The Common Core State Standards (CCSS) establish a challenging text-complexity standard for all high school graduates to read at college and workplace text-complexity levels. We argue that implementation of the CCSS standard requires concurrent examination of historical student reading-growth trends. An example of a historical student average reading-growth curve is presented, along with growth curves for quartile subgroups. Next, a strategy is illustrated for exploring potential alternate student reading paths if students are to attain the CCSS goal. Finally, implications derived from the student growth illustrations are discussed in relation to the Common Core text-complexity standard and its implementation.
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Journals Division
The University of Chicago Press
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Student Reading Growth Illuminates the Common Core Text-Complexity Standard
Raising Both Bars
Gary L. Williamson,
Metametrics
Jill Fitzgerald and A. Jackson Stenner
Metametrics and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
ARTICLE CITATION
Gary L. Williamson, Jill Fitzgerald, and A. Jackson Stenner, "Student Reading Growth Illuminates the Common Core Text-Complexity Standard: Raising Both Bars," The Elementary School Journal 115, no. 2 (December 2014): 230-254.
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