| Document Date: 11/15/07 | ||
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Standard 1.0 General Reading Processes
Topic
Indicator
- 1. Read orally at an appropriate rate
Objectives
- Read familiar text at a rate that is conversational and consistent
Indicator
- 2. Read grade-level text with both high accuracy and appropriate pacing, intonation, and expression
Objectives
- Apply knowledge of word structures and patterns to read with automaticity
- Demonstrate appropriate use of phrasing
- Attend to sentence patterns and structures that signal meaning in text
- Use punctuation cues to guide meaning and expression
- Use pacing and intonation to convey meaning and expression
- Adjust intonation and pitch appropriately
- Increase sight words read fluently
Topic
D. Vocabulary
Students will use a variety of strategies and opportunities to understand word meaning and to increase vocabulary.
Indicator
- 1. Develop and apply vocabulary through exposure to a variety of texts
Objectives
- Acquire new vocabulary through listening to, independently reading, and discussing a variety of literary and informational texts
- Discuss words and word meanings daily as they are encountered in text, instruction, and conversation
Indicator
- 2. Develop and apply a conceptual understanding of new words
Objectives
- Classify and categorize increasingly complex words into sets and groups
- Identify and explain relationships between and among words
Indicator
- 3. Understand, acquire, and use new vocabulary
Objectives
- Use context to determine the meanings of words
Assessment limits:
- Above grade-level words used in context
- Words with multiple meanings
- Use word structure to determine the meaning of words
Assessment limits:
- Grade-appropriate prefixes and suffixes
- Use resources to confirm definitions and gather further information about words
- Use new vocabulary in speaking and writing to gain and extend content knowledge and clarify expression
Topic
E. General Reading Comprehension
Students will use a variety of strategies to understand what they read (construct meaning).
Indicator
- 1. Develop and apply comprehension skills through exposure to a variety of print and non-print texts, including traditional print and electronic texts
Objectives
- Listen to critically, read, and discuss texts representing diversity in content, culture, authorship, and perspective, including areas such as race, gender, disability, religion, and socio-economic background
- ** Read a minimum of 25 self-selected and/or assigned books or book equivalents representing various genres
- Discuss reactions to and ideas/information gained from reading experiences with adults and peers in both formal and informal situations
Indicator
- 2. Use strategies to prepare for reading (before reading)
Objectives
- Survey and preview the text by examining features such as the title, illustrations, photographs, charts, and graphs
- Set a purpose for reading the text
- Make predictions and ask questions about the text
- Make connections to the text from prior knowledge and experiences
Indicator
- 3. Use strategies to make meaning from text (during reading)
Objectives
- Reread the difficult parts slowly and carefully
- Use own words to restate the difficult part
- Read on and revisit the difficult part
- Skim the text to search for connections between and among ideas
- Make, confirm, or adjust predictions
- Periodically summarize while reading
- Periodically paraphrase important ideas or information
- Visualize what was read for deeper understanding
- Use a graphic organizer or another note-taking technique to record important ideas or information
- Explain personal connections to the ideas or information in the text
Indicator
- 4. Use strategies to demonstrate understanding of the text (after reading)
Objectives
- Identify and explain the main idea
Assessment limits:
- Of the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain what is directly stated in the text
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain what is not directly stated in the text by drawing inferences
Assessment limits:
- From the text or a portion of the text
- Draw conclusions or make generalizations about the text
Assessment limits:
- From the text or a portion of the text
- Confirm, refute, or make predictions and form new ideas
Assessment limits:
- The development, topics, or ideas that might logically be included if the text were extended
- Paraphrase the main idea
Assessment limits:
- Of the text or a portion of the text
- Summarize
Assessment limits:
- The text or a portion of the text
- Connect the text to prior knowledge or personal experience
Assessment limits:
- Prior knowledge that clarifies, extends, or challenges the ideas in the text or a portion of the text
Standard 2.0 Comprehension of Informational Text
Topic
A. Comprehension of Informational Text
Indicator
- 1. Develop and apply comprehension skills by reading a variety of self-selected and assigned print and non-print informational texts, including electronic media
Objectives
- Read, use, and identify the characteristics of nonfiction materials such as textbooks, appropriate reference materials, research and historical documents, personal narratives, diaries, and journals, biographies, newspapers, letters, articles, web sites and other online materials, other appropriate content-specific texts to gain information and content knowledge
