Image Map
Showing posts with label Common Core. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Common Core. Show all posts

Sunday

Using specific texts to delve into Craft and Structure with the Common Core Standards

Using specific texts to delve into 

Craft and Structure with the

Common Core Standards

Common core

Start by choosing a story that has some connection to history/reality.  That way you can also include some supportive pieces.  Here I included a story, a YouTube video of a song with images and a flyer from the time period.

Story:

Have you read A Train to Somewhere? It's by the amazing Eve Bunting. Based on the 19th century orphan train, it follows the story of a young girl hoping her mother will meet her at one of the stops.

YouTube video:

Rider on an Orphan Train written and performed by David Massengill.  Here is link to a YouTube video of the song with images from the time period.  


Flyer:

Here is an orphan train flyer from the time.


common core


Craft and Structure Reading Standard #4
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.CCRA.R.4
"Interpret words and phrases as they are used in a text, including determining technical, connotative, and figurative meanings, and analyze how specific word choices shape meaning or tone."


Some questions that meet the standard:

  • Why do you think the author used the word: clutches?  What feeling is she trying to evoke?
  • In italics, the author says She'll be there.  She'll want me.   Who is she?
  • On page 12, you get a picture of what the adoption process looks like.  Why did the illustrator draw it this way?
  • The author says the people felt the boys muscles.  Why do you think the author wrote that?
  • "My mother didn't want me." The author wrote this very bluntly.  Do you think this is true?
  • Mrs. Book says "Sometimes what you get turns out to be better than what you wanted in the first place."  What does that mean?
Remember to focus on the intent of the author.  What feelings or understandings is the author trying to get across?


Craft and Structure Reading Standard #5
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.CCRA.R.5
"Analyze the structure of texts, including how specific sentences, paragraphs, and larger portions of the text (e.g., a section, chapter, scene, or stanza) relate to each other and the whole."



David Massengill lyrics : "Rider On An Orphan Train"

Once I rode an orphan train
And my brother did the same
They split us up in Missouri

James was five and I was three

He got taken by some pair

But for me they did not care
We were brave and did not cry
When they made us say goodbye


That was the last I saw of him
Before some family took me in

But I swore I'd run away
And find my brother James someday


I went back when I was grown
To see how old the Children's Home
And I asked for to see my file

Of when I was an orphan child

It's sad, they say, there's been a flood

File washed away in Missouri mud
Sometimes life is a stone wall
You either climb, or else you fall


In every town, on every street
All the faces that I meet

And I wonder, could one be
My brother James come back to me


Though I don't know where he's gone
I have searched my whole life long
Now I roam from town to town

But there's no orphan lost-and-found

Sometimes I dream a pleasant sight

My brother James and I unite
Remembering our last goodbye
No longer brave, we start to cry


I hope he lives a life of ease
And all his days a soft, warm breeze

May he sit upon a throne
And may he never sleep alone


Once I rode an orphan train
And my brother did the same
They split us up in Missouri

James was five and I was three

Craft and Structure Reading Standard #6
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.CCRA.R.6
"Assess how point of view or purpose shapes the content and style of a text."


Look at the flyer.  Do you fee the creator was persuasive in creating this flyer?  What type of people would come to adopt children?

As you can see all the questions focus on the author and the intentionality in using certain words or structures in demonstrating a point of view or writing for a specific purpose.



Check out these amazing authors and learn more about teaching.


You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!
Click here to enter






You can find me on these platforms (as well as my blog!)
  

How can I make your job easier this year?  Let me know in the comments.  If I use your ideas for a blog post, you will win $10 to Teachers Pay Teachers.  Even better, if I use your ideas to make a resource in my store, LisaTeachR's Classroom, I'll send you a free copy of that resource! 

Saturday

Looking deeper at Craft and Structure for Reading with Common Core Standards

Looking deeper at

Craft and Structure 

for Reading 

with Common Core Standards

Common core

Craft and Structure are numbers 4-6 in the Common Core standards.  Did you know that 10 out of 14 assessed claims are based on these standards?  Yet after some empirical data,  it has been found that most Language Arts instruction resides in standards 1-3 -Key ideas and details.  We need to be focusing more on these standards.

