Common Core Learning Standards
Common Questions
What is the Common Core?
What should my child be doing?
Are they Important?
Should I be concerned about the CCLS?
What will teachers at LMG be doing now?
“You better watch out You better not cry
Better not pout I'm telling you why
Santa Claus is coming to town .”
- HAVEN GILLESPIE, "Santa Claus is Coming to Town"
What is the CCLS?
Developed by experts to provide a clear and consistent framework to prepare our children for college and the workforce.
Provide teachers and parents with a common understanding of what students across the country are expected to learn
Standards define the knowledge and skills all students (K-12) need to succeed in academic college courses and in the workforce.
The Standards:
Are aligned with college and work expectations;
Are clear, understandable and consistent;Include rigorous content and application of
knowledge through high-order skills; Build upon strengths and lessons of current
state standards; Are informed by other top performing
countries, so that all students are prepared to succeed in our global economy and society
“Christmas at my house is always at least six or seven times more pleasant than anywhere else. We start drinking early. And while everyone else is seeing only one Santa Claus, we'll be seeing six or seven.”
W.C. FIELDS, The Mammoth Book of Zingers, Quips & One-Line
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Where can I access the Common Core State Standards?
A: The final version of the standards, released June 2, 2010, is available at www.corestandards.org.
An extensive general FAQ about the standards is available here: www.corestandards.org/frequently-asked-questions
New York State has launched EngageNY.org to assist parents, teachers, and students with the CCLS
Why is the CCLS Important?
Prepare all students with the knowledge and skills they need to succeed in college and work
Ensure consistent expectations regardless of a student’s zip code;
Provide educators, parents, and students with clear, focused guideposts;
Lead to new more rigorous assessments that will drive changes in curriculum and teacher practice.
Common Core: Literacy Increased complexity from K-12, which help to articulate
what students need to know and be able to do along this trajectory and assist with differentiation;
Literacy-building as a shared responsibility for all content area teachers;
Emphasis on teaching reading of informational text as the grades progress;
Emphasis on steadily increasing students’ ability to understand more and more complex text over time;
Integration of research skills across the standards and across all grades;
Emphasis on writing to argue and to inform or explain in the upper grades in order to prepare students for college-level writing.
I stopped believing in Santa Claus when I was six. Mother took me to see him in a department store and he asked for my autograph.
SHIRLEY TEMPLE, Halliwell's Filmgoer's Companion
Common Core: Math Fewer topics and more generalizing and linking of concepts;
• Better alignment with how high achieving countries teach math;
Emphasis on both conceptual understanding and procedural fluency starting in the early grades;• More time to teach core concepts and reinforce them
over the K-12 progression;• Later introduction of some concepts;
Focus on mastery of complex concepts in higher math (e.g. algebra and geometry) via hands-on learning;
Emphasis on mathematical modeling in the upper grades.
New York State and the CCLS Content Standards stay in place
Regents Exams will begin to address CCLS on exams in 2012
Federal funding is in place to support the CCLS
Common Core at LMG 2010-2012
Curriculum alignment: Teachers are in teams working to plan units and lessons, around a theme and/or skill.
Performance Task: Teachers develop projects for students in Humanities and Science and Math. One literacy task is dedicated to non-fiction
Academic Rigor: Over the course of four years tasks and content increase in complexity
Sample Math Task
(Requires depth of understanding of mathematical concepts and the ability to apply mathematics to real world problems).
A company that sells juice in small cartons like the one shown below has a problem. The straight straw attached to the outside of each carton keeps getting lost inside. Investigate how the problem could be fixed.
Create a report for the company describing as many different solutions to the straw-and-juice-box problem as possible.
Use mathematics to explore and describe the nature and cause of the problem faced by the company.
Common Core: Math Fewer topics and more generalizing and linking of concepts;
• Better alignment with how high achieving countries teach math;
Emphasis on both conceptual understanding and procedural fluency starting in the early grades;• More time to teach core concepts and reinforce them
over the K-12 progression;• Later introduction of some concepts;
Focus on mastery of complex concepts in higher math (e.g. algebra and geometry) via hands-on learning;
Emphasis on mathematical modeling in the upper grades.
I never believed in Santa Claus because I knew no white dude would come into my neighborhood after dark.
DICK GREGORY, Judy Brown's The Funny Pages
Questions
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