Teaching The Common Core

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A Publication of the California History-Social Science Project

Teaching the
Common Core
SOURCE
THE
1 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
The Source
California History-Social Science Project
Quarterly Magazine
FEATURES
Were #3!
by Nancy McTygue
How the Common Core State Standards are helping reverse the marginalization of history
instruction.
Reading the Common Core Standards
by Dave Neumann
A close reading of who crafted the Common Core State Standards, their purpose, and their
promise for history instruction.
No Fear!
by Shennan Hutton
The challenges and rewards of implementing the Common Core State Standards.
Common Core Reading Strategies
by Donna Leary
A cause and effect lesson on the cotton boom in the American South.
Teaching Vocabulary
by Lisa Meyers
A 7th grade lesson on the Roman Empire that incorporates Common Core State Standard L.7.6.
History Blueprint Pilot Results
by Shennan Hutton
A look at the Civil War History Blueprint on the ground, in the classroom.
3
5
6
11
13
15
Together, Toward the Common Core
by Letty Kraus
How The History Project at UC Davis is working to incorporate effective strategies for
implementing the Common Core State Standards.
8
California History-Social Science Project
Advisory Board
Emily Albu, UC Davis
University of California Representative
Steve Aron, UCLA & Autry Museum
Private Industry Sector Representative
Marvin Awbrey (Co-Chair)
Fresno Unified School District, Retired
Professional Organization Representative, CCSS
Barbara Doten, Long Beach Unified
California State Board of Education Representative
Gary Dei Rossi, San Joaquin COE
Commission on Teacher Credentialing Representative
Gary K. Hart, Public Policy Institute of California
Governors Office Representative
Craig Hendricks, Long Beach Community College
Emily Rader, El Camino Community College
California Community College Representative
Jeff Pollard (Co-Chair)
Natomas Charter School
Superintendent of Public Instruction Representative
Amanda Podany, California State Polytechnic University,
Pomona
California State University Representative
Alan Taylor, UC Davis
Statewide Faculty Advisor
Staff
Statewide Office
Nancy McTygue, Executive Director
The UC Berkeley History-Social Science Project
Rachel Reinhard, Director
The History Project at UC Davis
Pam Tindall, Director
The UCLA History-Geography Project
Mary Miller, Co-Director
Emma Hipolito, Co-Director
The History Project at CSU Long Beach
Dave Neumann, Director
The History Project at CSU Dominguez Hills
Lisa Hutton, Director
The UC Irvine History Project
Nicole Gilbertson, Director
The History Project at CSU Fresno
Melissa Jordine, Director
The Civil War: A Common Core Program
California History-Social Science Projects Common Core
workshops.
29
Rewriting History
by Emily Markussen Sorsher
The types of writing supported by the Common Core State
Standards.
27
Teaching Writing
by Nicole Gilbertson
A glimpse at The History Project at UC Irvines new Common
Core resource to improve writing instruction.
25
Why Did Lincoln Fight?
From the Civil War History Blueprint, excerpts from Lesson #5,
Lincolns Speeches.
21
Dont Be Afraid of the Common Core
by Mary Miller
How the Common Core State Standards encourage the teaching of
analysis, use of evidence, and engaging with multiple perspectives.
19
The Source is a publication of The California History-Social Science Project
(CHSSP). Copyright 2013 UC Regents. We welcome your letters and inquiries.
To learn more visit our website at http://chssp.ucdavis.edu/ or contact us at
[email protected].
-Shelley Brooks, Editor
3 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
T H E S O U R C E
For years I have railed against the marginalization of
history and the related social sciences, in this column,
in formal presentations, and basically, to anyone who
would listen. (My apologies to those of you Ive
cornered more than once on this topic, especially the
woman who cuts my hair and my mom, who really
couldnt find an easy way out of earshot). Although
the context for each harangue changed, my central
questions did not: How did the study of history
become so unimportant as to be dropped from the
public school curriculum? Why would American
schools suddenly stop teaching students how to think
critically, argue persuasively, and analyze competing
points of view? And why on earth would school
leaders reduce instructional time for history, a text-
dependent discipline, if they wanted to improve
student literacy? Finally, given the fact that this
marginalization is most pronounced in schools of color
and poverty, what will be the impact on a democratic
system dependent upon informed citizenry?
We began to see this marginalization really take hold
in California schools halfway through the last decade.
This was a result of the increasingly harsh
accountability measures based upon student
performance on standardized tests in English and
mathematics. By 2008 when we hosted The History
Summit, a series of public conversations on the topic,
hundreds of schools across the state had instituted
daily calendars that reduced or eliminated history
instruction all together for some or all of their students
- primarily those in the elementary and middle school
grades in economically-challenged communities.
Teachers reported that their administrators forbade the
instruction of American and world history (as well as
other non-tested and therefore of questionable value
disciplines, like the arts and foreign language). Horror
stories began to emerge from the ranks of our
elementary teacher leaders, who were now required to
Were Number 3!
Why would American schools suddenly
stop teaching students how to think
critically, argue persuasively, and
analyze competing points of view?
divide their day into two and one-half hours of
English language arts (mainly scripted lessons
centered on simple narrative or fiction, interspersed
with out-of-context vocabulary drills), two hours of
mathematics, and an hour of physical education. The
monotony of this approach drove the most
determined teachers to subvert the process in the
most creative of methods: carving out weekly history
sessions in their calendars by hanging a testing do
not disturb sign on their classroom doors.
That really was the low point, in my mind, of a
system gone horribly wrong. Im not trying to place
the blame for the marginalization on any particular
legislation, policy, or educational leader. I still agree
with the broad goals of the standards and assessment
school reform movement providing equal access to
students at every school and holding us all (teachers,
administrators, parents, and community members)
responsible for their learning. But in the zealous
pursuit of that goal (and in a bid to avoid increasingly
unpleasant accountability measures), school leaders
made what is clear now to be terrible decisions. By
focusing on the relatively narrow short-term goal of
increased test scores in English language arts and
mathematics, these leaders sacrificed some extremely
important long-term benefits, namely, the ability of
their students to think critically, evaluate an
argument, understand the history of our country, and
participate as a citizen of our global community.
Ive been thinking about this a lot lately as we
prepared this special issue of The Source, focused on
the new Common Core Standards that 46 states have
already adopted, including California. As many
teachers have already noted, the Common Cores
emphasis on expository text, its mention of specific
historical documents, and the specific inclusion of a
section dedicated to developing literacy in history or
social studies, increases the importance of history in
the public school curriculum. Clearly, this document
still privileges the teaching of mathematics and
English, but I cant help but wonder if our disciplines
new tagline should become, Were number 3! given
the attention given to history. Obviously, Im not so
nave to believe that the publication of this one
document, even with its official stamps of approval
from a variety of state and federal leaders, can
completely reverse the practice of marginalizing
history. But Im optimistic. It seems as if people are
finally listening and understanding that the answer to
low test scores in English is not to abandon a literate
discipline like history. National leaders, including
President Obama, are decrying the narrow
curri cul um. And former Secretary of State
Condoleeza Rice even drew a correlation between
declining educational performance and our national
security. Rice and former NY schools chief Joel Klein
