and procedures to make meaning of and access content.

This shift requires a balance of three discrete components in math instruction. This is not a pedagogical option, but is required by the standards.

Rigor = ________ + ________ + _______Conceptual

UnderstandingProcedural

Fluency Application

True or False?

• The CCSS Mathematics don’t prepare or require students to learn Algebra in the 8th grade.

True False

CCSSM – Standards Progression

In the CCSS the content has been reorganized to provide time for greater

depth and mastery of concepts.

True or False?

• The CCSS ELA dictate which texts to use and don’t allow for the use of classic literary texts.

True False

Students Should Read A Balance of Literature & Informational Text

Literature Informational Text

Grade 4 50% 50%

Grade 8 45% 55%

Grade 12 30% 70%

http://www.corestandards.org/assets/CCSSI_ELA%20Standards.pdfCCSS for ELA, p. 5

The Assessment Challenge

How do we get from here... ...to here?

All studentsleave high school

college and career ready

Common Core State Standards

specify K-12 expectations for

college and career readiness

...and what can an assessment system

do to help?

A Balanced Assessment System

Common Core State Standards

specify K-12

expectations for college and career readiness

All students leave

high school college

and career ready

Teachers and schools have

information and tools they need

to improve teaching and

learningInterim assessments

Flexible, open, used for actionable

feedback

Summative assessments

Benchmarked to college and career

readiness

Teacher resources for formative

assessment practices

to improve instruction

On Track Rollout

What can you do?• How can you support educators to

leverage CCSS for greater educational impact?

• What can you do to…• Impact classroom instruction for student

learning?

CCSS Overview Video