Literacy Design Collaborative Working on Modules Day 3 Lynda Gillespie SREB Literacy
Literacy Design Collaborative Session Two, One Day Training.
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Transcript of Literacy Design Collaborative Session Two, One Day Training.
Outcomes for Session 2
• Deepen understanding of the LDC process and how it will enable you to teach the reading and writing skills required by the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) while honoring the integrity of your content
• Analyze and understand how to use the LDC argumentative & informational rubrics for scoring student work
• Calibrate and practice scoring student work
Outcomes for Session 2
• Identify formative assessment opportunities imbedded in LDC modules
• Focus on the Grade Level Expectations of the CCSS and Colorado Academic Standards (CAS) in developing a second module
• Apply research-based instructional strategies to module development
• Create a second Teaching Task and construct a second module
Quick Draw: Successes and Challenges
• Create a visual representation of your experience with your first module
• Stand and share
LDC and PARCC
• Colorado is a member of the PARCC Consortium
• PARCC will assess student achievement of the CCSS
• LDC will help students learn the literacy skills required by the CCSS
The PARCC Assessments
• Read the released sample item from the PARCC Assessment
• Review each section – what did you notice?
• In pairs, discuss the three guiding questions
• Be prepared to report out from pairs to whole group
Deconstructing the LDC Rubric
Form groups of 3-5:• Read page 36 in Guidebook• Identify who is going to “close read” each of the scoring elements
For your scoring element(s):• Read the section again• Identify vocabulary that will need direct instruction to support
student comprehension• Identify the key differences between each rating level (1-4)• What instructional strategies might help students understand the
rubric?
Deconstruction Worksheet
• Use the worksheet, “Literacy Design Collaborative Rubric Deconstruction Worksheet”
• Follow the instructions, paraphrasing the elements as you would explain them to your students
• Share your analysis from the previous slide with your group members
Scoring Student Work
• Insights from Teacher Trainers
• Score student work in groups of three or four
Reflecting on Practice
• What do I need to consider changing or revising when writing my second module?
• What am I going to change in my instructional practice based on what I have learned? (Relate to Educator Effectiveness)
• Do a quick-write of your answers to these questions and any reflections or questions you have
Review of Example Module
• Look at the Teaching Task Section: Overview, Student Background, Task, and Text Selection
• Look at the Skills Section: Notice the Grade Level Expectations
• Look at the mini-tasks
Review of the Module
• Using the Module Review Sheet, review 3 Modes of Academic Writing and write one or two comments in each category
• Share with a partner when finished
• Identify three things you would do differently in your module
Beginning Your Second Module: Teaching Task
• Select a curriculum focus for next semester where you will use your module
• Write your Teaching Task for this module
• Have one of the trainers review your task
Tips for Choosing Texts and Other Resources
16
Ask yourself….will the texts and/or multimedia I’ve chosen provide the students with the information they need to completely respond to the prompt?
Check…. the ‘do-ability’of the task by using your selected readings to complete the task yourself
Text selection is critical!Look for the perfect balance
• reading level of students• complexity of text (demands on skills and stamina of reader)• background knowledge required for comprehension• sufficiency of content for writing task
Keep Gradual Release in mind• whole group• small group• independent
Be sure text provides students with information needed to respond completely to the teaching task
Choose the Texts (and if desired, multi-media)
Quantitative measures look at factors impacting “readability” as measured by particular computer programs
Qualitative measures examine levels of meaning, knowledge demands, language features, text structure, and use of graphics as measured by an attentive reader
Reader and Task considers additional “outside” factors that might impact the difficulty of reading the text
Measuring Text Complexity
Quantitative Measures using new, more demanding CCR Lexile Requirement
Qualitative Measures that analyze critical features of the text that computers cannot analyze
Considerations for Reader and Task that guide the use of the text in the classroom
Final Placement Recommendation that sums up the findings of all three factors
Tools for Selecting Complex Texts
Why Practice With Complex Text?
• Gap between complexity of college and high school texts is huge
• The complexity that students can read is the greatest predictor of success in college (ACT study)
• Too many students are reading at too low a level(<50% of graduates can read sufficiently complex texts)
• Standards include a staircase of increasing text complexity from elementary through high school
• Standards also focus on building general academic vocabulary so critical to comprehension
Text Complexity
It is critical that all students develop the skill, concentration, and stamina to read complex texts for success in college and the workplace.
CCSS emphasizes regular practice with complex text and academic language.
Quantitative Measures of Text Complexity
Lexile Framework by MetaMetrics• Module Creator• Lexile.com• EBSCO
Quantitative Measures: Strengths and Limitations
• Quantitative metrics are excellent at situating informational texts
• Offer a starting point for placing narrative fiction
• Unable to rate drama and poetry
Qualitative Measures of Text Complexity
Considers:– Meaning/Purpose– Knowledge Demands– Language Features– Text Structures– Use of Graphics
Judgments about these factors add additional information to the process of determining text complexity that quantitative measures cannot assess.
Qualitative Measures and Real Texts
Knowledge Demands: The book asks readers to wrestle with serious moral issues—how both an individual and southern society before the era of civil rights conceive of justice.
Meaning/Purpose: The book explores the protagonist’s discovery of how her town and her family understand race and prejudice.
Qualitative Measures and Real Texts
Text Structure: While the narrative is largely linear in fashion, flashback is employed to look back on events when the protagonist was young, and the narrative perspective is not wholly reliable as a result of her youth.