co-chaired a report organized by the Council on
Foreign Relations in which they recommended that
our schools need greater curricular diversity.
The California History-Social Science Project supports
the lofty goals outlined in the Common Core
standards. We fully understand that there will be
many barriers to its implementation in American
schools, especially here in California given our
ongoing budget crisis. We cant help but be hopeful,
however, that by bringing attention to the very skills
that were lost in our recent national obsession with
standardized tests of limited value, we can make
things just a little better for all of our kids.
T H E S O U R C E
California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue 4
It seems as if people are finally listening
and understanding that the answer to
low test scores in English is not to
abandon a literate discipline like history.
A former high school history and government teacher, Nancy
McTygue is the Executive Director of The California History-
Social Science Project. Write to her at [email protected].
T H E S O U R C E
5 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
Since the mid-1990s, young snowboarders have often worn tee-shirts bearing the lifestyle clothing brand name
No Fear. The slogan expressed the enthusiasm (and perhaps recklessness) with which they tackled the
physically challenging aspects of their sport. Contemplating teaching the new Common Core State Standards
in history and social science classes is a little like standing atop a thin piece of fiberglass and gazing down a
steep snow-covered slope. The Common Core Reading and Writing Standards for Literacy in History-Social
Studies are challenging, even more so because they emphasize skills that havent been required or emphasized
since the beginning of standardized testing in the 1990s. Many, if not most, of our students struggle with
reading. Given the financial situation of our schools, we know that there will be little money for books,
materials, and professional development. This is a steep, steep slope indeed.
But I say nay, I shout NO FEAR!
At the risk of being overly dramatic, let me express my enthusiasm for implementing new Common Core State
Standards in history and social science classes. I think the Common Core Reading and Writing Standards for
Literacy in History-Social Studies might give us history teachers not only what we need but what we want as
well. Let me tell you why.
Few of us truly believe that
history is about memorization
of facts to be regurgitated on
a multiple-choice exam. We
know that history textbooks
arent very interesting, and
lecture isnt a very effective
method of instruction.
Image courtesy of LetMeColor.com coloring pages.
The Common Core for History - No Fear!
T H E S O U R C E
California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue 6
The Common Core standards for our subject emphasize thinking skills, primary sources, evidence, analysis,
point of view or perspective, and argument. These are not merely, or even primarily, English / Language Arts
skills. They are closely related to historical inquiry, a process of helping students to act as historians. Under
pressure to cover the content standards and raise student test scores, history teachers have had little time to
devote to historical inquiry. Now when we take the time to have students analyze a primary source, we can
say that we are teaching the Common Core Reading Standards for Literacy in History-Social Studies RH1,
RH2, RH4, RH8, and RH9. We can proudly write the standards on the board for our principals and the whole
world to see. We can teach history in a more exciting, engaging, and thoughtful way.
Eventually the standardized tests that dominate our planning and efforts will be revised to include the
Common Core standards, which will not only test memorization of historical content but also mastery of
historical thinking skills. We will no longer be measured solely by how much information we can get our
students to memorize. Even though it is quite tricky to measure historical thinking skills on standardized
tests, a number of groups, including the History Project, are working on writing these new assessments.
Few of us truly believe that history is about memorization of facts to be
regurgitated on a multiple-choice exam. We know that history textbooks arent
very interesting, and lecture isnt a very effective method of instruction.
However, stepping away from the tried-and-true plateau of telling students facts
to venture down the steep slope of the Common Core standards and historical
inquiry is daunting. Thats why I say, No Fear!
This article first appeared as a post in the Blueprint for History Blog on March 1, 2012.
CHSSPs Program Coordinator, Shennan Hutton, also serves as an instructor for world and
Medieval history courses at several northern California colleges and universities. Prior to earning
her Ph.D. in Medieval History from UC Davis, she taught high school world history for 15 years
in Vallejo, CA.
Visit her blog at http://blueprintforhistory.wordpress.com/
History Blueprint Pilot Results - Spring 2012
In the 2011-2012 school year, a team of historians and teacher leaders designed the first History Blueprint unit
on the American Civil War. Timed to coincide with the sesquicentennial of the war, the unit combined
California History-Social Science Content Standards (part of 8.9 and all of 8.10), and the Common Core
Reading and Writing Standards for Literacy in History/Social Studies. The goal of the History Blueprint
initiative is to create units which have everything a teacher needs primary sources, lesson plans, multimedia
sources, assessments, support for literacy, and development of historical thinking skills. An integral part of the
unit creation process is review and revision. The Civil War unit went through three drafts, each read and
critically reviewed by teachers, historians, and CHSSP site directors, and revised based on that feedback. The
final and most important review was the classroom pilot held in spring 2012.
In spring 2012, more than 20 eighth-grade teachers field-tested
the History Blueprint Civil War unit in their classrooms. One
pilot teacher, Jennifer Mustin of Oak Valley School in Tulare,
quizzed former students who appeared at Back-to-School Night
with younger siblings on Civil War content, just to see what they
remembered. When she asked them why the South seceded from
the Union, she was amazed to find that the students could
I felt that the kids really learned
how to think like historians. Even the
lowest readers could make
connections.
-Pilot Teacher
T H E S O U R C E
actually tell her why. She had noticed during the pilot that their writing improved from the beginning to the
end of the unit, but she did not expect them to retain content knowledge. She also reported that her students
CST scores on the Civil War component improved from 64 to 68 points.
Not all teachers felt as comfortable with their implementation of the unit. A universal criticism of the unit was
that it was too long. Virtually every teacher who piloted the unit modified the lessons and redesigned aspects
of the unit. Doing justice to historical issues while teaching students to read closely, analyze, think and write
takes time. All the units we produce are likely to be too long. However, teachers can pick and choose and
modify, which is something that they will do anyway. This is the way it should be. We can rely on teachers
judgment of what their students need and what fits in with their classroom practice.
The second part of assessing the unit was an analysis of student work, which we conducted in October 2012.
We determined that although the Evaluation of the Secession Argument assignment virtually forced students
to cite specific evidence and use the language of logic, many students were still confused in their application
of that logic to deal with evidence that pointed in contradictory directions. As a result of this discussion, we
will revise the sentence frame to guide the students more effectively.
Meanwhile, the Civil War unit is the prototype which are we following to create two new units, the Cold War
(for 10
th
and 11
th
-grade) and Sites of Encounter in the Medieval World (for 7
th
-grade). We anticipate that the
Cold War unit will be ready for piloting in April 2013, and the Medieval World may be ready by fall 2013. If
you teach any of those grades, please think about the possibility of piloting one of the new History Blueprint
units in the coming year.
Visit the History Blueprint and CHSSP websites to learn more:
http://historyblueprint.org/
http://chssp.ucdavis.edu/programs/programs/historyblueprint