Let's break down each one of the craft and structure standards...

Craft and Structure Reading Standard #4
"Interpret words and phrases as they are used in a text, including determining technical, connotative, and figurative meanings, and analyze how specific word choices shape meaning or tone."

First of all, this is not about vocabulary lists and context clues.  It's more about the author and their choices.   

Some questions that should guide your lesson planning...

  • Why do you think the author used this particular word?
  • What images does the author paint when he uses the word _______?
Remember to focus on the intent of the author.


Craft and Structure Reading Standard #5
"Analyze the structure of texts, including how specific sentences, paragraphs, and larger portions of the text (e.g., a section, chapter, scene, or stanza) relate to each other and the whole."

This can be easily confused with text structures used with informational text.  This is not that.  This is more about the authors choices in what structure the text is written in.  Is it a narrative?  A poem?  Free verse?
Then within that structure, what is the big picture?  Did the author write a long detailed paragraph to offer the most information?  Or did the author choose a one sentence or a very small paragraph to pack a punch?

Craft and Structure Reading Standard #6
"Assess how point of view or purpose shapes the content and style of a text."

In the past when we asked author's purpose, the answer was inform, entertain or persuade.  This standard goes much deeper than that!  Here the analysis is on the point of view of the author or the specific purpose in writing this text.

As you can see all the questions focus on the author and the intentionality in using certain words or structures in demonstrating a point of view or writing for a specific purpose.


common core


Hope this gave you a little more clarity.  If you need help with close reading, check out these close reading guides I created for you!


Check out these amazing bloggers and learn more about teaching.





You can find me on these platforms (as well as my blog!)
  

How can I make your job easier this year?  Let me know in the comments.  If I use your ideas for a blog post, you will win $10 to Teachers Pay Teachers.  Even better, if I use your ideas to make a resource in my store, LisaTeachR's Classroom, I'll send you a free copy of that resource! 

Sunday

Best tips to help those struggling readers

Best tips to help those struggling readers


When I have at-risk conferences, I don't like to talk about deficits.  I prefer to talk about ways to work with your kids.  Here's what I discuss with my parents.

First and foremost, read every day.  There is no substitute for spending quality time with the adults you love.  Besides that, talk about the reading.  The common core has shifted from basic who, what, when, where questions to how and why questions.  When discussing the text with your child, make sure to ask questions like "Why do you think the character did that?"  and "How do you know...?"  Beyond that, ask for text evidence.  When they answer a question, ask them to point out evidence in the text that proves their point.

Secondly, make sure there are a lot of materials they can read around the house.  It should be a combination of stories and nonfiction texts.  Magazines and newspapers qualify.  Kids love nonfiction about animals.  Amazon is quick and easy and of course, the library is free!

Luckily, nowadays, we have a plethora of web sites and apps that can also help. Here are some I recommend:

  • Storybird.com  This is a great web site that curates art.  Basically, artists provide their art for kids to use when writing stories.  The art sparks ideas for the writing.  Kids can also read stories by others.  Accounts are created and you do not need an email address.
  • en.childrenslibrary.org/ offers a digital library.  There are a ton of books to read.
  • scholastic.com has both a kids section and a parents section.  The parents section has a lot of tips and tricks.  It can hone in on specific grade levels. The kids section has a lot of games and contests and is based on the current , most popular kid lit.
  • Learning Ally has a lot of audiobooks available for readers.  If a kid reads a book enough times, they start to connect the text to the sounds.
  • Voicedream is an app that will take any text and turn it into speech.  You can use it on an iPad or Android device. It has synchronized highlighting too!
  • Dragon dictation  This app is great for those kids who are struggling to get their ideas down because the spelling/writing gets in the way. They say what they want and the app turns it into text. And it's free!
  • Blio is another app ereader.  It's great because it will highlight words as it is reading them.  Super helpful.
I hope you find these apps useful for new readers or struggling readers.




TPT ***Google Plus ***Facebook
Bloglovin ***Twitter ***Pinterest


Saturday

Sharing is caring!: Back to School Freebies


Here are bunch of freebies for going back to school.  Enjoy!

First, teach your kids about digital citizenship! If you need some guidance, click here. Here is a pledge they can sign after you have taught them the rules.


