Our Facilitators
• Les Burns, Program Chair of English Education, University of Kentucky
• Kelly Clark, Secondary Literacy Consultant, KDE
• Marci Haydon, Instructional Coach, Old Kentucky Home Middle School, Nelson County
• Lisa King, Literacy Consultant, CKSEC
• Kelly Philbeck, ELA Network Specialist, CKEC
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Maximizing Productivity
1AskQuestions & Engage Fully
2Open your mind to diverse views
3Utilize your learning
Rule of two feet.Please silence cell phones. Return from breaks promptly.
2012-13 Teacher Leader Network Target
I can use careful planning to improve instruction in order
to become an effective
teacher and leader.
Learning Targets
• I can use careful planning to improve instruction in order to be a more effective teacher and leader.
• I can use careful planning to ask quality questions in classroom discussions.
• I can use careful planning to write assessment questions congruent to my content standards.
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R-Group Space
• Introduction to R-Group Space• Explanation of Features• Consent Forms
• If you are interested in joining R-Group Space, please turn your consent forms in to Kelly Philbeck by the end of our lunch break.
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Text ComplexityRaising Rigor in Reading
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• Text Complexity• Quantitative Measures• Qualitative Measures• Matching Readers to
Texts• Close Reading
Questioning as an Effective Instructional Tool
Questioning:• Promotes effective classroom discussions,
both formal and informal• Promotes higher order thinking and
deeper understanding• Engages inquiry skills• Requires students to formulate higher
order questions• Promotes mastery of standards/learning
targets 11
Model Texts by Grade Level
K-1 Stella Luna by Nell CannonRead aloud to students
Hanging with Fruit Bats Read aloud to students
2-3 A Field Trip to Remember Ostriches
4-5 Up to My Neck in Trouble The Bottlenose Dolphin
6-8 --Childhood--Shimmel Shine --Boar Out There and News Article
--Ain’t I a Woman--How People Help Nature in Oil Spills
9-10 Everything Else Falls Away, Lee Smith
Intuition mind map and 2nd stanza “Intuition” by Jewel
11-12 Jonathon Harker’s Journal, (Dracula “5 May” or Chapter 2)
Gut Almighty
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Using What’s There
• Review the texts you are teaching, and identify:
– What skills do my students have to learn/practice in order to understand and perform?
– What techniques, concepts, or conventions (form, plot, sequence, dialogue, text cues, symbols, vocabulary, etc.) are present in the text in ways that make them worth highlighting?
• How do the KCAS standards and learning targets reflect these possible instructional goals? 14
What Really Matters?(To Students)
(A Note about Comprehension and Accountability Questions)
• Generative Topics – (Thematic Statements are richer)
• Essential Questions– Vehicles that drive teaching and learning
tasks.• Offer rich ideas to frame inquiry, discussion,
writing/thinking, and assessment.• Allow multiple “correct” responses supported by
evidence from texts and real life.15
Questions, Instruction, and Assessment
• Scaffolding to support student success
• Logical Sequencing
• Positioning students are “primary knowers”
• Empowering students to participate
• Focusing instruction
• Only assess what you actually taught!– Teaching means more than telling. Don’t forget modeling,
practice, application, and discussion. (See CHETL)
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Discussion Techniques
• Lecture• Recitation• QAR (Question-Answer-Response)• Socratic Seminar• Literature Circle• “Fish Bowl”• Other?
– What is the teacher’s role?
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Discussion Techniques – What are the Teacher’s Roles?
• “Lead Student”– (Facilitator, Coach,
Referee, Judge, Moderator)
– Rough-draft and final-draft talk
• Re-voice and Probe
• Model
• Prompt
• Expand
• Connect
• Explain
• Clarify
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CHETL Connections• Learning Climate
1. Creates learning environments where students are active participants as individuals and as members of collaborative groups
2. Effectively allocates time for students to engage in hands-on experiences, discuss and process content and make meaningful connections
• Assessment and Reflection1. Uncovers students’ prior understanding of the concepts to be
addressed and addresses students’ misconceptions/incomplete conceptions
2. Provides adequate modeling to make clear the expectations for quality performance
3. Allows students to use feedback to improve their work before a grade is assigned 21
CHETL Connections
• Rigor and Engagement1. Teacher orchestrates effective classroom discussions,
questioning, and learning tasks that promote higher-order thinking skills.
2. Teacher provides meaningful learning opportunities for students.
3. Teacher challenges students to think deeply about problems and encourages/models a variety of approaches to a solution.
4. Teacher clarifies and shares with students learning intentions/targets and criteria for success.
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CHETL Connections
• Relevance1. Teacher links concepts and key ideas to students’ prior
experiences and understandings , uses multiple representations, examples and explanations. Students’ funds of knowledge.