7 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
The History Project at UC Davis (HP) has heard a
variety of teacher reactions to the implementation of
the Common Core State Standards (CCSS). Many
teachers concurred with Susan Giunta and expressed
enthusiasm for the guidelines CCSS provides that
support historical reading, thinking, and writing
skills. Some feel they have found support from HP
programs to begin implementing the standards. Heidi
Page, an 8
th
-grade teacher in Benicia Unified School
District noted, I feel my work with the HP-led
Teaching American History grant has prepared me
very well for integrating the common core. In the
lessons I have designed for the project, I already
incorporate a great deal of critical thinking skills that
are a focal point of the CCSS.
At the same time, teachers also expressed concerns.
How will schools and districts implement the
standards? What will the state assessments expect?
Will history-social science teachers and experts have
suf f i ci ent i mpact on deci si ons rel at ed t o
implementing the CCSS in their subject area
classrooms? Amid feelings of cautious optimism,
teachers confirmed what we suspectedlocal
districts are focusing almost exclusively on the ELA
and Math standards and providing little, if any,
discipline-specific support for the CCSS in History/
Social Studies, Science and Technical Subjects. Like
CHSSP sites across the state and other like-minded
professional development organizations across the
nation, the History Project at UC Davis offers support
to teachers, schools and districts as they transition to
the Common Core State Standards (CCSS).
While the CCSS may be new, the skills that they
promote align well with the CHSSPs established
vision of high quality history instruction that includes
specific attention to developing student literacy. Our
experience with teachers illustrates that literacy skills
are best taught while actively reading, analyzing, and
interacting with engaging and content-rich text. The
CCSS seem to endorse this position, bringing hope
that history and social science instructiononce
marginalized as an unintended consequence of
NCLBs focus on English and mathematicswill
reclaim an important place in the classroom.
In the spring of 2012 The History Project at UC Davis
assembled a study group of teacher leaders from
grades three through twelve to help us consider how
best to support teachers with implementation. We
hoped to nurture the grassroots efforts of teachers
and to provide a model of what productive
interdepartmental and cross-grade partnerships could
look like. Together we engaged in a close analysis of
the skills described in the CCSS. Next, we shared how
to align existing discipline-specific, academic literacy-
focused lessons with the CCSS. Finally, we analyzed
the draft assessments recently made available on-line
by the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium, the
group charged with developing assessments aligned
with Common Core for Californias schools.
The HP study group helped us to assess teacher,
school, and district needs and to evaluate how our
established literacy work aligns with the Common
Core. Based on our findings, we developed a train
Together, Toward the Common Core in History-Social Science
by Letty Kraus, The History Project at UC Davis
T H E S O U R C E
I feel I am teaching to a deeper, more meaningful level. We are writing more in the
classroom and our work is at a higher thinking level. I still have to teach the California
[History Content] Standards, of coursebut when I am teaching with the Common Core
Standards in mind, I don't feel like I am "teaching to the test." In fact, I enjoy teaching to
these standards!
-Susan Giunta, 4
th
-grade teacher, SCUSD
California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue 8
the trainers style workshop for summer 2012, where
participants developed their understanding of the
Standards while discussing the shifts needed to
integrate them into their instruction. HP provided
teaching tools, including history-specific question
banks (see Sample Questions on the next page) to
direct close reading exercises; ways to help students
think about the significance of evidence; sourcing
activities to call students attention to the craft and
structure of an argument; and methods and
terminology to help students construct written
arguments. The HP workshop helped participants
design a plan for their site customized with local
benchmarks and other site initiatives in mind. By
partnering with teachers to strengthen existing
strategies and to develop new ones, we can continue
to identify and capitalize on emerging best practices.
Of course, any new mandate or initiative causes
anxiety because it initially feels foreign. From our
pe r s pe c t i ve , howe ve r, t he CCSS s i mpl y
institutionalized the academic literacy skills already
taught in the history-social science classrooms of the
K-12 teachers with whom we work. These teachers
practitioners of discipline-specific literacyare vital
and must be equal partners in formulating, testing,
and disseminating an approach that can be
customized to school, department, and individual
classroom needs in order to raise student achievement
over the decades to come.
T H E S O U R C E
9 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
Solano teachers working with The History Project at UC Davis.
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Choose 2-3 unfamlllar words and Lry Lo deLermlne Lhelr meanlng from Lhelr use ln Lhe LexL
!
Pow does Lhe creaLor's use of Lhe word______________ emphaslze Lhe polnL of Lhe LexL?
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olnL of vlew:
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o Pow mlghL LhaL creaLor be blased?
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!
urpose:
o WhaL ls Lhe Lone (e.g. sarcasuc, gloomy, lnsplrlng) of Lhe source? WhaL loaded words or sLrong
descrlpuve words are belng used? rovlde examples and explaln how Lhese words emphaslze Lhe
creaLor's purpose.
o Who ls Lhe lnLended audlence? Pow mlghL Lhe audlence aecL whaL Lhe creaLor chose Lo lnclude or
omlL?
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purpose of Lhe creaLor?
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relevanL and sumclenL.
o ls Lhe argumenL valld? Why or why noL?
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Lhe argumenL much sLronger?
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!
Was Lhls source creaLed aL Lhe ume of Lhe evenL, as a remembrance, or as analysls?
Copyright 2012 UC Regents
T H E S O U R C E
California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue 10
T H E S O U R C E
11 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
The emergence of the Common Core Standards
confronts teachers with a new text that they will soon
begin poring over with the same care as the
Standards. With that realization in mind, it seems
appropriate to step back from this crucial primary
source document and engage in the kind of heuristic
task proposed by Sam Wineburg, author of Historical
Thinking and Other Unnatural Acts and advocate for
students reading of primary sources. The essential
question for this lesson, or article, is this: How do
sourcing, contextualization, and corroboration help us to
better understand the Common Core Standards? A
deeper understanding of this broader context might
help us appreciate how remarkable this document is
as a national standard in education, and to be
thoughtful about how to interpret it.
Well begin our investigation of the Common Core
Standards by sourcing the document: who is the
author? The actual wordsmiths are not as interesting
as the official sponsor, the National Governors
Association. Most Americans had probably never
heard of the NGA before the arrival of Common Core.
Even those who routinely teach about the history and
structure of American government might be
surprised to learn that this organization of all
American governors has existed for over a century,
meeting annually to address common problems. The
leadership of a Progressive-era organization in this
endeavor reminds us that Common Core represents
but the most recent in a long line of educational
reforms. Furthermore, the fact that an unexpected
organization has become the lead voice in educational
reform indicates the leadership vacuum with regard
to our countrys woeful academic performance
compared with industrial counterparts worldwide.
As Linda Darling-Hammond warns in The Flat World,
Educational Inequality, and Americas Future, the
United States is standing still while more focused
nations move rapidly ahead.
1
Our country is
stymied by a federalist system where responsibility
for education is shared between the state and the
federal government, so perhaps it should not be a
surprise that a group of state executives would have
the responsibility and authority to write national
standards.
Next, we need to contextualize the Common Core by
placing the document into its broader historical
framework. While it fits within the larger flow of
educational reform, the Common Core initiative is
best understood in light of three trends in the last
generation. First, the 1983 report A Nation at Risk,
drafted by a federal commission sponsored by
Ronald Reagans Secretary of Education, raised the
alarm about declining educational achievement (as
measured by SAT scores). These declines came in the
wake of the 1970s, which Diane Ravitch describes as
an era with reformers, radicals, and revolutionaries
competing to outdo one another in educational
experi mentati on.
2
The report l aunched the
accountability movement in its call for rigorous
content-based standards in all subject areas. The effort
to create voluntary National Standards in the core
subject areas resulted from this call. Controversy
about a purported left-wing agenda by the authors of
the American History standards led to the demise of
this project, as described in Gary Nash, et al History
on Trial: Culture Wars and the Teaching of the Past. That
this effort foundered on controversies about history
seems quaint now, given the current marginalization
of this subject. Second, the failure of a national
standards movement ushered in the era of state
standards, which has fundamentally shaped day-to-
day classroom dynamics for millions of students and
their teachers. Third, of course, the No Child Left
Behind juggernaut arrived in 2002. With this
reauthorization of the 1965 Elementary and
Secondary Education Act, the national government
