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StandardsWork

2021

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As part of the Knowledge Matters School Tour, StandardsWork / Knowledge Matters Campaign has visited over 20 school districts across the country celebrating the implementation of knowledge-building English language arts curriculum that promotes excellence, provides equitable instruction, and inspires a passion for learning.

2020-21

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The Council of Chief State School Officers supported StandardsWork in bringing the Knowledge Matters School Tour to Delaware and Massachusetts and, in doing so, to “find the good and praise” the efforts of educators in those states that have successfully implemented new high-quality instructional materials. Both campaigns involved capturing and sharing teachers’ enthusiasm for their professional learning journey.

2019-21

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With support from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, StandardsWork provides key assistance to Curriculum Matters, a professional learning network of school district leaders from across the country who lead the adoption and implementation of high-quality instructional materials (HQIM).

2018-21

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With support from the Tennessee Department of Education and other funders, StandardsWork advanced the goals of the state’s Reading 360 literacy initiatives and statewide adoption of high-quality English language arts curricula by elevating educator voices, in social media and blogs, about transformative experiences with such programs.

2018 Training Adult Educators

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StandardsWork receives a second multi-year contract from the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Career, Technical, and Adult Education to help states build sustainable standards-based adult education models. The current contract helps to build the capacity of state and local adult education program providers to meet the needs of all students, particularly their growing population of English learners.

2018 ModEL Detroit

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The Skillman Foundation supports SW in developing for the Detroit Public Schools Community District a set of K-8 teacher resources, which they will provide to the wider community open source, to aid in the implementation of the newly adopted EL Language Arts curriculum.

2017 Cultivating Excellence in English Learner Instruction (CEELI)

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The William T. Grant Foundation awards SW a grant to facilitate a community of practice in which educators working with English learners in five public school districts across the country apply strategies learned from some of the most distinguished researchers in English learner literacy.

2016 Knowledge Matters Campaign

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StandardsWork adopts the Knowledge Matters Campaign which exists to restore wonder and excitement to the classroom by putting history, science, geography, art, music, and more back into the education we give all students, especially those least likely to gain such knowledge outside of school.

2013-16 The Mars Game

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For a two-year research project of the Advanced Distributed Learning (ADL) Initiative of the U.S. Department of Defense, StandardsWork partners with Lockheed Martin to develop The Mars Game (www.themarsgame.com), an immersive 3D game that teaches math and programming to high school students, especially those who struggle. Five studies, including two RCTs, show boys and girls can be motivated to learn complex concepts while playing well-designed games.

2013-17 Training Program

U.S. Department of Education, Office of Career and Technical Education awards StandardsWork a four-year contract to build and deliver a training program to help state and local offices of adult education adapt their adult learning programs to college and career ready standards.

2008 Texas Standards

StandardsWork completes K-12 English language arts and reading standards for the Texas Education Agency.

2007 Picturing America

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National Endowment for the Humanities commissions SW to provide curriculum advice/counsel, including the development of cross-curricular learning connections for iconic images, as part of the widely-heralded Picturing America project.

2007 Tools and Training

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Charter networks, including Friendship Public Charter Schools, Boys Latin of Philadelphia, and Community Academy Public Charter Schools engage StandardsWork to develop standards-based curriculum tools and train teachers in their use.

2005 DCPS Overhaul

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District of Columbia Public Schools engages StandardsWork to lead an overhaul of its academic standards in English language arts, math, science, and social studies, an effort that results in DC's standards – once considered some of the worst in the nation – being rated among the very best. StandardsWork goes on to develop curriculum framework documents, parent guides to the standards, and many other support tools over a three-year period of extensive work with DCPS.

2004 National Assessment Governing Board

The National Assessment Governing Board (NAGB) engages StandardsWork to conduct field work to determine how participation in the 12th grade assessment might be increased. Ray Fields, Assistant Director of Policy & Research at NAGB said, "Governing Board members continue to remark on the exceptional quality, clarity, and usefulness of the final report product…The relationship was collegial, the communications clear and open, the staff expert and cordial, and the work products excellent."

2004 American Board for Certification of Teacher Excellence

American Board for Certification of Teacher Excellence (ABCTE) launches multi-year contract with StandardsWork to facilitate the development of standards – in English language arts, mathematics, science, history, geography, and professional teaching knowledge - upon which "passport" exams will be developed to alternatively certify teacher candidates.

2003 Indiana Commission on Higher Education

Indiana Commission on Higher Education engages StandardsWork to create “super standards” and evaluate the quality of state curriculum framework documents and cross-curricular activities to them and the state's grade-by-grade academic standards.

2003 U.S. Department of Education

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U.S. Department of Education, Office of Innovation & Improvement awards StandardsWork a three-year grant to conduct public awareness campaigns in Washington, DC and Baltimore, Maryland to share school accountability information and encourage more active involvement by parents in their children's education.