2. Teacher incorporates student experiences, interests and real-life situations in instruction.
3. Students must identify these for themselves, not have them assumed or dictated by teachers.
4. Student develops descriptions, explanation, predictions, and models using evidence.
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Model Texts by Grade Level
K-1 Stella Luna by Nell CannonRead aloud to students
Hanging with Fruit Bats Read aloud to students
2-3 A Field Trip to Remember Ostriches
4-5 Up to My Neck in Trouble The Bottlenose Dolphin
6-8 --Childhood--Shimmel Shine --Boar Out There and News Article
--Ain’t I a Woman--How People Help Nature in Oil Spills
9-10 Everything Else Falls Away, Lee Smith
Intuition mind map and 2nd stanza “Intuition” by Jewel
11-12 Jonathon Harker’s Journal, (Dracula “5 May” or Chapter 2)
Gut Almighty
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Model Texts
• Read the grade-level model text handout at your table.• On your own or with a partner, identify 1-2 standards or
learning targets from the KCAS that you would teach using this text.
• Standard/Target 1:
• Standard/Target 2:
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Think About Your Generative Topics and Essential Questions
• Based on what you read, identify 1-the standards/targets you chose to use, identify 1-2 Generative Topics or Essential Questions you would use to frame your lessons and students’ activity (especially their discussions)
• Do They…..– Promote rigorous study?– Relate to real-life?– Reflect personal, social, cultural, and global
concerns of the students? – Engage students?
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Creating and Sequencing Generative Questions
• Identify at least 5 questions you feel are MOST important to ask in relation to ONE of the texts you read for your grade level.– Make sure the questions are clearly aligned with the
standards/targets you planned to assess.– Create questions that span or blend the “levels” of Bloom’s
Taxonomy. • Be prepared to explain the type of each question.
– Sequence your 5 questions to support your students’ gradual understanding of the topics, questions, and targets required for participation and success.
• Be prepared to explain why you chose your sequence, and whether/why it could be changed.
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Questions and Assessment
• Identify 1-3 summative assessments you might use at either the lesson or unit-level to determine students’ attainment of the standard/target.
– If you did not ask the question and study it explicitly, DO NOT assess it.• Invalid and Unreliable
– Only assess what is taught and practiced during formative learning tasks.
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CCR in Reading, Students who are and Listening
Students who are CCRStudents who are CCR in Reading, Writing, Speaking and Listening
Why Challenging Texts?
• Intellectually challenging classroom activity correlates to reading comprehension gains (Rowan and Correnti, 2009)
• Best predictor of Literacy gains: Amount of reading challenging text (ACT,2006)
The Language in the Standards
How Do We Scaffold Students in the Classroom?
• Rigorous and Complex Text• Increased Stamina• Text Dependent Questions
In order to Scaffold….
• Teachers must anticipate miscomprehension: to head it off, to be vigilant about it, and to be responsive to the problem
Scaffolding Strategies
• Activate prior knowledge• Showing examples• Modeling process• Graphic organizers• Preteaching vocabulary• Questioning• Providing feedback
Have a Discussion……
• How has your thinking changed about complex text since the beginning of the session?
We started “digging our
post-hole” for addressing the
KCAS Reading/Writing
Standards by learning how to
identify complex text
Now our post-hole must get
deeper in order to teach our students to expectation level of the standards
Heavy duty strategies are
needed to accomplish this
CLOSE READING AND
TEXT DEPENDENT QUESTIONS
Close Reading/Text Dependent Questions
What Skills?
• LDC Instructional Ladder–Reading Process
•(Skills Cluster 2)
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Label each question with appropriate
standard/target
Make meaning of the standard referenced.
Does each question capture the intent of the standard/target
labeled?
Progressions
Deconstructions
CCR Standards/SMP
Content– Vocabulary & Interpretation
Rigor– DOK/Bloom’s
To Jury
FACILITATION
RIGOR
DOK?Verbs/Bloom’s
Artifact(s)
Observation
CONTENT
Standard(s)? Target(s)?Standard consistent vocabulary? Artifact(s)
Students engage in content at appropriate level
Artifact(s):assessment, lesson plan, activity, etc.
STUDENT WORK Artifact(s)
The CCSS Requires Three Shifts in ELA/Literacy
1. Building knowledge through content-rich non-fiction
2.Reading, writing and speaking grounded in evidence from text, both literary and informational
3.Regular practice with complex text and its academic language
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What is Close Reading?
