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1: Reading E1a: The student reads at least twenty-five books or book equivalents each year. The materials should include traditional and contemporary literature (both fiction and non-fiction) as well as magazines, newspapers, textbooks, and on-line materials. Such reading should represent a diverse collection of materials from at least three different literary forms and from at least five different authors. E1b: The student reads and comprehends at least four books (or book equivalents) about one issue or subject, or four books by a single writer, or four books in one genre, and produces evidence of reading that: § Makes and supports warranted and responsible assertions about the texts; § Supports assertions with elaborated and convincing evidence; § Draws the texts together to compare and contrast themes, characters, and ideas; § Makes perceptive and well-developed connections; § Evaluates writing strategies and elements of the author’s craft. E1c: The student reads and comprehends informational materials to develop understanding and expertise and produces written or oral work that: § Restates or summaries information; § Relates new information to prior knowledge and experience; § Extends ideas; § Makes connections to related topics or information. E2: Writing E2a: The student produces a report that: § Engages the reader by establishing a context, creating a persona, and otherwise developing reader interest; § Develops a controlling idea that conveys a perspective on the subject; § Creates an organizing structure appropriate to purpose, audience, and context; § Includes appropriate facts and details; § Excludes extraneous and inappropriate information; § Uses a range of appropriate strategies, such as providing facts and details, describing or analyzing the subject, narrating a relevant anecdote, comparing and contrasting, naming, explaining benefits or limitations, demonstrating claims or assertions, and providing a scenario to illustrate; § Provides a sense of closure to the writing. E2b: The student produces a response to literature that: § Engages the reader through establishing a context, creating a persona, and otherwise developing reader interest; § Advances in judgment this is interpretive, analytic, evaluative, or reflective; § Supports a judgment though references to the text, references to other works, authors, or non-print media, or references to personal knowledge; § Demonstrates understanding of the literary work through suggesting an interpretation; § Anticipates and answers a reader’s questions; § Recognizes possible ambiguities, nuances, and complexities; § Provides a sense of closure to the writing. E2c: The student produces a narrative account (fictional or autobiographical) that: § Engages the reader by establishing a context, creating a point of view, and otherwise developing reader interest; § Establishing a situation, plot, point of view, setting, and conflict (and for autobiography, the significance of events and of conclusions that can be drawn from those events); § Creates an organizing structure; § Includes sensory details and concrete language to develop plot and character; § Excludes extraneous details and inconsistencies; § Develops complex characters; § Uses a range of appropriate strategies, such as dialogue, tension, or suspense, naming, pacing, and specific narrative action, e.g., movement, gestures, expressions, § Provides a sense of closure to the writing. E2d: The student produces a narrative procedure that: § Engages the reader by establishing a context, creating a persona, and otherwise developing reader interest; § Provides a guide to action for a complicated procedure in order to anticipate a reader’s needs; creates expectations through predictable structures, e.g., headings; and provides smooth transitions between steps; § Makes use of appropriate writing strategies , such as creating a visual hierarchy and using white space and graphics as appropriate; § Includes relevant information; § Excludes extraneous information; § Anticipates problems, mistakes, and misunderstandings that might arise for the reader; § Provides a sense of closure to the writing.
E2e: The student produces a persuasive essay that: § Engages the reader by establishing a context, creating a persona, and otherwise developing reader interest; § Develops a controlling idea that makes a clear and knowledgeable judgment; § Creates an organizing structure that is appropriate to the needs, values, and interests of a specified audience, and arranges details, reasons, examples, and anecdotes effectively and persuasively; § Includes appropriate information and arguments; § Excludes information and arguments that are irrelevant § Anticipates and addresses reader concerns and counter-arguments; § Supports arguments with detailed evidence, citing sources of information as appropriate; § Uses a range of strategies to elaborate and persuade, such as definitions, descriptions, illustrations, examples from evidence, and anecdotes; § Provides a sense of closure to the writing. E2f: The student produces a reflective essay that: § Engages the reader by establishing a context, creating a persona, and otherwise developing reader interest; § Analyzes a condition or situation of significance; § Develops a commonplace, concrete occasion as the basis for the reflection, e.g., personal observation or experience; § Creates an organizing structure appropriate to purpose and audience; § Uses a variety of writing strategies , such as concrete details, comparing and contrasting, naming, describing, creating a scenario; § Provides a sense of closure to the writing.
E3: Speaking, Listening, and Viewing E3a: The student participates in one-to-one conferences with a teacher, paraprofessional, or adult volunteer, in which the student: § Initiates new topics in addition to responding to adult-initiated topics; § Asks relevant questions; § Responds to questions with appropriate elaboration; § Uses language cues to indicate different levels of certainty or hypothesizing, e.g., “what if…,” “very likely…,” “I’m unsure whether…;” § Confirms understanding by paraphrasing the adult’s directions or suggestions. E3b: The student participates in group meetings, in which the student: § Displays appropriate turn-taking behaviors; § Actively solicits another persons’ comment or opinion; § Offers own opinion forcefully without dominating; § Responds appropriately to comments and questions; § Volunteers contributions and responds when directly solicited by teacher or discussion leader; § Gives reasons in support of opinions expressed; § Clarifies, illustrates, or expands on a response when asked to do so; asks classmates for similar expansions; § Employs a group decision-making technique such as brainstorming or a problem-solving sequence (e.g., recognize problem, define problem, identify possible solutions, select optimal solution, implement solution, evaluate solution); § Divides labor so as to achieve the overall group goal effectively.