I created a Digital Citizen Pledge. You can download it from TPT here.




This freebie is a bookmark referencing the Common Core. The anchor standards for reading are separated into four areas: Key ideas and details, Craft and Structure, Integration of Knowledge and Ideas and Text Complexity and Range. I added questions to each area to keep students focused while reading. I modified it and added another version with a bookworm. It's free, of course.



Last but not least...


For math...


Skip Counting Freebie

This freebie has a skip counting reference sheet and a practice sheet. Really useful for my kids with multiplication facts and division. It's free on my TPT store!



Enjoy!




TPT ***Google Plus ***Facebook
Bloglovin ***Twitter ***Pinterest

Sunday

IMWAYR: Brown Girl Dreaming



Monday Linky from Teach Mentor Texts and Unleashing Readers!




by Jacqueline Woodsen

I just finished this and it just wowed me.  It's written in narrative prose.  It's so powerful.  It's a collection of the author's own memories growing up in the 60's and 70's as an African American.  She has her feet in two worlds: New York City and South Carolina.  It details her thoughts about growing up in these places during the Civil Rights era.

I loved the section entitled The Other Woodsen which will resonate with anyone who had a brilliant older sibling and always came up short.

Another section I loved was:

reading


I am not my sister. 
Words from the books 
   curl around each oth-
   er 
make little sense 
until 
I read them again 
and again, the story 
settling into memory. 
   Too slow 
the teacher says. 
Read faster. 
Too babyish, 
the teacher says. 
Read older. 
But I don’t want to read 
   faster or older or 
any way else that might 
make the story disappear 
   too quickly from 
   where 
   it’s settling 
inside my brain, 
slowly becoming 
a part of me. 
A story I will remember 
long after I’ve read it for 
   the second, third, 
tenth, hundredth time.

Woodson, Jacqueline (2014-08-28). Brown Girl Dreaming (Newbery Honor Book) (p. 226). Penguin Young Readers Group. Kindle Edition. 

How beautiful was that?  Something we need to remember this in the the age of reading levels.  Don't limit your kids.  We need to allow our students to read outside of their levels.  Sometimes they need to reconnect to those primary books that are so meaningful to them and sometimes they need to read older books because they are motivated.  Let them fly!

Thinking about Mentor texts?  Read this!!


learning 
from 
langston 

I loved my friend. 

He went away from me. 
There’s nothing more to 
   say. 
The poem ends, 
Soft as it began— I
 loved my friend. 
   —Langston Hughes 

   I love my friend 
and still do 
when we play games 
we laugh. I hope she 
   never goes away from 
   me 
   because I love my 
        friend. 
   —Jackie Woodson

Woodson, Jacqueline (2014-08-28). Brown Girl Dreaming (Newbery Honor Book) (p. 245). Penguin Young Readers Group. Kindle Edition. 

Isn't that the most powerful example of using a mentor text?  What a simple, beautiful way to show kids.

This book has won the John Newbery Honor Medal and the NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literary Fiction In YA and the National Book Award.  Here's her speech at the National Book Award.   All well deserved.  Congratulations, Ms. Woodsen on a triumph.

Monday

Ideas for Alice's Adventures in Wonderland with Fourth Grade Students

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
by Lewis Carroll




So I'm teaching Fourth Grade this year. As we all know, we need to be thinking about text complexity and striving to challenge our kids. If you go to Appendix B of the Common Core State Standards, you can find the ELA Text Exemplars for all grades. The very first story for grades 4-5 is Alice in Wonderland! It's a tale about Alice who follows a white rabbit down a hole and many nonsense adventures ensue.

Because it was written so long ago, it is in the public domain and can be used freely. You can find it on Project Gutenberg. You can find various versions of the text, audio versions and a dramatization. If you go to Wikipedia, you can find comics, graphic novels and art related to Alice.

Here's the excerpt the CCSS provides:

Carroll, Lewis. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Illustrated by John Tenniel. New York: William Morrow, 1992. (1865)

From Chapter 1: “Down the Rabbit-Hole”

Alice was beginning to get very tired of sitting by her sister on the bank, and of having nothing to do: once or twice she had peeped into the book her sister was reading, but it had no pictures or conversations in it, ‘and what is the use of a book,’ thought Alice ‘without pictures or conversation?’