2002 America Diploma Project

On behalf of Achieve, Inc., provided research, technical assistance, and policy guidance to the America Diploma Project, work that went on to form the basis of the Common Core State Standards Initiative.

2001 Results Card

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The first “Results Card”, a report on multiple measures of student achievement in 10 states, is published. Measures include writing proficiency, college remediation rates, percentage of the state's kindergarteners who attended Prek, higher level course enrollments, chronic student and teacher absenteeism, etc.
A follow up report, “Driving Student Success”, described results for a state policy audience eager to begin implementing the new federal No Child Left Behind law.

2000 HireStandards

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HireStandards was launched to provide executive search services to school districts and charter school operators looking for academic leaders capable of driving standards-based reform efforts.

1999 State Standards in Four States

The Arizona and Maryland State Departments of Education engage StandardsWork to help develop state standards, as do school districts in Allentown, PA and Ardmore, OK. The Arizona work included standards for adult education and English language learners.

1998 California State Standards

The California Commission on the Establishment of Academic and Content Standards engages StandardsWork to lead the writing, editing, and benchmarking of CA's state standards for ELA, math, and history/social studies.
California was one of the first states to develop high-quality standards based on defined criteria. The standards have received widespread praise from experts and teachers and are still considered among the best in the nation, frequently being used as the foundation for other state standards.

1995 Raising the Standard

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Denis Doyle and Susan Pimentel's “Raising the Standard – An Eight-Step Action Guide for Schools and Communities” is published by StandardsWork, Inc., an offshoot of the America 2000 Coalition that was started by Susan Pimentel and Leslye Arsht to provide support to communities working to develop state and district standards.

1993 Goal Line

Goal Line, a first-of-its-kind online network designed to spread the word about exemplary programs, was started to showcase what good schools look like and to advocate for programs and practices that work. Many of the programs in this database, e.g. AVID, Parents as Teachers, continue to be successful interventions today.

1992 America 2000 Coalition

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The America 2000 Coalition is founded to support the national education goals by linking businesses and social-service organizations to local school reform efforts. Central to the organization's mission was to "find the good and praise it”, a guiding principle of then Secretary of Education Lamar Alexander that was coined by his friend and author, Alex Haley.

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  • Pressing Our Point

Expanding the Important National Conversation About Reading

by Susan Pimentel

Recently I contributed a piece to Education Week, “Why Doesn’t Every Teacher Know the Research on Reading Instruction?” My intention was to support and even broaden the important national conversation about reading instruction that was spawned by Emily Hanford’s “Hard Words” documentary. This conversation has continued to have a great deal of fuel, as local papers have begun writing about shortcomings in reading instruction and Hanford brought the conversation to the editorial page of the NYTimes.

In my piece, I called attention to two other areas of reading research that deserve attention: the importance of content knowledge to reading comprehension and the importance of getting all kids to read texts on their grade level. I asserted that we are in the midst of a renaissance in the curriculum space that could have a profound impact on the results being experienced in classrooms.

In response to the many inquiries we’ve received about this claim, I have expanded my piece to name the names of K–8 English language arts (ELA) curricula that characterize the renaissance. They are a different breed of materials, not only because of their research-base and strong standards-alignment.  Each has received high marks in reviews by the independent EdReports and Louisiana Believes educator review processes. Three of the four utilize trade books purchased separately. Half are available as Open Educational Resources. All are developed by smaller organizations, including some nonprofits, that can’t begin to compete with the marketing budgets of the Big Three publishers.  The curriculum renaissance represents a transition, with important policy considerations that we invite education advocates to consider (e.g. How can our state curriculum adoption processes become more open and responsive to newer, smaller entrants?)

When it comes to the essential work of improving reading outcomes, I feel great urgency. We can’t share this information broadly enough (I would skywrite it above elementary schools if I could!)  Thank you for taking the time to read and share this piece, including the newly-added paragraph that names names in italics.

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Almost two decades ago, the National Reading Panel reviewed more than 100,000 studies and arrived at recommendations for how students should receive daily, explicit, systematic phonics instruction in the early grades. Why is this literacy research not more widely known? Why is the fact that reading skills need to be taught, and that there is a well-documented way to do it, not something highlighted in many teacher-preparation programs (or parenting books, for that matter)?

Recently, a remarkable audio-documentary by Emily Hanford went viral, shining a spotlight on such crucial literacy research—none of which is new, but much of which is unknown to today’s teachers. Like many in the literacy community, I worry about our failure to bring research into classroom practice. My concern is greatest for teachers who are being sent into classrooms without the tools they need to succeed. I’m hopeful this renewed interest will serve as a catalyst for overhauling reading instruction in our teacher-preparation programs. However, relying solely on better preparation for the next generation of teachers is a slow delivery system to children. The stakes are too high. We need more immediate solutions.