Methodical investigation of a complex text through…
– Answering text-dependent questions– Unpacking the text’s meaning– Directing students to:
• examine and analyze text at a deep level of critical thinking
• focus on word/sentence meaning• focus on development of events and ideas• extract evidence from the text• make non-trivial inferences based on what they have read
Elements of Close Reading Instruction
Instruction should…• Focus on words, sentences, paragraphs that
pose the biggest challenge to confidence, comprehension, and stamina
• Ask text dependent questions that require students to closely examine the text
• Ask students to make inferences based on evidence beyond what is explicitly stated
• Pay close attention to a variety of text structures
Close Reading and the CCSS
• Anchor Standards for Reading– Prioritize close reading skills of:
• Extracting evidence (Standard 1)• Making inferences (Standard 1)• Reading complex text (Standard 10)• Determining central idea/theme (Standard 2)• Building knowledge by comparing two or more texts
(Standard 9)• Citing evidence to support conclusions (1 & 10)
Text Dependent Questions and CCSS
• Determine ideas or themes and analyze their development(Standard 2)• Summarize key supporting details and ideas (Standard 2)• Analyze how and why individuals, events, and ideas develop and
interact (Standard 3)• Analyze how specific word choices shape meaning or tone (Standard 4)• Interpret technical, connotative, and figurative meanings of words and
phrases (Standard 4)• Analyze how two or more texts address similar themes or topics
(Standard 9)• Assess how point of view or purpose shapes the content and style
(Standard 6)• Integrate and evaluate content presented in diverse media and formats
(Standard 7)• Assess the validity of the reasoning (Standard 8)• Assess the relevance and sufficiency of the evidence (Standard 8)
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Text Dependent Questions
Characteristics:– Questions must originate from the text itself– Questions focus on a word, sentence,
paragraph(s)– Open, not leading questions– Provide learning opportunity for students– Require thought/discussion about the question
(no right answer immediately provided)– Cause students to linger over portions of the text,
looking for specific answers, not just “getting the gist”
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Text-Dependent Questions are not…
• Low-level, literal, or recall questions
• Focused on comprehension strategies
• Just questions…
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Non-Text Dependent Questions
Examples from Alice in Wonderland:•Are books without pictures or conversations useful?•How would you react if you saw a talking rabbit?•Would Alice have followed the rabbit down the hole if she had not seen it look at a watch?•What do you know about Lewis Carroll?
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Text Dependent Questions
• What kind of books does Alice find useful?
• How did Alice react when she saw a talking rabbit?
• Why did Alice follow the rabbit down the hole?
• What does the reader know about the rabbit?
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Text Dependent Questions
Level of Text Specificity
CCSS Anchor StandardClose Reading Skill
Text Dependent Question
Word/Phrase Analyze how specific word choices shape tone (Standard 4)
Why wasn’t Alice “burning with curiosity” when she initially saw the rabbit? What events led her to feeling this way?
SentenceAssess 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?
ParagraphSummarize key supporting details (Standard 2)
What does Alice observe about the rabbit in the third paragraph? 63
Framing Text Dependent Questions• Why did the author choose a particular word?
• Analyze the impact of syntax of a sentence• Collect evidence• Test comprehension of key ideas/arguments• Analyze how portions of the text relate to each
other and the whole• Look for pivot points in a paragraph• Track down patterns in a text• Notice what is missing or understood• Investigate beginnings and endings of a text
Writing Text Dependent Questions
• Practice with…– The author’s note from “Letter from a
Birmingham Jail”
OR
– Hanging with Bats
Guidelines for Creating Text-Dependent Questions
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Step One: Identify the core understandings and key ideas of the text. (with standards/learning targets in mind)
Step Two: Start small to build confidence.
Step Three: Target vocabulary and text structure.
Step Four: Tackle tough sections head-on.
Step Five: Create coherent sequences of text-dependent questions.
Step Six: Identify the standards that are being addressed.
Step Seven: Create the culminating assessment.66
Time for Lunch!
• Enjoy your lunch!
• Questioning Video Menu
• Talk with Colleagues
• Share Ideas
Lunch: 11:45-12:30
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Practice Answering Text Dependent Questions
• Reread the first sentence of the text:
According to the text…– What does Lincoln mean by “four score and
seven years ago”?– Who are “our fathers”?– According to the text, what does conceived
mean?– What does proposition mean?
Practice Answering Text Dependent Questions
• Look carefully at Lincoln’s speech:
–Which verb does he use the most? Circle the verb each time it appears in the text.
Practice Answering Text Dependent Questions
• What does the word “dedicate” mean in the first two times Lincoln uses it?
• What other verb is closely linked to it the first two times it appears? Explain the reason for this pairing.
• How is “dedicate” used the next two times and how does it relate to the word consecrate?
• Who is now doing the dedicating?
Practice Answering Text Dependent Questions
• How does Lincoln use “dedicate” the final two times?
• How does it relate to devotion?
Practice Answering Text Dependent Questions
• Lincoln never mentions the word “union” over the course of the speech, instead repeatedly refers to the “nation” instead. What is the effect of selecting this word instead of the other?
Practice Answering Text Dependent Questions
• What is another word one might expect Lincoln to use in a speech during the Civil War that does not appear in the speech?
