Your Literacy Standards Companion, Grades K-2. Jim Burke

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Your Literacy Standards Companion, Grades K-2 - Jim Burke Corwin Literacy

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and CollaborationPresentation of Knowledge and Ideas

      11 Part 5. LanguageConventions of Standard EnglishKnowledge of LanguageVocabulary Acquisition and Use

      12  Resources

      Preface

      The standards offer us all a tremendous opportunity to help our students learn what they need to know for success in school and life, but using them requires a lot of something we as teachers have very little of: time. Standards demand that we find more time for students to learn in school—more time to think, practice, collaborate, and reflect. And we have to find more time as teachers to plan and teach, to learn the related language and instructional moves implicit in the standards.

      With an all too keen sense of my own limited time, I began to create a version of the Common Core State Standards that better met my needs, one I could keep by my side and reference quickly when planning, writing, or participating in meetings related to the Common Core standards. When teachers saw it, they wanted their own copies, and the result was The Common Core Companion—one for grades 6–8 and another for 9–12, which were both published in 2013.

      What’s the big idea behind Your Literacy Standards Companion? It’s inefficient for us all across the nation to spend time deciphering what our specific state standards say and digesting what they mean for teaching and learning, so I wrote the Companion to do that for you. With this book at your side, you can reclaim hours of time to do the most important work: develop your instructional ideas (and the standards themselves) into rich, engaging learning experiences for our students that meet the standards’ higher expectations.

      Because I often work with literacy coordinators who are responsible for all students in their district, I wanted these Companion books to be K–12, districtwide, and school-wide tools. That way teachers and administrators could hit the ground running as they implemented the standards and envisioned professional development that would support all teachers. But I had one problem: I was not an elementary school teacher. For teachers in grades 3–5, I thought of Leslie Blauman, an exemplary teacher and guide to teachers around the country.

      When it came to someone in grades K–2, I did not have to think long about whom to ask, for in those grades, all roads lead to Sharon Taberski, whose books Comprehension From the Ground Up and On Solid Ground did for K–3 instruction what Julia Child did for French cooking. She’s that good. And she is also a wise, patient, and generous friend and mentor to any who know her.

      More important than her landmark books is the fact that Sharon taught in her own classroom for 28 years and still works in classrooms, now in her role as a coach for teachers. She brings to this K–2 volume what I hoped she would: the ability to carefully balance the high demands of the standards with the developmental needs of young children.

      So without further ado, and with deepest gratitude for all she has taught me through the process of writing this book, I introduce you to Your Literacy Standards Companion, Grades K–2. If you’re looking for someone to help you understand and, more important, use the state standards in your classroom, you have come to the right place, for with Sharon Taberski, you are in good hands. Trust her to help you create exemplary standards-aligned K–2 literacy instruction that will allow you to be the teacher you have been and are capable of becoming.

       Jim Burke

      Introduction: Turning Standards Into Daily Teaching

       Every time we experience a problem, we have the opportunity to gather new resources, think about it, frame it, and take action.

      —Renate N. Caine and Geoffrey Caine, Natural Learning for a Connected World

      An excellent education should not be an accident; it should be a right, though nowhere in the United States Constitution or any of our other founding documents do we find that right listed. The Common Core State Standards address that omission and challenge us all—administrators and teachers, parents and children, politicians and the public at large, professors and student teachers—to commit ourselves anew to the success of our children and our country.

      This is how Jim Burke opened grades 6–8 and 9–12 of The Common Core Companion, the four-volume ELA series he conceived of for Corwin Literacy in 2013. In the 3 years since, these books and the volumes for K–2 and grades 3–5 have been so-called “evergreen” bestsellers, because they help educators everywhere get the important work done of transforming standards into daily learning outcomes. A series for Common Core Mathematics Companion also thrives. Here’s the interesting thing: Corwin sales data showed robust book sales even in states that never adopted the Common Core State Standards (CCSS)—educators were purchasing the books to help them refresh or reimagine their own state standards. When Leslie Blauman, the author of the grades 3–5 version, and I heard of these sales, it made great sense: educators are brilliant at adapting resources to suit their needs. Yet maybe more important, it underscored for us that while the politics and assessments tied to the CCSS are fraught—and Leslie and I knew from the get-go of the CCSS adoption that they would be—the standards themselves are timeless and true to what we want our students to be able to do.

      It also didn’t surprise Leslie, Jim, and me when Corwin Literacy saw this market need and decided to issue this new version, Your Literacy Standards Companion, with indexes for each state that opted out of the CCSS, to make it easier for users to go right to the pages most aligned to their state’s standards. The following states have indexes in this book:

       Alaska

       Arizona

       Arkansas

       Colorado

       Florida

       Georgia

       Indiana

       Iowa

       Kansas

       Louisiana

       Maryland

       Minnesota

       Mississippi

       Missouri

       Nebraska

       New Jersey

       Oklahoma

       Pennsylvania

       South Carolina

       Tennessee

       Utah

       Virginia

       West Virginia

      As I write this revised introduction and reflect on how any standards are best put into practice, my advice to you on how to use this resource

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