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Text Sets North Carolina Department of Public Instruction English Language Arts Department

Text Sets North Carolina Department of Public Instruction English Language Arts Department. Agenda. Introduction and Review of Agenda Text Sets and Lesson Design Text Sets and the Standards Criteria for Constructing a Text Set Morning Break (15 minutes) Lesson Featuring a Text Set

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Text Sets North Carolina Department of Public Instruction English Language Arts Department

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  1. Text SetsNorth Carolina Department of Public Instruction English Language Arts Department

  2. Agenda • Introduction and Review of Agenda • Text Sets and Lesson Design • Text Sets and the Standards • Criteria for Constructing a Text Set • Morning Break (15 minutes) • Lesson Featuring a Text Set • Steps to Creating a Text Set • LUNCH (12:00 – 1:00) • Example Text Sets • Pattern Folder Activity • Afternoon Break (15 minutes) • A Text Set in Action • Reflection

  3. Participant Notes • You will find the participant notes on our LiveBinder

  4. CREATING TEXT SETS

  5. Resources • Texts and Lessons for Content-Area Reading (Harvey “Smokey” Daniels and Nancy Steineke) • Teaching with Text Sets (Mary Ann Cappiello and Erika Thulin Dawes) • Common Core Curriculum Maps English Language Arts (Common Core)

  6. Line of Inquiry FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT Text Set W.11-12.1b W.11-12.5 RUBRIC LESSON W.11-12.9 RI.11-12.1

  7. Line of Inquiry Text Set W.11-12.1b W.11-12.5 RUBRIC LESSON W.11-12.9 RI.11-12.1 Line of Inquiry

  8. Defining What is Text?: The term “text” refers to anything that a teacher can use to center instruction, anything that students can read, view, listen to, or explore, including books, photographs, films, articles, music, art, and more. What is a Text Set?: A text set is a collection of related texts organized around a topic or line of inquiry. A text set includes information in many modalities, including print, audio, visual. Examples could be podcasts, news footage, photographs, drawings, artifacts, sculptures, and paintings, including primary sources.

  9. Text Sets and the Standards • The Standardsfocus on building student ability to read and understand grade-level complex text and express that understanding clearly through writing and speaking. • The Standards emphasize the role of close engagement with text in students building knowledge about the world. • A coherent sequence of texts around a clear topic or line of inquiry will support students in building vocabulary and background knowledge. • Text sets are one tool for educators in planning units of instruction to help students meet the demands of the Standards.

  10. Shifts Building knowledge through content-rich nonfiction and informational texts Reading and writing grounded in evidence from the text Regular practice with complex text and its academic vocabulary

  11. Where does using multiple texts appear in the Standards? Reading: Integration of Knowledge and Ideas • R.CCR.7Integrate and evaluate content presented in diverse media and formats, including visually and quantitatively, as well as in words. • R.CCR.9Analyze how two or more texts address similar themes or topics in order to build knowledge or to compare the approaches the authors take.

  12. Writing: Research to Build and Present Knowledge • W.CCR.7Conduct short as well as more sustained research projects based on focused questions, demonstrating understanding of the subject under investigation. • W.CCR.8Gather relevant information from multiple print and digital sources, assess the credibility and accuracy of each source, and integrate the information while avoiding plagiarism.

  13. Speaking and Listening: Comprehension and Collaboration • SL.CCR.2Integrate and evaluate information presented in diverse media and formats, including visually, quantitatively, and orally.

  14. What are your ideas? With your table group, discuss… • How have you used multiple texts to teach the Standards? • And, what challenges might teachers face in your district with using multiple texts?

  15. Dan Sparlin New additions to the WiseOwl collection of resources Contact: Dan.sparlin@dpi.nc.gov

  16. Text Sets in K-12 Classrooms • Elementary: Across Genres / Integrated approach • Middle Grades: Across Genres /Team Approach • High School: Across Genres

  17. Why Create a Text Set… • To capture interests and cultivate engagement • To prompt inquiry • To read for multiple perspectives • To build prior knowledge • To encourage student writing: Text sets as mentor texts • To differentiate instruction • To support vocabulary development

  18. Criteria Constructing a text set requires considering three criteria: • A variety based on text complexity considerations. • Various cultural perspectives may be appropriate for some concepts. • Differences that offer various approaches to the “big idea” or conceptual understanding that unifies the conceptual text set. Donham, J. (2013). Text Sets, Deep Learning, and the Common Core. School Library Monthly, 29(6), 5-7.