Assessment limits:
- Grade-appropriate informational texts
- Read, use, and identify the characteristics of functional documents such as sets of directions, science investigations, atlases, posters, flyers, forms, instructional manuals, menus, pamphlets, rules, invitations, recipes, advertisements, other functional documents
Assessment limits:
- Grade-appropriate functional documents
- Select and read to gain information from personal interest materials such as brochures, books, magazines, cookbooks, catalogs, and web sites
Indicator
- 2. Identify and use text features to facilitate understanding of informational texts
Objectives
- Use print features such as large bold print, font size/type, italics, colored print, quotation marks, underlining, and other appropriate content-specific texts
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Use graphic aids such as illustrations and pictures, photographs, drawings, sketches, cartoons, maps (key, scale, legend, graphs, charts/tables, and diagrams, other graphic aids encountered in informational texts
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Use informational aids such as introductions and overviews, materials lists, timelines, captions, glossed words, labels, numbered steps, bulleted lists, footnoted words, pronunciation key, transition words, other informational aids encountered in informational texts
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Use organizational aids such as titles, chapter titles, headings, subheadings, tables of contents, numbered steps, glossaries, indices, transition words, other organizational aids encountered in organizational texts
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Use online features such as URLs, hypertext links, sidebars, drop down menus, home pages, site maps, other features characteristic of online texts
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain the contributions of text features to meaning
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
Indicator
- 3. Develop and apply knowledge of organizational structure of informational text to understand what is read
Objectives
- Identify and analyze the organizational patterns of texts such as sequential and/or chronological order, cause/effect, problem/solution, similarities/differences, description, main idea and supporting details
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and use words and phrases associated with common organizational patterns such as words that show chronology (first, second, third), description (above, beneath, next to, beside), cause and effect (because, as a result), sequence (next, then, finally)
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
Indicator
- 4. Determine and analyze important ideas and messages in informational texts
Objectives
- Identify and explain the author's/text's purpose and intended audience
Assessment limits:
- Purpose of the author or the text or a portion of the text
- Connections between the text and the intended audience
- Identify and explain the author's opinion
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- State and support main ideas and messages
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Summarize or paraphrase
Assessment limits:
- The text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain information not related to the main idea
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain relationships between and among ideas such as comparison/contrast, cause/effect, sequence/chronology
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Relationships between and among ideas in one or more texts
- Draw conclusions and inferences and make generalizations and predictions from text
Assessment limits:
- From one text or a portion of the text or across multiple texts
- Distinguish between a fact and an opinion
Assessment limits:
- In one or more texts or a portion of a text
- Identify and explain how someone might use the text
Assessment limits:
- Application of the text for personal use or content-specific use
- Topics and ideas within a text or across texts that may have implications for readers or contemporary society
- Connect the text to prior knowledge or experience
Assessment limits:
- Prior knowledge that clarifies, extends, or challenges the ideas in the text or a portion of the text
Indicator
- 5. Identify and explain the author's use of language
Objectives
- Identify and explain specific words or phrases that contribute to the meaning of a text
Assessment limits:
- Significant words and phrases (e.g., figurative language, idioms, etc.) in the text or a portion of the text
- Connotations of grade-appropriate words in context
- Denotations of above-grade-level words in context
- Identify and explain specific words and punctuation that create tone
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain the effect of repetition of words and phrases
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
Indicator
- 6. Read critically to evaluate informational text
Objectives
- Explain whether the text fulfills the reading purpose
Assessment limits:
- Connections between the content of the text and the purpose for reading
- Identify and explain additions or changes to format or text features that would make the text easier to understand
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain what makes the text a reliable source of information