changed the nature of public schooling across the
nation by making standardized test scores the
primary measure of school quality
3
while leaving to
the states the content of instruction measured by test
scores.
Finally, the Common Cores definition of educational
rigor must be corroborated through comparison with
other documents. To begin with, the skills described
in the Common Core English-Language Arts
Standards match well with the conclusions of the
report by The Carnegie Council for Advancing
Adolescent Literacys A Time to Act, chaired by
Catherine Snow, Professor of Education in the
Reading the Common Core State Standards
by Dave Neumann, Site Director, The History Project at CSU Long Beach
T H E S O U R C E
California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue 12
Har var d s Gr aduat e Sc hool of
Education: adolescent learners in our
schools must decipher more complex
passages, synthesize information at a
hi gher l evel , and l earn to form
independent conclusions based on
evidence. They must also develop
special skills and strategies for reading
text in each of the differing content
areas, including history.
4
In addition,
the specific criteria delineated in
Reading Standards for Literacy in
History/Social Studies 612 jibe with
calls for historical thinking issued by
education scholars Wineburg, Peter
Seixas, Bob Bain, Peter Lee, and others.
The Common Core l i sts speci fi c
exemplars of historical texts. While some
fit uneasily with current grade-level
history standardssuch as Patrick
Henrys Speech to the Second Virginia
Convention or Martin Luther King, Jrs
Letter from Birmingham Jail for
Grades 9-10teachers can easily
concentrate on the texts that do fit their
standards.
More importantly, rather than focusing
narrowly on the particular exemplars,
teachers should attend more broadly to
the skills necessary to comprehend a
variety of texts. When we consider the
three instructional shifts in English-
Language Arts that Common Core
introduces, we recognize some familiar
concepts: a focus on content-rich
nonfiction and informational text, use of
complex text and academic vocabulary,
and reading and writing grounded in
evidence. Literacy standards in History/
Social Science explicitly address citing
evidence from primary and secondary
sources, considering differences in point
of view, and corroborating claims. These
are all key elements of inquiry-based
instruction in historyelements that
CHSSP workshops have emphasized for
years. Teachers who make these
elements routine in their instruction will
find their students succeeding on
Common Core, whether or not they encounter familiar texts on the
assessment.
We can enthusiastically embrace the Common Core Standards
documents call for a national standard of rigorous literacy skills in
history-social science. We should pay at least as much attention to
the skills themselves as we do to the exemplars. There has been
much talk about how this document is poised to become a
dramatic new reality for teachers and students. While this is true in
many ways, teachers who already embrace inquiry-based
instruction using a rich variety of texts in their classrooms may
find that the future is not so different after all.
Patrick Henry before the Virginia House of Burgesses, May 30, 1765. Image from
the Library of Congress: http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2006691555/
Notes
1
The Flat World and Education: How Americas Commitment to Equity Will Determine
Our Future (New York: Teachers College Press, 2010), 9.
2
The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice are
Undermining Education (New York: Basic Books, 2010), 23.
3
Ibid., 15.
4
Carnegie Council on Advancing Adolescent Literacy, Time to Act: An Agenda for
Advancing Adolescent Literacy for College and Career Success (New York: Carnegie
Corporation of New York, 2010), x.
T H E S O U R C E
13 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
Teaching Vocabulary
In reviewing the Common Core Reading
Standard 4 for Literacy in History/Social
Studies in grades 6-12, I have tried a variety
of activities to review or reinforce concepts
before a unit assessment and find that the
lesson below engages students in ways others
do not. I walk the rows and I see 32-36
students working diligently, with pencils
gr i ppe d a nd a c a de mi c voc a bul a r y
incorporated into their work. There is an
element of competition in the activity that
motivates each student to actively participate.
Common Core Standards:
L.7.6. Acquire and use accurately grade-
appropriate general academic and domain-
speci f i c words and phrases; gat her
vocabulary knowledge when considering a
word or phrase important to comprehension
or expression (also standard in grade 6 and 8).
Lesson Overview:
This is a one-class period review lesson to be
done before the unit assessment. Create a list
of fifteen key terms from the unit. These
terms should include general academic and
unit-specific words or phrases. I compose a
general overview of the unit (from beginning
of empire to fall of empire, for example) and
then from those sentences, choose the fifteen I
want to include in the activity.
1. The students should be in groups.
2. Announce that we are retelling the story of the
Roman Empire for example.
3. Then, one word is revealed. (I use a PowerPoint
slide.) Students are instructed to write, from
recall, an introductory sentence to the story of
the Roman Empire correctly using that word. I
give them one minute to write (more time could
be given or notes could be used to differentiate
the lesson). The student then passes his/her
paper to the next student.
4. Then, the second word is revealed. The students
read the previous sentence and write a second
sentence with the second word.
5. The students then pass the papers and a third
word is revealed and so on.
6. After approximately five sentences, a break is
called. Students are instructed to read everything
on their paper and ask themselves if all words
are used correctly. They are encouraged to edit
any incorrect sentences. After these corrections
the next word is revealed and the activity
proceeds.
7. When the last word is revealed students write
the concluding sentence to the story. As a group
they again review the story for accuracy. (One
bonus feature is that students have now re-read
these vocabulary words three or four times.)
Procedures
Roman Forum looking towards Coliseum. Image from the Library of Congress: http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2007663210/
T H E S O U R C E
California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue 14
This sample student work uses a vocabulary list based on history standards covered in unit 7.1:
Students analyze the causes and effects of the vast expansion and ultimate disintegration of the
Roman Empire. Vocabulary words are underlined in each sentence.
Lisa Meyers teaches 7th grade World History in Rancho Santa Margarita. Meyers is a
fellow of the UC Irvine Writing Project and enjoys developing new reading and writing
strategies for the history curriculum.
T H E S O U R C E
15 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
As stated throughout this issue, history is an
especially appropriate discipline in which to teach
the reading, writing and critical thinking skills called
for in the Common Core State Standards. Our
discipline requires students to read primary and
secondary sources, synthesize language, gather and
organize evidence to support a claim, and then
incorporate that analysis into a written explanation,
argument, or justification. UC Berkeley History-
Social Science Project teachers have found that the
academic literacy strategies presented during the
Implementing the Common Core Standards Through
History Instruction summer institute give them a
toolbox for teaching the Common Core State
Standards.
A large part of acquiring the skills necessary to
understand history is learning to recognize how text
passages are organized. The Common Core State
Standards state that 6
th
to 8
th
grade history students
should Describe how a text presents information
(e.g. sequentially, comparatively, causally). Passage
organization is a close reading strategy that aids
students in understanding relationships between
evidence. Some of the organizational patterns found
in historical writing are: chronology, cause and effect,
compare/contrast, debate, point of view, description,
and thesis supported by evidence. These patterns
have distinct linguistic features, such as verbs and
conjunctions, which organize evidence.
1
This
approach teaches students how to use linguistic
features to recognize these organizational patterns
and understand how they impart historical meaning.
One of the predominant patterns in historical writing
is cause and effect. Without recognizing this pattern,
students may see history as just a sequence of events,
rather than understanding the relationships among a
network of events, people, ideas, and processes. It is
i n t hose rel at i onshi ps t hat t rue hi st ori cal
interpretation lies, teaching all students how to think
historically.
To expose causal relationships within text, teachers
can introduce frequently used cause and effect
sentence patterns, such as When__, then __. Or If
__, then __. as well as verbs like led, enabled,
caused, and made. Students should also be
taught to recognize signal words used to explain
cause and effect, such as, thus, so that, since,
therefore, then, consequently, as a result,
due to, and because of. After teachers highlight
the types of words and phrases that denote causality,
students can work in groups to discuss, record, and
question the text for an explicit understanding of a
texts cause and effect relationship. The lesson
strategy below illustrates how history teachers can
seamlessly include Common Core State Standards
into their classroom instruction by explicitly
instructing students in the recognition and use of
cause and effect passage organization.
Consider the following excerpt from United States
History: Independence to 1914, which includes a
number of causal links that may not be readily
apparent to students:
The Cotton Boom: Whitneys invention of the
cotton gin made cotton so profitable that southern
farmers abandoned other crops in favor of growing
cotton. The removal of Native Americans opened
up more land for cotton farmers in the Southeast.
Meanwhile, the development of new types of cotton
plants helped spread cotton production throughout
the South as far west as Texas.
2