  19. 1. Text Complexity • The Standards assert that Lexilescores alone are not a measure of complexity. • A text set might include titles that differ in: 1. Qualitative Measures 2. Quantitative Measures 3. Reader and Task

  20. Navigating Text Complexity

  21. 2. Cultural Perspectives “Text sets provide multiple perspectives on complex issues. They show students that there are different "truths" and thus emphasize the importance of questioning dominant interpretations.” (Annenberg Learner)

  22. 3. Conceptual Understanding • Central to the text set is the big unifying idea. To meet the expectation of the Standards for deep learning, this core idea is considered conceptual. A concept has several important attributes:

  23. Conceptual Understanding • A concept is an abstract idea. • A concept has complexity in that it may have multiple dimensions or attributes. • A concept transfers across time and place. • A concept is learned through inferential and inductive thinking.

  24. Linda Crafton (1991) wrote “when readers read texts that are conceptually related in some way, they are engaged in an exploration of cognitive and linguistic ties.”

  25. Break

  26. Text Set Lesson Words We Live By: Your Annotated Guide to the Constitution by Linda R. Monk Originally published in New York: Hyperion, 2003.

  27. What is (and isn’t) the meaning of “popular sovereignty”? Why does Monk claim that this is the form of government in America? Standards: RI.6-8.4-6

  28. Is Lucy Stone confused when she asks “Which ‘We the People’?” Why does Monk say this question has “troubled the nation?”Standards: RI.6-8.5-6

  29. What evidence is there in this paragraph regarding Marshall’s claim about the “evolving nature of the constitution”? Standard: RI.6-8.1

  30. The Focusing Question for Writing: Explain how the notion of who “the people” were has changed over time in America? Use evidence from the text to support your explanation. Anchor Standards: R.CCR.3-6 and W.CCR.2, 4, 5, 9

  31. One Composition for Lesson Design • Briefly introduce lesson • Read • Reread • Ask text-dependent questions • Provide opportunities for text-based writing

  32. This lesson… • allows the mystery and the adventure of the text to unfold, • chunks the text in a meaningful way, • includes scaffolding that doesn’t simplify the text and asks questions that require evidence, • and provides keen focus on paragraphs, sentences, and words.

  33. Steps to Creating Text Sets

  34. Step One: Identify the Anchor Text and Formulate a Line of Inquiry for the Set • Determine the standards that you want to teach. • Identify an anchor text and formulate an overall line of inquiry for the set. This can happen in either order. An educator may first identify an anchor text, from which they formulate a line of inquiry for the set OR an educator may choose to first identify a topic for a unit of study and then seek out an anchor text around which to build the set.

  35. Step OneContinued • The most important part of step one is that the anchor text be a grade-level complex text that meets the complexity demands of the Standards and is worthy of the time and attention of students. Without a rich anchor text, it is difficult to create a worthwhile text set.

  36. How Many Texts? • The number of texts in a set can vary depending on purpose and resource availability around a given topic. • What is important is that the texts in the set are connected meaningfully to each other to deepen student understanding of the anchor text.

  37. Step Two: Use Databases to Research Texts around the Topic • Once you have identified the anchor text and line of inquiry for your set, you can use a variety of databases to search for texts.

  38. Step Three: Evaluate Texts for Inclusion in the Set 1. Does the text contribute to the students building a body of knowledge connected meaningfully to the anchor text? 2. Is the text worthy of student time and attention? 3. Does the text contribute to a range and balance of text types and formats in the overall set? 4. Do the text complexity measures of the text place it in the grade band of the anchor text? A range of texts spanning the band will support student-knowledge-building over the course of the unit.

  39. Step Four: Refine, Finalize, and Produce Text Set • Continue to refine your selections until you are satisfied that you have a range and balance of texts that support student engagement with the line of inquiry.

  40. Lunch

  41. Examples of Text Sets

  42. Guiding Questions for Text Sets • How are the texts related in a meaningful way? • What makes the texts rich & worthy of rereading? • What are the range of text types? • Are there various degrees of complexity in the set?

  43. Strong vs. Weak

  44. Examples

  45. Checking for Understanding • Write a question on one side of an index card about something you learned this morning. • Answer the question on the back of the card. • Trade questions with someone from another table and discuss your learning.

  46. Pattern Folders: A Literary Analysis Tool

  47. Activity Activity How would you use this folder at your grade level(s)?

  48. Lesson Let’s take a look at how to use text sets within a lesson.

  49. Painting • Primary Source: Obituary • Primary Source: Letter • Poetic Text: Epitaph • Anchor Text: O Captain! My Captain! • Sixth Text: Student Choice • differentiation • formative assessment

  50. Line of Inquiry What differences and/or similarities do we see in the ways in which authors and artists present the subject through various media and genres? How do authors and artists successfully convey their presentations?

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