Language Features: The book contains both slang and southern dialect, but the vocabulary the text employs is accessible to average readers.
Weighing each measure equally, use professional judgment to factor together the results of the Quantitative, Qualitative, and Reader and Task Analyses to produce a Final Placement Recommendation.
Recommendation and Real Texts
Reader and Task Analysis
Considers :– Complexity of Content– Cognitive Capacities– Reading Skills– Motivation & Engagement– Prior Knowledge– Tasks and Assessment
Text Complexity and Your Module
Use the Text Complexity Analysis Worksheet to analyze one of the texts selected for Module 2.
Are the texts you’ve selected appropriately complex for your students?
Exit Ticket
1. I used to think_____________.
2. Now, I think_________________________.
3. One idea I learned about LDC this morning is_______.
4. One question I have is__________________.
5. I want to learn more about______________.
Scaffolding Complex Text
Shifts in standards require a shift in practice!• Multiple readings• Read aloud• Chunking text• Close reading (re-reading, vocabulary, questions
about structure, purpose, etc.)• Provide support while reading (a planned Think
Aloud)
Customizing Mini Tasks
Utilize the support of your teacher trainer and customize a mini task to scaffold the complexity of the text you’ve selected.
• Multiple readings• Read Aloud• Chunking text• Close Reading (re-reading, vocabulary, questions
about structure, purpose, etc.)• Provide support while reading (a planned Think
Aloud)
Skills and Instruction Guided by Grade Level Expectations from CCSS
• The Skills section needs to be refined to reflect the grade-level expectations of the selected skills
• An exemplary mini-task needs to reflect the grade-level expectations for the skill being taught
Finding the Connection
• Look at grade-level standards 7.1, 7.2, and 7.4 on p. 5 of 3 Academic Modes of Writing
• How are these standards addressed in the Reading Skills Cluster on p. 7?
• Which mini-tasks teach these skills? (pp. 10-12)
• Discuss in pairs
The Teaching Task
• Revise if needed
• Complete all sections of the Teaching Task tab in Module Creator
• Use the learning from the review of the Exemplar Module
Lessons Learned from Teacher Trainers
Teacher Trainer will share lessons learned about developing modules.
Completing Your Module
Teacher Trainers will help vet a section before you move on.
Remember to focus on Grade Level Expectations!
Skills Selection
• Use Module Creator to select your skills
• Add at least one grade-level expectation to each skill in the reading cluster and one to each in the writing cluster
• Have your skills section vetted
Text Dependent Questions
• Read the handout with the excerpt from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
• In pairs, write three text-dependent questions related to the excerpt
• Be prepared to share one of your questions with the larger group
What are Text-Dependent Questions?
• Draw the reader back to the text to discover what it says
• Have concrete and explicit answers rooted in the text
• Frame inquiries in ways that do not rely on a mix of personal opinion, background information, and imaginative speculation
Differences in Depth
Non-Text-Dependent Questions
Text-Dependent Questions
Are books without pictures or conversations useful?
What kind of books does Alice find useful?
How would you react if you saw a talking rabbit?
How did Alice react when she saw a talking rabbit?
Would Alice have followed the rabbit down the hole had she not seen it look at a watch?
Why did Alice follow the rabbit down the rabbit-hole?
What do you know about Lewis Carroll?
What does the reader know about the rabbit?
Creating Text-Dependent Questions
• An effective text dependent question delves into a text to guide students in extracting the key meanings or ideas and events found there
• To achieve this end, text dependent questions begin by exploring specific words, details, explanations and arguments
• Students investigate the text by utilizing the Anchor and/or Grade-level Reading Standards to generate the question
Level of Text Specificity
CCSS Anchor StandardClose Reading Skill
Text Dependent Question
Words/Phrases
Analyze how specific word choices shape tone (Standard 4)
Why wasn’t Alice “burning with
curiosity” when she initially saw the rabbit? What
subsequent events led to her feeling
this way?
Creating Text-Dependent Questions
Level of Text Specificity
CCSS Anchor Standard Close Reading Skill
Text Dependent Question
SentencesAssess how point of view
shapes content (Standard 6)
In the opening paragraph Alice states “what is the use of a
book … without pictures or
conversation?” What does that sentence reveal about her?
Creating Text-Dependent Questions
Level of Text Specificity
CCSS Anchor Standard Close Reading Skill
Text Dependent Question
Paragraphs
Summarize key supporting details
(Standard 2)
What details about the rabbit catch Alice’s eye in the third paragraph?
Investigate the structure of specific sentences,
paragraphs, and sections of text
(Standard 5)
Around what word does the meaning of the third paragraph pivot? How does that change the initial meaning of the
paragraph and channel it in a new direction?
Creating Text-Dependent Questions
Review and Revise
• Read the Handout, Text-Dependent Questions and the CCSS
• Revise your questions as needed to be effective text-dependent questions
A systematic approach to creating text- dependent questions for complex texts while aligning them with the demands of the CCSS.
Tools for Creating Text-Dependent Questions
Work on Mini-Tasks
• Begin designing mini-tasks for your selected skills
• Make sure at least one mini-task for reading and one for writing reflect grade-level expectations
• Use peers and the expertise of the teacher trainers to review your mini-tasks
Keep Working!
Continue to develop your module using the Module Review Sheet as a guide along the way.