E3c: The student prepares and delivers an individual presentation, in which the student: § Shapes information to achieve a particular purpose and to appeal to the interests and background knowledge of audience members; § Shapes content and organization according to criteria for importance and impact rather than according to availability of information in resource materials; § Uses notes or other memory aids to structure the presentation; § Develops several main points relating to a single thesis; § Engages the audience with appropriate verbal cues and eye contact; § Projects a sense of individuality and personality in selecting and organizing content, and in delivery. E3d: The student makes informed judgments about television, radio, and film productions; that is, the student: § Demonstrates an awareness of the presence of the media in the daily lives of most people; § Evaluates the role of the media in focusing attention and in forming an opinion; § Judges the extent to which the media are a source of entertainment as well as a source of information; § Defines the role of advertising as part of media presentation. E3e: The student listens to and analyzes a public speaking performance; that is, the student: § Takes notes on salient information; § Identifies types of arguments (e.g., causation, authority, analogy) and identifies types of logical fallacies (e.g., inferring causing from correlation, over-generalizing); § Accurately summarizes the essence of each speaker’s remarks; § Formulates a judgment about the issues under discussion. E4: Conventions, Grammar, and Usage of the English Language E4a: The student independently and habitually demonstrates an understanding of the rules of the English language in written and oral work, and selects the structures and features of language appropriate to the purpose, audience, and context of the work. The student demonstrates control of: § Grammar; § Paragraph structure; § Punctuation; § Sentence construction; § Spelling; § Usage. E4b: The student analyzes and subsequently revises work to clarify it or make it more effective in communicating the intended message or thought. The student’s revisions should be made in light of the purposes, audiences, and contexts that apply to the work. Strategies for revising include: § Added or deleting details; § Adding or deleting explanations; § Clarifying difficult passages; § Rearranging words, sentences, and paragraphs to improve or clarify meaning; § Sharpening the focus; § Reconsidering the organizational structure; § Rethinking and/or rewriting the piece in light of different purposes. E5: Literature E5a: The student responds to non-fiction, fiction, poetry, and drama using interpretive, critical and evaluative process; that is, the student; § Makes thematic connections among literary texts, public discourse, and media; § Evaluates the impact of authors’ decisions regarding word choice, style, content, and literary elements; § Analyzes the characteristics of literary forms and genres; § Evaluates literary merit; § Explains the effect of point of view; § Makes inferences and draws conclusions about fictional and non-fictional contexts, events, characters, settings, themes, and styles; § Interprets the effect of literary devices, such as figurative language, allusion, diction, dialogue, description, symbolism; § Evaluates the stance of a writer in shaping the presentation of a subject; § Interprets ambiguities, subtleties, contradictions, ironies, and nuances; § Understands the role of tone in presenting literature (both fictional and non-fictional) § Demonstrates how literary works (both fictional and non-fictional) reflect the culture that shaped them. E5b: The student produces work in at least one literary genre that follows the conventions of the genre. These may include: § A reflective essay § A memoir § A short story § A short play § A poem § A vignette E6: Public Documents E6a: The student critiques public documents with an eye to strategies common in public discourse, including: § Effective use of arguments; § Use of the power of anecdote; § Anticipation of counter-claims; § Appeal to audiences both friendly and hostile to the position presented; § Use of emotionally laden words and imagery; § Citing of appropriate references of authorities. E6b: The student produces public documents, in which the student: § Exhibits an awareness of the importance of precise word choice and the power of imagery and/or anecdote; § Utilizes and recognizes the power of logical arguments, arguments based on appealing to a reader’s emotions, and arguments dependent upon the writer’s persona; § Uses arguments that are appropriate in terms of knowledge, values, and degree of understanding of the intended audience; § Uses a range of strategies to appeal to readers. E7: Functional Documents E7a: The student critiques functional documents with an eye to strategies common to effective functional documents, including: § Visual appeal, e.g., format, graphics, white space, headers; § Logic of the sequence in which the directions are given; § Awareness of possible reader misunderstandings. E7b: The student produces functional documents appropriate to audience and purpose, in which the student: § Reports, organizes, and conveys information and ideas accurately; § Includes relevant narrative details, such as scenarios, definitions, and examples; § Anticipates readers’ problems, mistakes, and misunderstandings; § Uses a variety of formatting techniques, such as headings, subordinate terms, foregrounding of main ideas, hierarchical structures, graphics, and color; § Establishes a persona that is consistent with the document’s purpose; § Employs word choices that are consistent with the persona and appropriate for the intended audience.
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