Only roughly one-third of our nation’s 4th and 8th graders can demonstrate proficiency on national tests, with students from low-income families and students of color faring the worst. When students can’t read, they have trouble learning; the great majority of students who fail to master reading by 3rd grade either drop out or finish high school with dismal lifetime earning potentials.

I’d like to build on the momentum Hanford’s piece has sparked to call attention to additional research-based practices that go hand-in-hand with the importance of phonics. As educators experience ‘aha’ moments about the need for stronger phonics instruction, let’s talk about some other literacy practices that need fixing in elementary classrooms. Here’s my short list of practices and resources to add to the conversation:

1. Let all kids read the good stuff. The pervasive practice of putting kids into reading groups according to their “just right” reading level has meant that large numbers of students receive a steady diet of below-grade-level instruction. The texts they’re reading don’t require them to decipher unfamiliar vocabulary, confront challenging concepts, or parse new and complicated language. Noted literacy researcher Timothy Shanahan has written extensively about why this is the wrong approach, documenting that “after 70 years there still isn’t any research supporting the idea of matching kids to just-right texts” after 1st grade—yet still the practice persists. This, despite research showing that the ability to handle complex text is the distinguishing characteristic between students who go on to do well in college and work and those who don’t.

Why would we deprive our youngsters of the opportunity to build this muscle in elementary school, when all that’s standing in the way of their doing so is the opportunity and the support that close reading can provide?

The Council of Chief State School Officers offers a host of resources to help teachers guide students with complex texts.

2. Build students’ general content knowledge. Some of the most profoundly important, yet under-recognized, reading research shows that students’ reading comprehension depends heavily on their background knowledge about the world—knowledge that comes largely from learning about science and social studies topics. When students know something about a topic, they are better able to read a text in which that topic is discussed, even when the sentence structure is complex or the words are unfamiliar. Cognitive science expert Daniel Willingham explains this principle clearly, and the Knowledge Matters Campaign expands on it further.

The implications for literacy instruction are enormous because young children are receiving less time with science and social studies content in their school day. According to a 2007 study, instructional time spent on these subjects dropped by an hour and a half per week since the 1990s. The diminished attention to these knowledge-building topics creates less fertile ground for reading comprehension to flourish and is a significant culprit in our stagnant national reading outcomes. Given that time is a scarce commodity in most schools, the takeaway for school leaders is to incorporate rich content, organized around conceptually-related topics, into the reading curriculum so that students learn new information about the world while they develop as readers. Student Achievement Partners has ready-made resources that teachers can pull into their classrooms.

3. Let quality English/language arts curriculum do some of the heavy-lifting.

Poor-quality curriculum is at the root of reading problems in many schools. It is not an overstatement to say that a school that doesn’t have a phonics program is doing its students a huge disservice. Increasingly, the same can be said about the lack of intentionality for building students’ knowledge of the world and access to complex text. The current lack of educator know-how can be remedied by curriculum that points the way.

Fortunately, bolstered by emerging research about the “curriculum effect,” we’re in the midst of a curriculum renaissance. In recent years, a number of respected organizations have developed curricula that are tailor-built to both state standards and the latest research. Educator reviews conducted by organizations such as the nonprofit EdReports or Louisiana Believes can help schools easily identify the best curriculum for their context.

My colleagues and I have studied the K–8 ELA curricula that earn ‘all-green’ reviews on EdReports. They are strong in all of the key accelerators of literacy: developing foundational skills (including a systematic phonics program); fostering knowledge acquisition by students; inclusive of high-quality, complex texts; and supportive of teachers in the important work of getting all kids reading texts on grade level. Products we regard highly include: EL Education K-5 Language Arts (developed by EL Education, provided by Open Up Resources); Core Knowledge Language Arts (developed by the Core Knowledge Foundation, provided by Amplify); ARC Core, developed and provided by the American Reading Company, and Wit & Wisdom, developed and provided by Great Minds.

No longer should classroom teachers need to scour the internet for materials. Instead, educators can spend their time focusing on how to become the best possible deliverers of thoughtfully arranged, comprehensive, sequential curriculum that embeds standards, the science of reading, and the instructional shifts described above.

I have great empathy for teachers who have labored under the weight of misdirected teacher preparation, insufficient curriculum, ever-shifting educational fads, and ever-increasing professional demands—and welcome the attention of journalists who are shining a light on the opportunity represented by the convergence of science and a new class of high-quality curriculum materials. Based on my own experiences with educators taking this improvement journey, significant reading gains are possible with the right support. Our students’ reading future can be bright—if we seize the moment.

The initial version of this piece was orginally published by Education Week as Why Doesn’t Every Teacher Know the Research on Reading Instruction? This expanded version was subsequently published in Flypaper.

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