So she was considering in her own mind (as well as she could, for the hot day made her feel very sleepy and stupid), whether the pleasure of making a daisy-chain would be worth the trouble of getting up and picking the daisies, when suddenly a White Rabbit with pink eyes ran close by her.

There was nothing so VERY remarkable in that; nor did Alice think it so VERY much out of the way to hear the Rabbit say to itself, ‘Oh dear! Oh dear! I shall be late!’ (when she thought it over afterwards, it occurred to her that she ought to have wondered at this, but at the time it all seemed quite natural); but when the Rabbit actually TOOK A WATCH OUT OF ITS WAISTCOAT-POCKET, and looked at it, and then hurried on, Alice started to her feet, for it flashed across her mind that she had never before seen a rabbit with either a waistcoat-pocket, or a watch to take out of it, and burning with curiosity, she ran across the field after it, and fortunately was just in time to see it pop down a large rabbit-hole under the hedge.

In another moment down went Alice after it, never once considering how in the world she was to get out again.



Ways to use this literature with the common core...

Great standard to use with this text:
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.4.7
Make connections between the text of a story or drama and a visual or oral presentation of the text, identifying where each version reflects specific descriptions and directions in the text.

Because there is so much out there on Alice, this is a great piece of literature to meet this standard. For example, look at the statue of Alice in Central Park.



You can ask kids: How does this representation match up with what you visualized when hearing this story? What parts of the story does it represent?


Why did Lewis Carroll choose to format the text in this way? How does it affect our understanding as readers?


There are even graphic novels you can purchase on iTunes! Here is an image from the graphic novel Alice in Wonderland - the Graphic Novel for iPadBy Ave!Comics Production and the original John Tenniel illustration. Compare the two images. Which captures the text most effectively and why?





Here are two writing activities:
  • Have students write a companion book from another character's point of view 
  • Students can write their own graphic novel of a specific chapter from Alice in Wonderland. 


I created a close reading guide to help address the Common Core standards when teaching this unit. You can find it here. Students love to hear this classic read aloud. There is so much out there to use with the students and spark their thinking about literature. Give Alice a try. It's a classic for a reason.





TPT: http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Lisateachr
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LisaTeachR
Blog: http://lisateachr.blogspot.com/
Bloglovin: http://www.bloglovin.com/blog/12597175
Twitter: @Lisa_teacher

Thursday

FF: Reading for the Common Core Bookmark

Freebie Friday!

Linking with Teaching Blog Addict

Reading for the Common Core Bookmark


This freebie is a bookmark referencing the Common Core.  The anchor standards for reading are separated into four areas: Key ideas and details, Craft and Structure, Integration of Knowledge and Ideas and Text Complexity and Range.  I added questions to each area to keep students focused while reading. I modified it and added another version with a bookworm.

It's free on my TPT store!  Enjoy!

Saturday

Inside Out and Back Again: close reading guide

Inside Out and Back Again
by Thannha Lai

Watch this video to meet Ha and her family.




I created a close reading guide for Inside Out and Back Again by Thanhha Lai. It's a wonderful book written in free verse chronicling Ha's, a ten year old girl, journey from war-torn Vietnam to Alabama and her problems as a second language learner and with bullying.

Close reading will be an integral part of teaching with the Common Core. Students need to know how to be analytic when reading texts and poems. I have outlined the components of authentic literacy and what it looks like in the classroom. I formatted the guide as follows. It begins with an explanation of close reading and how to format a lesson. Then, there is a story summary, themes listed and character descriptions. I created focus questions for each and every chapter. There are explicit gradual release formatted lessons throughout. I included a close reading sheet for each of the explicit lessons. You could use the focus questions to create more close reading lessons using the blank templates or for class discussions. At the end, there is a blank sheet for planning and to use with close reading of different chapters. I hope your students enjoy it as much as my students did.

