Common Core Standards
College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards for Reading
Reading CCRA.R.1
This first Anchor Standard for Reading can be broken into a few basic parts: read the text; explain what the text says; explain what you can reasonably guess is true based on what’s in the text; and point out the parts of the text that make those guesses “reasonable,” as opposed to “wild.”
Example 1
Reading like Sherlock
This anchor standard basically asks students to do two things:
1. Solve the mysteries of the text through close reading and making inferences.
2. Prove their case in court by citing specific text evidence that supports their ideas.
This is the first reading standard because, in one way or another, it relates to all the other reading standards. In order to determine the theme, discuss the characters, analyze the text’s structure, etc., students must first be able to read closely, make inferences, and support those inferences with the text. If you can set this standard as the foundation for everything else you do with a text, your students will be well on their way to mastering all ten standards. Our advice? Make “Prove it!” your new class motto and hit the books with your students.
Have you hit some resistance when it comes to “hitting the books?” Usually students approach a long reading passage as Captain Ahab approaches the Great White Whale; they just want to yell and throw a stick at it. But wait, there is hope! Encourage students to approach the passage like Watson and Holmes instead, and they’ll be fine. Rather than doing a deadly dance with a monster, they need to gather clues and sort out the logical conclusions. Hey, kids, whip out your steampunk pipe and magnifying glass and the passage will, in short, be neutralized.
Example 2
Crazy Little Thing Called Logic
Let’s take a closer look at part one of this standard: “Read closely to determine what the text says explicitly and to make logical inferences from it.”
Teaching students to read closely involves helping them tune into their “reading voice.” You know, that little voice in your head that chatters in the background as you read, saying things like, “Wait a minute, that doesn’t make sense...Oh, I get it now...Hold on, is he really the killer?...Wow, she is totally selfish, isn’t she?...Um, what?” If students can learn to listen consciously to this voice and track their thinking as they read, they will begin picking up on the clues in the text and will be able to use those clues to make and support inferences.
There are several ways to help students track their understanding of a passage. Not surprisingly, these methods involve taking notes and annotating the text as they read. We all know students want to just zip through the passages and get straight to the questions, so be prepared for some eye-rolling and whining on this one. We recommend that you model this process for your students. Put a passage up on the projector and walk through your thinking out loud. What clues would you highlight? What marginal notes would you make? How do these notes help you make and support inferences about the text?
Here are a few tips to pass on to your students:
- Take the reading one paragraph at a time and try to discern the clear and literal meaning. Write it down in the margin of your paper to help you track the big ideas as they evolve.
- Don’t forget to note your questions in the margins too. Places where you find yourself confused or wondering something or feeling inexplicably intrigued by some detail are likely to be important moments in the text that you’ll want to return to later. That reading voice of yours has good natural instincts, so listen to it.
- These marginal notes aren’t just for giggles, they should serve a purpose, and that purpose should not be to simply rewrite what’s already in the text. Stop wallowing in how much work this is and organize your notes to infer or draw conclusions about the passage as a whole. These should be logical (make sense) according to what you’re reading. If the passage is about global warming, assumptions involving magical ponies would obviously not be advisable.
- A Note on Highlighting: Highlighting with purpose? Good. Using highlighters to turn your paper into a neon collage? No good. We’re annotating here folks, not coloring. Only highlight the truly important clues that are likely to be useful in supporting your thinking. It’s okay if you’re a bit unsure at first; it takes practice to learn what is most important in a text.
Example 3
Student Rhapsody
Okay, now for part two: “Cite specific textual evidence when writing or speaking to support conclusions drawn from the text.”
This means students have to take their thoughts up a notch. Not only are they asked to understand the text clearly, they must also be able to speak or write about their interpretations with support from the text that proves their thinking is valid. The first thought for many students is, “How do I know which quote to use?” A fair question if starting from scratch, but thanks to you, they annotated the text as they read. Don’t worry, they’ll learn to appreciate your advice one of these days.
Speaking of advice, here’s some more to pass on to your students:
- Remember those notes? You know, the ones you whined and complained about? Well, take a moment to review them and determine the line or short passage that best illustrates your inference or interpretation. Underline or highlight it. Then use it to support your thinking.
- Don’t tailor your writing to fit a quote; rather, use a quote that compliments your ideas. If you’ve taken good reading notes, and if your inferences are valid, the right quote should be easy to locate. You can thank me later.
