We're sorry but the specific course you requested is no longer available. View the details below to find other offerings of the course you reqested
Graduate-Level Credit / Non-Credit Hours
3 Semester Credits, 5 Quarter Credits, or 45 Clock Hours
Course Description
This course is designed to provide an understanding of 6-12 Common Core State Standards, including the history of the standards, as well as the biggest shifts from current instructional practice. Most significantly, participants will learn teaching strategies to embrace the new ELA standards, with a particular focus on strengthening classroom practice in the biggest shift areas from old to new standards, and aligning to the tasks of the new assessments.
Global Goals of the Course
To deepen and/or apply the content and skills of the teacher’s existing professional knowledge base by meeting the following global goals of this course:
1. To understand the philosophical and pedagogical belief systems that brought the Common Core into place (NBPTS 1, 2, 4, 5 ; InTASC 4,9)
2. To understand how to read the Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts and Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects document (NBPTS 2; InTASC 4,5)
3. To explore the standards, developing an understanding of the meaning and context of each standard in grades six through twelve (NBPTS 2, 4; InTASC 4,7)
4. To understand the factors inherent in determining text complexity for 6-12 readers (NBPTS 1, 2, 3, 4, 5; InTASC 1,2,4,6)
5. To gain knowledge and understanding of the necessity and practice of close reading for middle school and high school students (NBPTS 2; InTASC 4,5)
6. To understand the concepts of disciplinary literacy, and the foundational skill of gaining academic literacy in informational reading (NBPTS 2, 4 ; InTASC 1,4,7)
7. To recognize the importance of, and encourage the use of text-dependent questions and answers (NBPTS 2,3; InTASC 1,4,5,6)
8. To strengthen the balance of informational and literary texts in current reading programs through the 6-12 curriculum, with more weight put on reading informational text in the curriculum (NBPTS 2, 4, 5; InTASC 4)
9. To gain knowledge of approaches to encourage writing from sources in all types of media, to use research in the writing process, and to learn to write argument (NBPTS 2, 3, 4; InTASC 4,5,7)
10. To explore and redefine literacy for the 21st century adolescent (NBPTS 1, 2, 4, 5; InTASC 4,9)
The course was great! The information was on point and the instructor was very supportive throughout the class.
I loved the enthusiasm the instructor brought to class every day, the overall course content, and the relevant assignments.
The professor was very knowledgeable and helpful about the content area and had so many great ideas that I plan on using with my class this year and beyond. I was surprised at how many resources there are for outdoor education and how beneficial it is to kids.