- Explain whether or not the author's opinion is presented fairly
- Identify and explain information not included in the text
Assessment limits:
- Information that would enhance or clarify the reader's understanding of the main idea of the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain words and other techniques the author uses to appeal to emotion
Assessment limits:
- Significant words and phrases that have an emotional appeal
Standard 3.0 Comprehension of Literary Text
Topic
A. Comprehension of Literary Text
Indicator
- 1. Develop and apply comprehension skills by reading a variety of self-selected and assigned literary texts including print and non-print
Objectives
- Listen to critically, read, and discuss a variety of literary texts representing diverse cultures, perspectives, ethnicities, and time periods
- Listen to critically, read, and discuss a variety of literary forms and genres
Indicator
- 2. Analyze text features to facilitate understanding of literary texts
Objectives
- Identify and explain how organizational aids such as the title of the book, story, poem, or play, titles of chapters, subtitles, subheadings contribute to meaning
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain how graphic aids such as pictures and illustrations, punctuation, print features contribute to meaning
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain how informational aids such as introductions and overviews, materials lists, timelines, captions, glossed words, labels, numbered steps, bulleted lists, footnoted words, pronunciation keys, transition words, end notes, works cited, other informatin aids encountered in informational texts contribute to meaning
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain how print features such as large bold print, font size/type, italics, colored print, quotation marks, underlining, other print features encountered in informational texts contribute to meaning
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
Indicator
- 3. Analyze elements of narrative texts to facilitate understanding and interpretation
Objectives
- Identify and distinguish among types of narrative texts such as short stories, folklore, legends, myths, realistic fiction, science fiction, historical fiction, biographies, autobiographies, personal narratives, plays, and poetry
Assessment limits:
- Grade-appropriate narrative texts
- Identify and explain the events of the plot
Assessment limits:
- Main problem, exposition, rising action, climax, and resolution
- Identify and describe the setting and the mood and explain how the setting affects the characters and the mood
Assessment limits:
- Details that create the setting and/or mood in the text or a portion of the text
- Connections among the characters, the setting, and the mood in the text or a portion of the text
- Analyze characterization
Assessment limits:
- Character's traits based on what character says, does, and thinks and what other characters or the narrator says
- Character's motivations
- Character's personal growth and development
- Identify and explain relationships between and among characters, setting, and events
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text or across multiple texts
- Identify and describe the narrator
Assessment limits:
- Conclusions about the narrator based on his or her thoughts and/or observations
Indicator
- 4. Analyze elements of poetry to facilitate understanding and interpretation
Objectives
- Use structural features to identify poetry as a literary form and distinguish among types of poems such as haiku, form/shape poetry, etc.
- Identify and explain the meaning of words, lines, and stanzas
Assessment limits:
- Literal versus figurative meaning
- Identify and explain sound elements of poetry
Assessment limits:
- Rhyme, rhyme scheme
- Alliteration and other repetition
- Onomatopoeia
Objectives
- Use structural features to identify a play as a literary form and distinguish among types of plays
- Identify and explain the action of a scene
Assessment limits:
- Literal versus interpretive meaning
- Identify and explain how stage directions create character and movement
- Identify and explain stage directions and dialogue that help to create character
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
Indicator
- 6. Determine important ideas and messages in literary texts
Objectives
- Identify and explain main ideas and universal themes
Assessment limits:
- Main ideas of the text or a portion of the text
- Message, moral, or lesson learned from the text
- Identify and explain similar themes across multiple texts
Assessment limits:
- Messages, morals, or lessons learned across texts
- Paraphrase
Assessment limits:
- The text or a portion of the text
- Summarize
Assessment limits:
- The text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain personal connections to the text
Assessment limits:
- Connections between personal experiences and the theme or main ideas
- Explain the implications of the text for the reader and/or society
Assessment limits:
- Ideas and issues of a text that may have implications for the reader
Indicator
- 7. Identify and describe the author's use of language
Objectives
- Identify and explain how the use of dialogue contributes to a story
- Identify and explain specific words and phrases that contribute to meaning