Example 4
Another One Bites Dust
All right Sherlock – the mystery is solved and the passage’s secret plot revealed. Reading texts aren’t the great burden students think they are when you show them how to divide and conquer. The text will never best them if they pay attention to the clues, and these skills of interpretation and analytical reading are essential for any subject matter. It’s elementary.
Quiz Questions
Here's an example of a quiz that could be used to test this standard.Time to get cracking. Read the following passage ...Oh, did you just get a text? I’ll wait... Okay read the following passage and answer the questions below (and you might want to put the cell down for a hot second). Don’t forget the awesome advice you were just given about annotating your texts. Wink, wink.
Sample Passage
So where do you do it? In the car…at your house… in class when your teacher isn’t looking? That’s right, cell phone usage is such a part of our global community that it is hard to find a person who isn’t plugged in. Teachers and students are undeniably at odds about phone usage in the classroom, and schools seem to be getting more and more lax about regulating it. Students are walking around the halls with phones attached to their heads and hands like they’re in a bad sci-fi flick. Some say that phones are harmless or necessary evils, but anyone who has been in a classroom knows that when a student is intently focused on the phone into his lap, not much learning is going on. Regardless of the rules, students will find a way to use them in school, so it is up to teachers to finagle student focus – fight with the Smartphone, not against it.
There is no denying a Smartphone is an amazing instrument. According to Webster, the first known usage of the word “Smartphone”1 was in 1997 by Ericsson to market their R380 device (Ozgur, 2011)2, and our beloved industry techies have never looked back. After more than a decade of development and the extension of social media, Smartphones enable an individual to be connected at all times. You can tweet, text, email, organize, update your FB status, and play Angry Birds all in one device. If teachers could harness the power of the Smartphone, it would do wonders for the modern classroom. The problem rests in App continuity between devices, anonymity issues, and collecting assessment data. However, these concerns don’t rule technology out altogether, as many devices catered to classroom needs exist already. As far as the Smartphone is concerned, until these hindrances are overcome, students and teachers will continue on like two warring households.
1 Smartphone. 2011. In Merriam-Webster.com. Retrieved February 16, 2012, from http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/smartphone.
2 Ozgur. The Smartphone Revolution: The Growth of Smartphones and the Exchange ActiveSync. Retrieved February 16, 2012, from http://mail2web.com/blog/2011/05/smartphone-revolution-growth-smartphones-exchange-activesync/ .
Aligned Resources
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- Teaching Adventures of Huckleberry Finn: Huck Finn vs. Video Games
- Teaching A Farewell to Arms: Hemingway and ... Yiyun Li?
- Teaching Night: Virtual Field Trip
- Teaching Romeo and Juliet: A Monologue for the Ages
- Teaching The Book Thief: Courage Protocol
- Teaching The Book Thief: Re-Imagining the Story
- Teaching The Giver: Remember the Time
- Teaching The Giver: In a Perfect World…
- Teaching The Catcher in the Rye: No Oscar for Holden
- Teaching The Prince: Politician or Poet
- Teaching To Kill a Mockingbird: A Dream Deferred
- Teaching Romeo and Juliet: Speaking Shakespeare's Language
- Teaching The Great Gatsby: Come a Little Closer
- Teaching The Great Gatsby: Reviewing a Classic
- Teaching A Tale of Two Cities: Mapping A Tale of Two Cities
- Teaching A Tale of Two Cities: Mix and Match Plot Arrangements
- Teaching Adventures of Huckleberry Finn: It Runs in the Family
- Teaching Night: Tragedy Times Two
- Teaching A Christmas Carol: Parable Party
- Teaching A Separate Peace: Blitzball for All
- Teaching A Farewell to Arms: Touring the Novel
- Teaching Adventures of Huckleberry Finn: The N-Word
- Teaching The Catcher in the Rye: Party Planner
- Teaching The Catcher in the Rye: Searching the Big Apple
- Teaching Lord of the Flies: Crime Scene Island
- Teaching Night: Survivors Unite
- Teaching Of Mice and Men: Close Reading Steinbeck: Letters vs. Novel
- Teaching A Farewell to Arms: If Hemingway Edited Hawthorne
- Teaching A Good Man is Hard to Find: Killer Short Stories: Flannery O'Connor and Southern Gothic Literature
- Teaching A Separate Peace: Lost in Translation? (Mapping a Community)
- Teaching A Christmas Carol: Give a Little, Get a Lot
- Teaching Macbeth: "With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility"
- Teaching The Prince: Found in Translation
- Teaching To Kill a Mockingbird: Sketch It: Making a Maycomb Map