Awards for Inside Out and Back Again:
2012 Newbery Honor Book, 2011 National Book Award for Young People's Literature, New York Times Best Seller

Some comments my close reading guide has received:

"This was my first year using this book and your resources helped me out greatly! Thank you!"
"Love this! My ESL students are struggling with the novel and this will help."
"Thank you for this wonderful product! Walking through a close read with my students, helped them understand the process. It was fantastic being able to reproduce the novel in a close reading graphic organizer. This product saved me a lot of time!"
"Awesome resource! I can't wait to use it. I can see that it will be useful with SEVERAL different grades. Thank you!"

Sunday

2+1 TPT Cybersale!!




Linking with Ideas by Jivey!  Thanks for hosting!




What's most wish listed from my TPT store? Well, my close reading guides see the most action. So it's my close reading guide for Wonder by R.J.Palacio. 



This is a guide to a close reading of Wonder by RJ Palacio. It's a wonderful book chronicling Auggie's, a young boy born with a facial deformity, journey through school and the adjustments he, his family and his classmates have to make.

Close reading will be an integral part of teaching with the Common Core. Students need to know how to be analytic when reading texts and poems. I have outlined the components of authentic literacy and what it looks like in the classroom. I formatted the unit as follows. It begins with an explanation of close reading and how to format a lesson. Then, there is a story summary, themes listed and character descriptions. After that, I created focus questions for each chapter. There are explicit gradual release formatted lessons sprinkled throughout. I included a close reading sheet for each of the explicit lessons. You could use the focus questions to create more close reading lessons using the blank templates or for class discussions. At the end, there is a blank sheet for planning and to use with close reading of different chapters. I hope your students enjoy it as much as my students did. This isn't a bunch of worksheets as I don't teach that way. This is for going deep with the literature!




My second most wish listed item is my close reading guide for Inside Out and Back Again by Thanhha Lai.



It's a wonderful book written in free verse chronicling Ha's, a ten year old girl, journey from war-torn Vietnam to Alabama and her problems as a second language learner and with bullying.

The format for my 
Inside Out and Back Again close reading guide is similar to the format for my Wonder close reading guide.  I hope your students enjoy it as much as my students did.

Of course, my guides are common core aligned!!


What am I buying tomorrow?  I love the work of I'm Loving Lit.  I want her Interactive Writing Notebook!  That's the first thing I'm getting!

Happy shopping.  The cybersale is only two days so get your shopping in!


Wednesday

My close reading guide for Flora and Ulysses


Flora and Ulysses: An Illuminated Adventure!




This is such a great book.  As a child of divorce and knowing many kids are going through it too, I thought it a good book to work with.  Besides, I just love Kate DiCamillo.


Floraand Ulysses: The Illuminated Adventures! This middle grade novel won the Newbery medal for 2014. The story is about Flora, a self-described cynic, who witnesses a tragedy/miracle in her neighbor’s backyard. She is able to revive the squirrel and names him Ulysses. The book is very funny but also tackles some serious issues such as divorce, abandonment issues and more. The book is written as part narrative and part graphic novel.



I formatted the close reading guide as follows. It begins with an explanation of close reading and how to format a lesson. I also included sentence stems aligned to Webb's Depth of Knowledge. Then, there is a summary, themes listed and character descriptions. I created focus questions for each and every chapter. Along with the focus questions, I culled out vocabulary you might need to review and creative writing activities, research activities or discussion points. There are explicit gradual release formatted lessons throughout for pivotal moments in the story. I included a close reading sheet for each of the explicit lessons. You could use the focus questions to create more close reading lessons using the blank templates or for class discussions. At the end, there is a blank sheet for planning and to use with close reading of different chapters. Finally, I added my version of Cornell Notes, which I use for homework reading. I added a sheet for using with the idea of a capacious heart and a printable for creating comic strips. There is also a rubric for grading the close reading sheets. I hope your students enjoy it as much as my students did.

Awards for Flora and Ulysses:
The John Newbery Medal Winner 2014, National Book Award Longlist, Texas Bluebonnet Award 2014-15

Enjoy my new close reading guide on TPT!!!



TPT: http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Lisateachr
Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/+LisaRoblesLisaTeachR/posts
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LisaTeachR
Bloglovin: http://www.bloglovin.com/blog/12597175
Twitter: @Lisa_teacher
Pinterest: www.pinterest.com/lisarteacher
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...