To highlight those relationships, it is helpful to break
apart, or deconstruct, the individual sentences by
organizing them into cause and effect columns
that provide a graphic flow chart detailing the
relationships between actions and events. This
procedure, when combined with questions of
historical significance, can both increase reading
comprehension and clarify causality.
!ommon Core
"eading S#a$gie%
Scenes from a Cotton Plantation. Image from the Library of Congress: http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/
96513748/
T H E S O U R C E
California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue 16
T H E S O U R C E
The teacher begins by asking What caused the cotton boom in the South? This question provides a focus for
the lesson. The teacher models the first cause and effect relationship on the chart for students. Working in
pairs, students then practice finding the second effect. After an initial discussion, student pairs are directed to
find and record the remaining two effects on the chart. As they fill in these columns, students are encouraged
to also write down relevant questions or conclusions in the third column. This chart inserts the Federal
Government as the agent that opens up more land in the Southeast.
Student Worksheet
What caused the cotton boom in the South?
Cause
Because
Effect
As a result..
Questions/ Conclusions
Whitneys invention of the cotton gin made cotton so profitable
[the cotton gin] made cotton so
profitable
southern farmers abandoned other
crops in favor of growing cotton
[the Federal Government] opened up
more land for cotton farmers in the
Southeast

development of new types of cotton
plants
Teacher Key
What caused the cotton boom in the South?
Cause
Because
Effect
As a result..
Questions/ Conclusions
(sample questions)
Whitneys invention of the cotton gin made cotton so profitable
Why wasnt cotton profitable before?
[the cotton gin] made cotton so
profitable
southern farmers abandoned other
crops in favor of growing cotton
What other crops were grown?
[the Federal Government] opened up
more land for cotton farmers in the
Southeast
The removal of Native Americans What happened to the Native
Americans? How could the
government remove them?
development of new types of cotton
plants
helped spread cotton production
throughout the South as far West as
Texas
Why was cotton so important?
(New types of cotton plants allowed
planters to grow in different/drier
climates than the original southern
cotton states editors note).
Image: Eli Whitneys Cotton Gin, from the Library of Congress: http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/npc2008000903/
17 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
T H E S O U R C E
After completing the chart, the class turns again to the initial question: What caused the cotton boom in the
South? Using their completed chart and the paragraph frame provided below, students can then write a short,
one-paragraph response to the question.
Student Paragraph Frame
What caused the cotton boom in the South?
Topic sentence: ____________________________________________________________________________________
Due to the invention of the cotton gin ________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________
In response, ______________________________________________________________________________________
Additionally, _____________________________________________________________________________________
As a result, _______________________________________________________________________________________
Teacher Key
The following is an example paragraph developed as a possible student answer.
What caused the cotton boom in the South?
The cotton gin caused the cotton boom in the south.
Due to the invention of the cotton gin, cotton became much more profitable.
In response, Southern farmers abandoned growing other crops and grew more cotton.
Additionally, the United States Government removed Native Americans so there would be more land to grow
cotton. New kinds of cotton plants were also developed.
As a result, people grew cotton all throughout the south and as far west as Texas.
Possible Inference Question: How did the invention of the cotton gin impact the spread of slavery?
Notes
1
Mary J. Schleppegrell, The Language of Schooling (New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2004).
2
United States History: Independence to 1914 (Austin, Texas: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 2006), 378.
This lesson was written by Donna Leary, former Site Director of the UC Berkeley
History-Social Science Project.
California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue 18
T H E S O U R C E
The more we at UCLA have looked at the Common
Core State Standards (CCSS)at least in their present
formthe less concerned we are about how history
teachers will be able to address this new mandate.
Because we have had the good fortune to work with
teachers long-term in our Teaching American History
grants and summer institutes, we have seen the
development of many lessons addressing critical
aspects of the CCSS, which can be boiled the down to
a few key terms:

