Resources for Understanding the Common Core State Standards
Explore an educator’s guide to websites, organizations, articles, and other resources looking at the new system of standards and how they will be assessed.
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Go to My Saved Content.Feeling overwhelmed by the sheer volume of dense, conflicting information out there about the Common Core State Standards (CCSS)? You're not alone. Connecting with other educators is often a great way to uncover useful CCSS information, tools, and resources. Consider sharing your voice in online communities: on Twitter ( or ), or聽 (麻豆传媒入口's is one place to start). If you'd like even more help making sense of the initiative, here's 麻豆传媒入口's guide to other organizations that offer valuable resources.
The Debate
Debate and controversy continue over the CCSS and associated changes to assessments. Some supporters argue a common set of rigorous national standards will transform American education, prepare students for college and careers, and allow our nation to maintain international competitiveness. Some opponents assert the standards represent a flawed, untested, 鈥渙ne-size-fits-all鈥 approach -- an overreach into matters best left up to local control. have introduced bills revisiting the decision to adopt the CCSS in the first place. In 2013, the general public was mostly left out of this debate; however, more recent polls have found that public awareness of the standards has grown. For more about two 2014 polls and what they suggested about shifts in public awareness and opinion, read , from NPR.
With rumors about the CCSS swirling, it can be difficult to sort out fact from fiction. This article from Common Sense Media includes links to resources that can help you understand the supporting and opposing arguments. Smithsonian鈥檚 , by Stephen Sawchuk, is another good read. Several CCSS endorsers have put effort into debunking myths鈥 is one of those efforts. For more updates from around the nation as events take place, take a look at ASCD鈥檚 and Education Week鈥檚 ongoing coverage. Finally, The Hechinger Report's in-depth coverage of is a good source of stories from the trenches聽and more detailed information about CCSS intricacies and controversies.
Common Core State Standards Initiative
First, go straight to the source. The is comprehensive and well organized. You can download PDFs of the and the , see an , read , and check out about them. A from the USC Rossier School of Education provides a survey of the standards and includes guidance on helping community members and parents, as well. You can also from the .
Videos on the Common Core
offers more than 240 , from broad overviews to lesson ideas for specific standards. They've also developed additional videos and resources, including demonstrations of Common Core-aligned lessons, in partnership with leading nonprofits and teachers鈥 unions focused on implementing the Common Core. And if you're looking for short, accessible videos to explain the Common Core Standards to parents or colleagues, check out . There you will find more than 30 videos, from brief animated overviews to details on the standards' specifics to Spanish translations. is one of the key initiatives, so it has done great work making the Common Core understandable.
ASCD's Common Core Resources
received a to support implementation of Common Core State Standards over a three-year period, and it has become an endorsing partner in the initiative. ASCD has developed a with a wealth of information, and created a website called EduCore: Tools for Teaching the Common Core. The organization has a twice-monthly, topic-based newsletter, Core Connection (mentioned above), that you can .
Common Core Toolkit from the Partnership for 21st Century Learning
Among all the great resources offered by the , you can find the Common Core Toolkit, a 48-page guide as a free PDF download or in hard copy for a nominal fee. This resource helps map the CCSS to P21's comprehensive . It includes lesson vignettes to show what such alignment looks like in action, resources and links for states and districts working to put the standards into place, and information about assessment.
Achieving the Common Core
As an independent, nonprofit, education-reform organization, Achieve has a mission of supporting standards-based education reform, and it offers both content and policy resources. The best place to start is the Achieving the Common Core page, where you will find a PowerPoint presentation, fact sheets, side-by-side comparisons of the CCSS and other respected benchmarks, videos, and lesson plans. The "On the Road to Implementation" guide is useful and well organized, and Achieve has also developed a Toolkit for Evaluating the Alignment of Instructional and Assessment Materials.
Achieve the Core
, an initiative of Student Achievement Partners and nonprofit founded by the lead writers of the Common Core, is a website that shares free, open-source resources to support Common Core implementation. Available resources include tools and resources that educators can use in ELA classrooms and , information about shifts in instruction related to the Common Core, and guidance and tools to help evaluate alignment of instruction, assessment, and materials to CCSS shifts. New for 2015, a includes a collection of classroom videos and lesson materials intended to help K-12 educators align their lessons to the standards.
Share My Lesson Common Core Information Center
Ready to start thinking about classroom implementation? is a fantastic free platform where teachers can exchange lesson plans and ideas, developed by the and . Their Common Core State Standards Information Center is a hub for lesson plans and advice. The Share My Lesson team did the legwork of digging through more than 250,000 user-uploaded and -rated resources on the site to find the most relevant ones for teaching with the Common Core Standards -- check out the K - 8 Math Index and the 6-12 English Language Arts Index for lessons mapped to specific standards. They also host a Common Core Forum so that you can join the discussion.