Assessment limits:
- Significant words and phrases with a specific effect on meaning
- Denotations of above-grade-level words used in context
- Connotations of grade-appropriate words and phrases in context
- Identify and explain words and phrases that create tone
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain figurative language that contributes to meaning
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain language that appeals to the senses and feelings
Assessment limits:
- Specific words and phrases in the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain how repetition and exaggeration contribute to meaning
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
Indicator
- 8. Read critically to evaluate literary texts
Objectives
- Determine and explain the plausibility of the characters' actions and the plot
Assessment limits:
- In the text or a portion of the text
- Identify and explain questions left unanswered by the text
Assessment limits:
- Questions and predictions about events, situations, and conflicts that might occur if the text were extended
- Identify and explain the relationship between a literary text and its historical context
- Identify and explain the relationship between the structure and the purpose of the text
Standard 4.0 Writing
Topic
A. Writing
Indicator
- 1. Compose texts using the prewriting and drafting strategies of effective writers and speakers
Objectives
- Generate, select, and narrow topics, collectively and independently, using graphic organizers, prior writing, and/or prior experiences
- Select and use appropriate organizational structures such as narrative, chronological or sequential order, description, main idea and detail, problem/solution, question/answer, comparison and contrast, cause and effect
- Complete an idea by providing topic, support, and concluding sentences
Indicator
- 2. Compose oral, written, and visual presentations that express personal ideas, inform, and persuade
Objectives
- Compose to express personal ideas by experimenting with a variety of forms and techniques suited to topic, audience, and purpose
- Describe in prose and/or poetic forms to clarify, extend, or elaborate on ideas by using vivid language such as imagery and figurative language
- Compose to inform using relevant support and a variety of appropriate organizational structures and signal words within a paragraph
- Compose to persuade using significant reasons and relevant support to agree or disagree with an idea
- Take a position and generate convincing reasons to support it
- Consider the effectiveness of form, diction, audience appeal, and organization
- Use writing-to-learn strategies such as learning logs, dialogue journals, and quickwrites to connect ideas and thinking about lesson content
- Manage time and process when writing for a given purpose
Indicator
- 3. Compose texts using the revising and editing strategies of effective writers and speakers
Objectives
- Revise texts for clarity, completeness, and effectiveness
- Eliminate words and ideas that do not support the main idea
- Clarify meaning by adding modifiers and sensory words within a sentence
- Clarify meaning by rearranging sentences within a text
- Provide sentence variety and length by combining sentences and correcting rambling sentences
- Use suitable traditional and electronic resources to refine presentations and edit texts for effective and appropriate use of language and conventions such as capitalization, punctuation, spelling, and pronunciation
- Self edit
- Peer edit
- Dictionary
- Thesaurus
- Spell checker
- Language handbook
- Grammar checker
- Prepare the final product for presentation to an audience
Indicator
- 4. Identify how language choices in writing and speaking affect thoughts and feelings
Objectives
- Select words appropriate for audience, situation, or purpose
- Describe how listeners might respond differently to similar words such as nightmare/dream, loud/deafening, cute/gorgeous
- Consider how word choices affect the audience
Indicator
- 5. Assess the effectiveness of choice of details, organizational pattern, word choice, syntax, use of figurative language, and rhetorical devices in the student's own composing
Objectives
- Assess the effectiveness of word choice that reveals a student's purpose for writing
- Language appropriate for a particular audience
- Language suitable for a given purpose
- Words/phrases/sentences that extend meaning in a given context
- Explain how specific words/phrases/sentences affect reader/listener response
- Examine and use transitions showing importance and relation such as "because," "additionally," "unless," "although," and "so"
Indicator
- 6. Explain how textual changes in a work enhance tone, clarify meaning, address a particular audience, or fulfill a purpose
Indicator
- 7. Locate, retrieve, and use information from various sources to accomplish a purpose
Objectives
- Identify, evaluate, and use sources of information on a self-selected and/or given topic
- Use various information retrieval sources (traditional and/or electronic) to obtain information on a self-selected and/or given topic
- Select appropriate information for note taking and organizing information
- Practice appropriate strategies for organizing information and/or taking notes
- Use information from two or more sources to fulfill a given purpose