Analysis

Evidence

Varied sources (primary and secondary,


visual, graphic, videos, maps, etc.)

Text structure

Perspective of author(s)

Fact/opinion and claims/reasoned judgment

Chronology and causation/explanation


In truth, teachers can feel confident that they are
heeding the demands of the CCSS if they just keep in
mind analysis, evidence, and perspective. (Im
deliberately avoiding switching those terms around
for fear that it would result in the cryRemember
APE! or PEA is the key!)
What does this mean in actual practice? In the Spring,
2012 Source, we wrote about our summer Cities
Institute where we integrated CCSS thinking in our
planning. We spent three wonderful days learning
about Rome, Constantinople, Chinese Imperial Cities,
and Tenochtitlan. Of course, their physical forms and
styles of political organization were interesting topics,
but more valuable were our investigations of the
reasons they were located where they were, which
required analysis of geographic sites and evidence
based on maps and images. We also looked at why
they declined, a question to which there were no easy
answers. Did Rome collapse because of over-
extension (a geographic perspective) or because of
barbarian attacks (a military perspective)? Clearly, no
one viewpoint can capture all the elements of such a
complex phenomenon, particularly one that occurred
over time and space, but these hows and whys of
history are both more interesting and more valuable
in developing students critical thinking skills.

Our longer Places and Time: L.A. History and
Geography and Library of Congress institutes
allowed participants to actually develop full lessons.
The richest of these focused on comparisons of places,
Dont Be Afraid of the Common Core
by Mary Miller, Co-Site Director, UCLA History-Geography Project
19 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
T H E S O U R C E
social structures, or perspectives. Participants asked
their students to analyze two or more cultures or
ideas using graphic organizers that called for
evidence from primary sources. Savvy teachers
know that many of the relevant documents are
challenging for students so they carefully excerpted
key passages or used images to make these materials
accessible for all. Sherry Scott and Terry Sanders, fifth
grade teachers at Dickison Elementary School in the
Compton Unified District, for example, created a
lesson using illustrations from the Library of
Congress collection. Students were first asked to
analyze the drawings contents, then reflect on the
reasons for their creation, and ponder what
additional questions they had about the content.
Following guided reading, they were then to sort
Revolutionary era events into categories (economic,
religious, or political) and decide which of those
elements was the most influential in determining
whether or not to separate from England. The lesson
concluded with a carefully structured essay
incorporating evidence from their studies. We are
looking forward to seeing how this lesson played out
in their classrooms when they and the other
enthusiastic participants return in February for a
follow-up session.

