Teaching Common Core Standards: The One Standard That Rules Them All

I love how administrators, superintendents, politicians, lawyers, some guy named Gus who has a kid that goes to your school, Billy the Bartender, Cable News pundits, and my aunt’s Doberman like to tell us what we need to teach.

I figured, what the heck, I’ll throw my hat in the you should teach this ring.

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I mean, I have been an ELA teacher for over 2 decades. I do have degrees in education and literature. I even have my own kids who I’ve helped progress through school. Maybe I know a thing or two.

I’ll let you decide.

If you’ve looked at my lesson plan you’ve probably guessed it already.

It’s the first reading standard listed on just about every state’s list of reading standards and a key component of just about every writing exercise you’ll do.

It’s the standard that makes teaching all literary elements all expository writing, all non-fiction writing, all reading, and all

speaking and listening standards either much easier to teach or no longer necessary.

It’s what I talk about in this video.

 

Last Updated on April 26, 2021 by Trenton Lorcher

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