- Credit sources when paraphrasing, summarizing, and quoting to avoid plagiarism
Standard 5.0 Controlling Language
Topic
A. Grammar
Indicator
- 1. Recognize elements of grammar in personal and academic reading
Objectives
Indicator
- 2. Recognize, recall, and use basic elements of grammar to express ideas clearly ***
Objectives
- Recognize the meaning, position, form, and function of words when identifying grammatical concepts such as concrete, collective, and abstract nouns; demonstrative and relative pronouns; subordinating conjunctions
- Combine sentences using appositives, participial phrases, adjectives, adverbs, and prepositional phrases
- Differentiate between a phrase and a clause and between grammatically complete sentences and non-sentences such as sentence fragments and stringy/rambling sentences
- Compose simple, compound, and complex sentences using independent and dependent clauses, transitions, and conjunctions to connect ideas
Topic
B. Usage
Indicator
- 1. Recognize examples of conventional usage in personal and academic reading
Objectives
Indicator
- 2. Comprehend and apply standard English usage in oral and written language ***
Objectives
- Apply appropriate subject/verb agreement such as in compound subjects and with phrases that interrupt the subject and the verb
- Apply consistent and appropriate use of the principal parts of regular and irregular verbs; person, number, and case of pronouns; pronoun/antecedent agreement; and degrees of comparison of modifiers
- Recognize and correct common usage errors such as misplaced modifiers and incorrect use of verbs such as lie - lay, rise - raise, sit - set
- Use available resources to correct or confirm editorial choices
- Explain editorial choices
Topic
C. Mechanics
Indicator
- 1. Explain and justify the purpose of mechanics to make and clarify meaning in academic and personal reading and writing
Objectives
Indicator
- 2. Apply standard English punctuation and capitalization in written language ***
Objectives
- Use commas correctly in direct address and to separate adjectives and parenthetical expressions such as on the other hand, for example, by the way
- Use apostrophes in plural possessives and nouns that end in –s
- Use quotation marks and commas in dialogue
- Use a colon to introduce a list
- Use quotation marks and commas in simple dialogue and for direct quotations
Indicator
- 3. Explain editorial choices involving mechanics
Objectives
Topic
D. Spelling
Indicator
- 1. Recognize conventional spelling in and through personal and academic reading
Objectives
Indicator
- 2. Apply conventional spelling in written language
Objectives
- Spell grade-appropriate high-frequency and content words
- Spell multi-syllabic words with complex spelling patterns
- Use suitable traditional and electronic resources as a spelling aid
- Use mnemonic devices to recall frequently misspelled words
Indicator
- 3. Maintain a personal list of words to use in editing original writing
Objectives
Topic
E. Handwriting
Indicator
- 1. Produce writing that is legible to the audience
Objectives
- Write fluidly and legibly in manuscript and cursive
- Use word processing technology when appropriate
Standard 6.0 Listening
Topic
A. Listening
Indicator
- 1. Demonstrate active listening strategies
Objectives
- Attend to the speaker
- Ask appropriate questions
- Contribute relevant comments
- Relate prior knowledge
Indicator
- 2. Comprehend and analyze what is heard
Objectives
- Determine speaker's purpose
- Identify how the language of the presentation contributes to effect and meaning
- Elaborate on the information and ideas presented
- Draw conclusions based on the information presented
- Determine speaker's attitude through verbal and non-verbal cues such as tone of voice, inflections, and facial expressions
Standard 7.0 Speaking
Topic
A. Speaking
Indicator
- 1. Use organization and delivery strategies at an appropriate level
Objectives
- Demonstrate appropriate volume, articulation, enunciation, intonation, pacing, timing, and stress
- Demonstrate appropriate timing
- Fluency
- Pacing
- Rate
- Use appropriate non-verbal techniques to enhance communications
- Posture
- Eye contact
- Facial expressions
- Gestures
Indicator
- 2. Make oral presentations
Objectives
- Speak in a variety of situations to inform and/or relate experiences, including retelling stories
- State a position and support it with reasons
- Participate in dramatic presentations
- Plan and deliver effective oral presentations
- Use props when appropriate
- *Independent level text (Put Reading First) is relatively easy text for the reader, with no more than approximately 1 in 20 words that are difficult for the reader (95% success). Instructional level text (Put Reading First) is challenging but manageable text for the reader, with no more than approximately 1 in 10 words difficult for the reader (90% success).
- **New Standards identifies the need for students to process 1 million words per year to maintain academic progress.
- ***At each grade level, curricular options include more complex examples of previous years' objectives.
- ****Emphasis is on application of conventions rather than memorization of terms.
Indicators/objectives that include assessment limits are assessed on MSA *New Standards identifies the need for students to process 1 million words per year to maintain academic progress.
11/15/07