common core state standards initiative

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What does it mean?

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Common Core State Standards Initiative. What does it mean?. Why Common Core State Standards?. Currently, standards vary from state to state. CCSS will help ensure consistent quality in education no matter your zip code. By 2014, 64% of new jobs will require postsecondary training. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Common Core  State Standards Initiative

What does it mean?

Page 2: Common Core  State Standards Initiative

•Currently, standards vary from state to state.

•CCSS will help ensure consistent quality in education no matter your zip code.

•By 2014, 64% of new jobs will require postsecondary training.

•About $1.4 billion per year is spent on remedial education for college students.

Page 3: Common Core  State Standards Initiative

• A historic, bipartisan state-led effort by the National Governor’s Assoc and the Council of Chief State School Officers along with education groups, such as ACT, College Board (SAT), and Achieve.

•Consistent English language arts and math standards for kindergarten through twelfth grades voluntarily adopted by states.

•CCSS are relevant to the real world and reflective of knowledge and skills needed in college and career.

Page 4: Common Core  State Standards Initiative

•National PTA adopted a position statement Supporting clear, high standards in 1981.

•PTA is the leading voice speaking on behalf of parents.

•PTAs have the ability to be the vehicle of information as Ohio begins the implementation Stage of CCSSI.

Page 5: Common Core  State Standards Initiative

Information from ODE Model Curriculum meetings

Page 6: Common Core  State Standards Initiative

English language arts consists of four strands:

•Reading•Writing•Speaking and Listening•Language

Each strand is further broken down to specific standards.

Separate standards are included for reading and writing in history/social studies, science, and technical subjects.

Page 7: Common Core  State Standards Initiative

Reading Standards for Literature

Reading Standards for Informational Text

Grade 3: Describe characters in a story (e.g., their traits, motivations, or feelings) and explain how their actions contribute to the sequence of events.

Grade 3: Describe the relationships between a series of historical events, scientific ideas of concepts, or steps in technical procedures in a text, using language that pertains to time, sequence, and cause/effect.

Grade 7: Analyze how particular elements of a story or drama interact (e.g., how setting shapes the characters or plot)

Grade 7: Analyze the interactions between individuals, events, and ideas in a text (e.g., how ideas influence individuals or events, or how individuals influence ideas or events).

Grades 11-12: Evaluate various explanations for characters’ actions or for events and determine which explanation best accords with textual evidence, acknowledging where the text leaves matters uncertain.

Grades 11-12: Analyze a complex set of ideas or sequence of events and explain how specific individuals, ideas, or events interact and develop over the course of the text.

From Achieve.org Understanding the CCSSI, June 2010

Page 8: Common Core  State Standards Initiative

Grade-Level Standards

• K-8 grade-by-grade standards organized by domain with a concentration in geometry and algebra in 7th and 8th grades.

• 9-12 high school standards organized by conceptual categories- Number and Quantity, Algebra, Functions, Modeling, Geometry, Statistics and Probability.

Page 9: Common Core  State Standards Initiative

Ohio’s Current Standards CCSSI

Number sense 13 standards Number sense 8 standards

Data and Probability 4 standards Statistics and Probability 5 standards

Geometry 8 standards Geometry 4 standards

Algebraic Thinking 6 standards Equations 9 standards

Measurement 7 standards Ratios 3 standards

There are far too many standards and important content is not distinguished, so the standards are unfocused and seem haphazard. The most crucial failing of these standards is in the inadequate development of arithmetic and the failure to make it a priority. THOMAS B. FORDHAM INSTITUTE • THE STATE OF STATE STANDARDS—AND THE COMMON CORE— June 2010

Page 10: Common Core  State Standards Initiative

• How teachers should teach.• All that can or should be taught.• The nature of advanced work beyond the core.• The interventions needed for students well

below grade level.• The full range of support for English language

learners and students with special needs.• Everything needed to be college and career

ready.

Page 11: Common Core  State Standards Initiative

•Model Curriculums will be presented to the State Board of Education in March 2011.

•Provide teachers with professional development regarding implementation of CCSS.

•Ohio may join other states to create assessments aligned to the new standards.

•Ohio PTA reaches out to help parents work with their school districts while the standards are implemented.

Page 12: Common Core  State Standards Initiative

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.