• What is the effect of it not being
mentioned?
Find 3 changes that Lincoln made between the first and final versions of his Gettysburg Address and explain the
impact on the meaning and/or tone of the speech.
First Draft or ”Nicolay” version
Final Draft or “Bliss” version
“to dedicate a portion of it” “to dedicate a portion of that field”
“This we may, in all propriety do.” “It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.”
“have hallowed it” “have consecrated it”
“while it can never forget what they did here”
“but it can never forget what they did here”
“It is rather for us, the living, we here be dedicated”
“It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated.”
“that the nation, shall have a new birth of freedom”
“that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom”
Sources
• Text Dependent Questions and the CCSS
The Aspen Institute, 2012
• www.achievethecore.org– Common Core Unit: A Close Reading of
Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address
TDQ Break-Out Rooms
• Elementary School with Lisa in the
Main Room
• Middle School with Marci in the Classroom
• High School with Les and Kelly Clark at the Hallway Tables
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Break Out Sessions
• LDC Module or Questioning Work Time Main Room with Les and Lisa
• New to LDC
Classroom with Marci and Kelly Clark
• Digging Deeper into Questioning
Hallway Tables with Kelly Philbeck
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Innovation Configuration Maps
• An instrument used to define and measure implementation of a new program or practice
Hall and Hord, (2011). Implementing Change: Patterns, Principles, and Potholes. Boston: Allyn and Bacon
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Innovation Configuration Map…
• Clarifies what a new program is or isn’t
• Defines “quality” clearly—what practices look like in use or in operation
• Indicates the degree to which the innovation is being implemented
• Informs how to best assist and support educator’s successful use of new practices 83
Innovation Configuration Map…
• Provides a blueprint for learning, planning, and resources required for implementation
• Determines significant factors that ensure successful implementation of the innovation to increase student achievement
• Provides a consistent guide to how districts begin and continue efforts to implement the standards
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Innovation Configuration Map Conventions
PILLAR—LEADERSHIP
CENTRAL OFFICE STAFF
Component 1: Develops strategic structures and processes for the effective implementation of the pillars (CHETL, Standards, Leadership, and Assessment Literacy) in all schools.
Level One Level Two Level Three Level Four Level Five Level Six
Designs a schedule for strategic use of time that includes clearly identified goals Provides time for learning teams to work, while focusing on district goals related to CHETL
Designs a plan that provide time with clearly identified goals;
Allows learning teams to work, monitoring that time is used effectively to address district goals related to CHETL
•Recognizes that time for effective implementation is critical and develops a plan to provide time for teams to work on CHETL, Assessment Literacy, and KCAS.
Recognizes the need for time for effective implementation but does not develop a plan for providing time
Has not addressed providing time for implementation of CHETL, Assessment Literacy, and KCAS.
Level One: Ideal
Level One: Ideal
Continuum of Behaviors Continuum of Behaviors
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IC Map Conventions1. An IC map describes behaviors for a
specific group—Central Office staff [principals, teachers, etc.]
2. The component describes major outcomes for Central Office related to implementation of a CCSS pillar.
3. “Ideal” or high-quality implementation appears on left-hand side—Level One.
4. The continuum of behaviors describes implementation variations from “Ideal—Level One” to “Not Yet Begun—Level Five/Six”
5. The number of levels can differ for each component. Some components might have 3 levels others 6. 86
TPGESAccomplished
Although the teacher may use some low-level questions, he or she asks the students questions designed to promote thinking and understanding.
Teacher creates a genuine discussion among students, providing adequate time for students to respond and stepping aside when appropriate.
Teacher successfully engages most students in the discussion, employing a range of strategies to ensure that most students are heard.
• Teacher uses open-ended questions, inviting students to think and/or offer multiple possible answers.
• The teacher makes effective use of wait time.
• The teacher effectively builds on student responses to questions.
• Discussions enable students to talk to one another without ongoing mediation by the teacher.
• The teacher calls on most students, even those who don’t initially volunteer.
• Many students actively engage in the discussion.
89
TPGES
Exemplary
• Teacher uses a variety or series of questions or prompts to challenge students cognitively, advance high-level thinking and discourse, and promote metacognition.
• Students formulate many questions, initiate topics, and make unsolicited contributions.
• Students themselves ensure that all voices are heard in the discussion.
• In addition to the characteristics of “accomplished”:– Students initiate higher-
order questions.– Students extend the
discussion, enriching it.– Students invite comments
from their classmates during a discussion.
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Next Steps
• Our next meeting is January 31st
• Bring binders and all of today’s handouts, as well as a semi-complete module.
• Read Chapter 5 in Text Complexity book• If you have lingering questions, post to
the parking lot or email me at
[email protected]• Please complete your evaluation
before you leave.
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