In summary, we believe that focusing on the thinking
behind the Common Core State Standards can only
help us develop more skilled and thoughtful
students. Not only is this an essential element of
modern citizenship, but in our increasingly diverse
world where the specific content of occupations is
often best learned on the job, employers will value
job-seekers who have been trained to analyze, use
evidence, and engage with multiple perspectives.
Facing page image: Constantinople. Mosque of St. Sophia and
Constantinople. Image from the Library of Congress:
http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/mpc2010000637/PP/
resource/
Above image: Los Angeles City Hall. Image from the Library
of Congress: http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/
ca1261.photos.322282p/
California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue 20
T H E S O U R C E
Abraham Lincolns public justification for war
evolved over his years in public office. In fact,
the entire meaning of freedom and equality -
ideals of the Declaration of Independence -
evolved during the war as well. As a senatorial
candidate in the 1850s, Lincoln argued for the
preservation of the Union and against the
expansion of slavery to the west. As the war
progressed, he placed a greater emphasis on
freedom and the abolition of slavery. While
Lincolns most famous act may have been
freeing the slaves and so bringing a new birth
of freedom, some historians argue that this was
not his original intention.
The California History-Social Science Project completed its first History Blueprint Unit in 2011. The Civil War
unit covers the 8th Grade Civil War standard, and centers on the question: Was the Civil War a war for
freedom? The unit is comprised of 8 lessons, each of which aligns with Common Core reading and writing
standards to develop student literacy. What follows is an excerpt from Lesson #5: Lincolns Speeches. Like all
Blueprint curriculum, this unit centers on a question of historical significance and includes analysis of relevant
primary sources in order to develop an evidence-based interpretation or argument. This unit asks students to
consider Lincolns motivations through a close reading of his public statements in order to answer the central
question of the lesson: Why Did Lincoln Fight?
Lesson #5 gives students the opportunity to make their own interpretations to answer the focus question
based on specific evidence from Lincolns speeches and comparisons with the Declaration of Independence.
This particular excerpt centers on Lincolns Gettysburg Address, delivered on November 19, 1863 at the
dedication of the Gettysburg cemetery, six months after the infamous battle that resulted in more than 50,000
Confederate and Union casualties. The lesson utilizes a sentence deconstruction activity, a literacy strategy
designed to help students understand Lincolns symbolism, abstraction, and 19
th
-century prose. Basic
directions are described on the next page; see CW5.4, unit page 227, for additional context and step-by-step
instructions for this lesson.
For more information and a free download of the entire unit, including all teacher resources, visit: http://
chssp.ucdavis.edu/programs/historyblueprint.
Abraham Lincoln, three-quarter length portrait. Image from the Library of Congress: http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/
2009630693/
Why Did
Lincoln Fight?
21 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
A History Blueprint Lesson
T H E S O U R C E
Procedures:
1. ulsLrlbuLe excerpL of !"# C#>6,0/'; @%%'#,, Lo sLudenLs, wlLh a brlef ouLllne of Lhe background of Lhe address,
emphaslzlng Lhe hlsLorlcal conLexL of Lhe speech.
2. 8ead or have sLudenLs read Lhe excerpL aloud, and Lhen sllenLly Lo Lhemselves. ulrecL sLudenLs Lo underllned
Lhe senLence(s) LhaL glves Llncoln's reason(s) for ghung Lhe war.
3. ulsLrlbuLe D#+4#+(# E#(*+,4'/()*+ charL. Worklng closely wlLh your sLudenLs, have Lhem ll ln Lhe rsL four
columns of Lhe charL uslng Lhe LexL of Lhe @%%'#,,, paylng close auenuon Lo Lhe parLs of speech and how Lhey
help creaLe meanlng for Lhe reader or audlence.
4. llnally, have sLudenLs work ln palrs or as a whole group Lo answer Lhe quesuons llsLed ln Lhe h column.
ulscuss Lo make sure sLudenLs boLh comprehend Lhe LexL and undersLand lLs slgnlcance.
3. uslng LexL from Lhe Address as evldence, reLurn Lo Lhe focus quesuon: Why uld Llncoln llghL?"
California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue 22
Bulletin Board from Sarah Schnacks Blueprint pilot classroom.
T H E S O U R C E
Student Handout #1:
Background: Six months after the Union victory in the Battle of Gettysburg, Lincoln gave this speech as
part of a dedication of the Gettysburg cemetery. 23,000 Union and 28,000 Confederacy soldiers died at the
battle of Gettysburg:
Speech:
Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation,
conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.
Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so
conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We
have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave
their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.
But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate -- we can not consecrate -- we can not hallow -- this
ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our
poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here,
but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to
the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather
for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us -- that from these honored dead
we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion --
that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain -- that this nation, under
God, shall have a new birth of freedom -- and that government of the people, by the people, for
the people, shall not perish from the earth.
Gettysburg Address Wordle
23 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
T H E S O U R C E
The Battle of Gettysburg. Image from the Library of Congress http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/90709061/.
Student Handout #2:
Sentence Deconstruction
-Time marker
-Connector words
-Prepositional
phrase
-Circumstances
Historical Actors
(who is doing this?)
Verbs / Verb
Phrases
Who, What, Where
Message
Questions or Conclusions
It is rather for us (our country) to the great task
remaining
before us
What was the unfinished task?
that from these
honored dead
we increased devotion How did Lincoln think the
people could honor those who
died?
to that cause for which they
(__________) here
the last full
measure of
devotion
How did Lincoln think the
people could honor those who
died?
-- that we
How did Lincoln think the
people could honor those who
died?
that these dead in vain
How did Lincoln think the
people could honor those who
died?
-- that this nation, under
God,
a new birth of
freedom
What does a new birth of
freedom mean?
Why did Lincoln think the
people of the Union should
continue fighting the war?
-- and that government of the
people, by the
people, for the
people,
from the earth.
What does a new birth of
freedom mean?
Why did Lincoln think the
people of the Union should
continue fighting the war?
California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue 24
T H E S O U R C E
In order for students to engage in the study of history, they must write.
Writing is the primary mode of knowledge production for the history
discipline. Historians analyze and synthesize source-based evidence and
answer relevant questions by developing interpretations, or arguments
about historical events. The history classroom is a primary site for
students to gain experience writing non-fiction, informational text. This is
exactly the type of writing that is required by the newly-adopted
Common Core State Standards. These standards are designed to be
robust and relevant to real careers. A consortium of researchers,
educators, politicians, and business professionals created these national
standards so that K-12 students would achieve the reading, writing,
speaking, and listening skills that are necessary for success in academia
and the business world for the 21st century. The standards require
students to write in the history classroom and mandate that all secondary
students engage in both informative and explanatory writing as well as
argumentative writing tasks.
Teachers and scholars with the California History Social-Science Project have developed a research-based and
standards-aligned curriculum, Teaching Writing: Planning and Implementing a Standards-Based Program, to
support educators as they incorporate the new writing standards. Most importantly, the curriculum helps
teachers develop an effective writing program for their history classrooms. The curriculum is organized into
two parts. The first section, Planning for Writing, provides teachers with the support they need to develop a
year-long writing program as well as planning tools for developing unit or lesson level writing prompts. In the
second section, Implementing History Writing, teachers will be introduced to practical examples of a range
of writing genres, including Cause and Effect and Compare and Contrast. Given the Common Core State
Standards emphasis on developing students ability to do research in multi-media formats, the curriculum
also includes instruction in research papers and websites. On a practical note, the genres included in the
curriculum align with the Advanced Placement History exam. Given that writing instruction will increase
academic literacy and opportunities for all students particularly English Learners Teaching Writing argues
that writing instruction should not only be reserved for advanced students, but must be included in all
history classrooms.
Teaching Writing: Planning and Implementing a Standards-Based Program lessons have been tested in a variety of
classroom settings. Qualitative analysis of research data from piloting classrooms demonstrates that the
professional development improved teachers academic literacy expertise and increased their efficacy at
improving student literacy. These teachers increased their explicit writing instruction and consequently noticed
increased achievement in their classrooms. One teacher reported, I have seen a tremendous growth of writing
in my class. Another teacher reflecting on his students growth commented, I can already see a positive
difference in my students writing this year as opposed to last year. Evaluation results of middle and high
school students support teacher observations. An external research report found that treatment group students
outperformed comparison group students in the areas of reading comprehension and written historical
analysis. Additionally, these gains were also consistent for English Learners who were a part of the treatment
group.
1
We look forward to working with teachers, schools, and districts to implement rigorous writing
programs to build upon the hard work of teachers and students in our state.
Teaching Writing:
Planning and Implementing a Standards-Based Program
Notes
1
Improving Teacher Quality grant in Santa Ana Unified and Orange Unified in partnership with UC Irvine History Project evaluated
by Continuous Improvement Associates in 2009.
25 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
T H E S O U R C E
Cause and Effect
Contact Nicole Gilbertson, Director of the The History Project at UC Irvine, to learn more
about Teaching Writing: Planning and Implementing a Standards-Based Program. More
information can also be found at: http://www.humanities.uci.edu/history/ucihp/
literacy_institute/index.php
A strategy to support identifying cause and effect in writing a paragraph.
California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue 26
T H E S O U R C E
he students in todays classrooms will face new challenges when they graduate; jobs have changed, as have
the skills they require of their entry-level workers. In an effort to secure our economic success in the next
generation, political and educational leaders created the Common Core State Standards (CCSS). At the heart of
the Common Core are the College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards, which reinforce the mission of the
CCSS to ready students for the new global economy. With all signs pointing to an economic future focused
on the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields, history must find a new way to contribute to
our students futures. For over two decades, the California History-Social Science Project has emphasized the
critical thinking skills that are crucial to success in the modern workforce research, analysis, and synthesis.
These are reflected in the new literacy goals that are shared across the curriculum.
The CCSS focus on three types of writing argument, informative/explanatory, and narrative. Students
should demonstrate their understanding through writing that conveys complexity of ideas, the synthesis of
research, and well-honed language techniques. For students in the 8
th
grade, these three types of writing
should be equally balanced; by the 12
th
grade, argumentative and explanatory assignments should account for
40% each of a students work, while narrative is relegated to 20% (a reflection of the needs of the modern
workforce). These categories present opportunities for history teachers to focus on literacy and give students
practice for CCSS assessments. The new computer-adaptive testing will involve performance task items,
which ask the students to synthesize and evaluate research in order to make an argument.
Many of the new standards capitalize on the current Historical and Social Sciences Analysis Skills outlined in
the California State Standards. A focus on research, interpretation, evaluation, and explanation of connections
is crucial to success on CCSS writing assignments. The new standards take these prioritized skills one step
further and organize them into specific categories of writing (see Types of Common Core Writing on next
page).

