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Wisconsin Common Core State Standards Webpages WI Model Academic Standards (PDF)
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Academic StandardsWHAT ARE WISCONSIN ACADEMIC STANDARDS? Academic standards specify what students should know and be able to do. Wisconsin has academic standards for 21 separate content areas, and adopted Common Core State Standards for English language arts and mathematics in 2010. In addition, Wisconsin adopted Common Core State Standards for Literacy in All Subjects. For more general information on general common core standards, please click here.Order Wisconsin Common Core State Standards Guidance Documents. WHY ARE ACADEMIC STANDARDS IMPORTANT? Standards serve as rigorous goals for teaching and learning. Setting high standards enables students, parents, educators, and citizens to know what students should have learned at a given point in time. Clear statements about what students must know and be able to do are essential to ensure that our schools offer students the opportunity to acquire the knowledge and skills necessary for success. In addition, public education is a state responsibility. The state superintendent and legislature must ensure that all children have equal access to high quality education programs. This requires clear statements of what all children in the state should know and be able to do as well as evidence that students are meeting these expectations. Furthermore, academic standards form a sound basis on which to establish the content of a statewide assessment system. WHAT INFORMS THE IMPLEMENTATION OF ACADEMIC STANDARDS?Wisconsins Guiding Principles for Teaching and Learning inform the design and implementation of all academic standards. All educational initiatives are guided and impacted by important and often unstated attitudes or principles for teaching and learning. The Guiding Principles for Teaching and Learning emerge from research and provide the touchstone for practices that truly affect the vision of every child a graduate prepared for college and career. When made transparent, these principles inform what happens in the classroom, the implementation and evaluation of programs, and most important, remind us of our own beliefs and expectations for students. For more information, follow the links below. Wisconsin Guiding Principles for Teaching and Learning
Wisconsin's Approach to Academic Standards
Wisconsin's Approach to Literacy in All Subject Areas GENERAL RESOURCES Statewide CESA Resources CESA CCSS Suite of Services
2012 WASCD CCSS Symposium Presentation January 11, 2012 Every Child a Graduate Conference (January 2011): Useful CCSS videos
Connecting to Early Learning Wisconsin Model Early Learning Standards (WMELS) DPI Early Childhood Home Page Connecting to Higher Education Implementation Resources
Working with English Language Learners
Wisconsin's state assessment is based on state standards. As Wisconsin transitions to the next generation assessment system announced last fall, DPI is supporting an assessment system built around the Common Core State Standards. Wisconsin is a governing state within the multi-state consortium called the SMARTER Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC). The guiding principles of SBAC mirror the recommendations of Wisconsins Next Generation Assessment Task Force report. Through the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium a common state summative assessment will be created and will replace the Wisconsin Knowledge and Concepts Exam in 2014-2015 at the earliest. Visit Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium's new website for resources and updated information. In addition to the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium, Wisconsin is involved in developing both new alternate achievement standards and a new alternate assessment for students with significant cognitive disabilities. DPI is a member of a second multi state consortium called Dynamic Learning Maps (DLM). DLM is charged with developing new alternate achievement standards, called Common Core Essential Elements (CCEEs), which are aligned with the Common Core State Standards. Upon the completion of the CCEEs, DLM will begin developing a summative alternate assessment, along with formative evaluation materials and supportive professional development. We expect that this summative alternate assessment will replace the Wisconsin Alternate Assessment for Student with Disabilities in 2014-15, following the same timeframe as the SBAC.
Last updated on 5/9/2012 9:52:25 AM |
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State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Evers
Department of Public Instruction, 125 S. Webster Street, P.O. Box 7841, Madison, WI 53707-7841 (800) 441-4563 DPI Home |