LearnZillion Common Core Lesson Plans
Another place to look for high-quality, teacher-produced lesson plans that align to the CCSS is , a learning platform that combines video lessons, assessments, and progress reporting. In addition to sortable Math and ELA video lessons, they offer a handy Common Core navigator. This organization has -- started by a public school in Washington D.C. as a home-grown repository for screencast lessons made by their teachers, they caught the attention of edtech funders and ended up with seed money to take their idea to a national level. or read a blog and hear a podcast from Marketplace about LearnZillion.
Khan Academy Practice Problems
Looking for resources to support math instruction? has created thousands of CCSS-aligned , created and reviewed by math educators. Check out the on their website to browse skills and related math exercises by grade and relevant standard. Adaptive software helps to identify gaps and show progress on each student's learning dashboard, and real-time tracking data is available to teachers.
BetterLesson Common Core Lesson Plans
In partnership with the , launched a new website in January 2014, featuring over 10,000 CCSS-aligned lessons for math and ELA/literacy. Developed by over 130 current, experienced teachers for every grade level, the featured lessons include the teachers鈥 reflections and insights, student work examples, and an array of other supporting materials.
The Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC)
As one of the two state-led collaboratives developing new assessments that align with the Common Core Standards, PARCC received a $186 million . You will find a solid implementation page on its website with guides, webinars, workbooks, and more resources for the transition period. PARCC also offers a page called For Educators, designed specifically for teachers in the trenches. PARCC is a consortium of states, and 13 states are participating in administration of the PARCC tests during the 2014-15 school year.
Educational Testing Service's Center for K-12 Assessment and Performance Management
is now working with and PARCC on the new systems of assessment through its Center for K-12 Assessment and Performance Management. The K-12 center has created graphic illustrations to explain each of the two systems. (Download the PDF for PARCC or the PDF for Smarter Balanced.) The center also publishes webinars, reports, PowerPoint presentations, and a PDF guide on its work with PARCC and SBAC.
Center on Education Policy鈥檚 Compendium of Research on the Common Core State Standards
This from the was last updated in February 2015 and includes summaries of studies across nine different topic areas. The full compendium is available for download; each of the topic areas is also available to download separately.
Research File: Common Core State Standards by the American Educational Research Association
The website houses on topics related to the Common Core. Some topics include differences between the new and previous standards, the adoption process, underlying assumptions, and whether or not the standards represent an improvement.
More 麻豆传媒入口 Resources About the Common Core
- Common Core in Action Series June 2015
- How PBL Prepares Students for CCSS Test Performance Tasks: Part 1 - Defining the Tasks by John Larmer, May 2014
- How PBL Prepares Students for CCSS Test Performance Tasks: Part 2 - PBL is Already Aligned for Assessment by John Larmer, May 2014
- How to Change the World: Service PBL in the Common Core Literacy Classroom by Amy Conley, November 2014
- Project-Based Learning and the Common Core: Resource Roundup by Andrew Miller, March 2014
- Connecting SEL and the Common Core, Part One by Maurice Elias, December 2014
- SEL and the Common Core, Part Two: Why Emotion Vocabulary Matters by Maurice Elias, December 2014
- How Are Social-Emotional Learning and the Common Core Connected? by Maurice Elias, January 2014
- A Cornucopia of Multidisciplinary Teaching by Vincent Mastro, August 2014
- Pivot Point: At the Crossroads of STEM, STEAM, and Arts Integration by Susan Riley, December 2013
- Use Arts Integration to Enhance Common Core by Susan Riley, November 2012
- Artistic to the Core: Music and Common Core by Karin Nolan, November 2012
- Education, the Brain, and Common Core State Standards by Ramona Persaud, May 2013
- Student Responses to Common Core Instruction and Assessment by Judy Willis, October 2013
- Badges and the Common Core by Matthew Farber, September 2013
- Games and the Common Core: Two Movements That Need Each Other by Milton Chen, April 2013
- How Well Do Schools Communicate? by Anne O鈥橞rien, August 2014
- What Do Parents Need to Know About the Common Core? by Anne O鈥橞rien, February 2014
- What Do Parents Think About the Common Core Standards? by Anne O鈥橞rien, August 2013
- Breaking Down Silos: Career Technical Education in the Era of Common Core by Anne O鈥橞rien, March 2015
- How the Common Core Supports Deeper Learning by Bob Lenz, January 2015
- When Teachers and Administrators Collaborate by Anne O鈥橞rien, November 2014
- Teacher Leadership and the Common Core State Standards? by Jose Vilson, October 2014
- The Shift: Media Specialists and the Common Core by Josh Work, March 2014
- Teaching Students Not Standards by Rebecca Alber, February 2014
- Recent Polls: Do Educators Support the Common Core? by Anne O鈥橞rien, January 2014
- From Coverate to 'Uncoverage' by Andrew Miller, August 2013
- Five-Minute Film Festival: Digging Into the Common Core by Amy Erin Borovoy, August 2013
- The Common Core: Haven't We Been Here Before? by Dr. Allen Mendler, June 2013
- Two Paths: How Will You See the Common Core? by Bob Lenz and Ken Kay, April 2013
- How Will Common Core Change What We Do? by Erin Powers, February 2013