In short, the Common Core expands upon the skills that teachers already knew were most effective for our
students. Teachers should ensure that writing assignments are part of their regular classroom routine,
scaffolding students through the research, analysis, and synthesis skills that prepare them for rigorous college
courses, expanding career options, or whatever their future may hold.
Rewriting History
by Emily Markussen-Sorsher,
The History Project at UC Irvine
27 California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue
T
Argument emphasizes an ability to interpret complex events and make connections between
historical moments and larger trends in politics, economics, and social phenomena. Common
Core focuses on the use of evidence in these assignments, where students will need to gather,
evaluate, and use information to support a claim in argumentative style writing. For history
teachers, this will mean routinely scaffolding activities such as Document Based Questions,
wherein students answer text-dependent questions from given excerpts of primary sources.
Students are required to use a variety of primary and secondary sources including graphs,
tables, literature, and narratives, with special attention to point of view. Appendix B of the
CCSS includes suggested sources for students.
Informative or Explanatory captures the standards in Chronological and Spatial Thinking, with
exercises in sequencing, cause and effect, and comparison. Current CHSSP practices on
summary writing will be beneficial to teachers adopting the Common Core. As students
matriculate, summaries are to include a carefully balanced body of research, with a final
product that presents a synthesis of information that has been carefully selected and organized
to provide insightful analysis of difficult concepts. This writing exercise prepares students to
produce a succinct summary from a wide-ranging body of research, a skill necessary in college
and career readiness.
Narrative encourages the use of narrative devices (rhetoric, figurative and sensory
language) to weave historical narratives into an argumentative or explanatory essay. Students
use the same Research, Evidence, and Point of View California standards to examine bias in
narratives and the value of narratives as evidence. With this new twist, perspective becomes a
tool students use to drive home their point in a speech, dissertation, or job application.
T H E S O U R C E
California History-Social Science Project, Common Core Issue 28
Types of Common Core Writing
The Civil War
A Common Core Program
Curriculum, Assessments, Student Literacy
& Teacher Professional Development
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Common Core Resources
The California Board of Education adopted the Common Core State Standards on August 2, 2010.
See below for links to relevant information regarding these standards.
California Department of Education, Common Core State Standards Resources:
http://www.cde.ca.gov/ci/cc/
Common Core State Standards Initiative Homepage:
http://www.corestandards.org/
Frequently asked questions about the Common Core State Standards:
http://www.cde.ca.gov/ci/cc/ccssfaqs2010.asp
ASCD, an endorsing partner, hosts a Common Core Resource Page:
http://www.ascd.org/common-core-state-standards/common-core.aspx
Videos on implementing the Common Core Standards:
https://www.teachingchannel.org/videos?page=1&categories=topics_common-core
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheHuntInstitute
Common Core Toolkit from Partnership for 21st Century Skills:
http://www.p21.org/tools-and-resources/publications/p21-common-core-toolkit
Share My Lesson information center for the CCSS:
http://www.sharemylesson.com/article.aspx?storyCode=50000148
Curricula and lesson plans, and Common Core forum.

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