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Big Idea:
The ability to read a variety of texts requires independence,
comprehension, and fluency. |
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3.1 A. Concepts About Print |
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Essential Questions |
Enduring Understandings |
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How does understanding a text’s structure help me better understand
its meaning? |
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Understanding of a text’s features, structures, and characteristics
facilitate the reader’s ability to make meaning of the text. |
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Cumulative Progress
Indicators |
Comments and Examples |
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By the end of Grade 12: |
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1. Interpret and use common textual
features (e.g., paragraphs, topic, sentence, index, glossary, table
of contents) and graphic features, (e.g., charts, maps, diagrams) to
comprehend information. |
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2. Identify interrelationships between
and among ideas and concepts within a text, such as cause-and-effect
relationships. |
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3.1 B. Phonological Awareness
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By the end of Grade 12: |
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No
additional indicators at this grade level |
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3.1 C. Decoding and Word Recognition |
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Essential Questions |
Enduring Understandings |
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How do I figure out a word I do not know? |
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Readers use language structure and context clues to identify the
intended meaning of words and phrases as they are used in text. |
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Cumulative Progress
Indicators |
Comments and Examples |
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By the end of Grade 12: |
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1.
Decode new words using structural and context analysis.
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3.1 D. Fluency |
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Essential Questions |
Enduring Understandings |
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How does fluency affect comprehension? |
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Fluent readers group words quickly to help them gain meaning from
what they read |
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Cumulative Progress
Indicators
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Comments and Examples |
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By the end of Grade 12: |
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1. Read developmentally appropriate materials at an independent level with
accuracy and speed. |
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2. Use appropriate rhythm, flow, meter, and pronunciation when reading. |
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3. Read a variety of genres
and types of text with fluency and comprehension. |
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3.1 E. Reading Strategies (before, during, and after reading)
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Essential Questions |
Enduring Understandings |
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-What
do readers do when they do not understand everything in a text?
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Good readers employ strategies to help them understand text.
Strategic readers can develop, select, and apply strategies to
enhance their comprehension. |
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Cumulative Progress
Indicators
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Comments and Examples |
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By the end of Grade 12: |
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1.
Assess, and apply reading strategies that are
effective for a variety of texts (e.g., previewing, generating questions,
visualizing, monitoring, summarizing, evaluating). |
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2.
Use a variety of graphic organizers with various text
types for memory retention and monitoring comprehension. |
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3.
Analyze the ways in which a text’s organizational
structure supports or confounds its meaning or purpose. |
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3.1 F.
Vocabulary and Concept Development |
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Essential Questions |
Enduring Understandings |
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-What
do readers do when they do not understand everything in a text?
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Words powerfully affect meaning |
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Cumulative Progress
Indicators |
Comments and Examples |
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By the end of Grade 12: |
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1.
Use knowledge of word
origins and word relationships, as well as historical and literary context
clues, to determine the meanings of specialized vocabulary. |
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2.
Use knowledge of root words to understand new words. |
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3.
Apply reading vocabulary
in different content areas. |
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4 Clarify
pronunciation, meanings, alternate word choice, parts of speech, and etymology
of words using the dictionary, thesaurus, glossary, and technology resources. |
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5 Define
words, including nuances in meanings, using context such as definition, example,
restatement, or contrast. |
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3.1 G.
Comprehension Skills and Response to Text |
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Essential Questions |
Enduring Understandings |
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- How do readers construct meaning from text? |
- Good readers compare, infer, synthesize, and
make connections (text to text, text to world, text to self) to make
text personally relevant and useful. |
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Cumulative Progress Indicators |
Comments and Examples |
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By the end of Grade 12: |
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Literary Text |
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1.
Apply a theory of literary criticism to a particular literary work. |
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2.
Analyze how our literary heritage is marked by distinct literary
movements and is part of a global literary tradition. |
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3.
Compare and evaluate the
relationship between past literary traditions and contemporary writing. |
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4.
Analyze how works of a
given period reflect historical and social events and conditions. |
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5.
Recognize literary concepts, such as rhetorical device, logical fallacy,
and jargon, and their effect on meaning. |
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6.
Interpret how literary
devices affect reading emotions and understanding. |
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7.
Analyze and evaluate the
appropriateness of diction and figurative language (e.g., irony, paradox,
metaphor, simile, personification). |
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8. Recognize the use or abuse
of ambiguity, contradiction, paradox, irony, incongruities, overstatement and
understatement in text and explain their effect on the reader. |
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9.
Analyze how an author’s
use of words creates tone and mood, and how choice of words advances the theme
or purpose of the work. |
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10.
Identify and understand the author’s use of idioms, analogies, metaphors, and
similes, as well as metrics, rhyme scheme, rhythm, and alliteration in prose and
poetry. |
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11.
Identify the structures in drama, identifying how the elements of dramatic
literature (e.g., dramatic irony, soliloquy, stage direction, and dialogue)
articulate a playwright’s vision. |
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12. Analyze the elements of
setting and characterization to construct meaning of how characters influence
the progression of the plot and resolution of the conflict. |
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13. Analyze moral dilemmas in works
of literature, as revealed by characters’ motivation and behavior. |
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14. Identify and analyze recurring
themes across literary works and the ways in which these themes and ideas are
developed. |
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Informational Text |
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15.
Identify, describe,
evaluate, and synthesize the central ideas in informational texts. |
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16.
Distinguish between essential and nonessential
information. |
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17. Analyze the use of
credible references. |
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18.
Differentiate between
fact and opinion by using complete and accurate information, coherent arguments,
and points of view. |
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19.
Demonstrate familiarity with everyday texts such as job and college
applications, W-2 forms contracts, etc. |
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20. Read, comprehend, and be able to follow information gained from technical
and instructional manuals (e.g., how-to books, computer manuals, instructional manuals). |
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21.
Distinguish between a summary and a critique. |
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22.
Summarize informational and technical texts and explain the
visual components that support them. |
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23.
Evaluate informational and technical texts for clarity,
simplicity and coherence and for the appropriateness of graphic and visual
appeal. |
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24.
Identify false premises in an argument. |
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25.
Analyze foundational U.S. documents for their historical and
literary significance and how they reflect a common and shared American Culture
(e.g., The Declaration of Independence, The Preamble of the U.S. Constitution,
Abraham Lincoln’s “Gettysburg Address,” Martin Luther King’s “Letter from
Birmingham Jail”). |
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H. Inquiry and Research |
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Essential Questions |
Enduring Understandings |
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- Why conduct research? |
- Researchers gather and critique information
from different sources for specific purposes. |
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Cumulative Progress Indicators |
Comments and Examples |
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By the end of Grade 12: |
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1.
Select appropriate
electronic media for research and evaluate the quality of the information
received. |
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2. Develop materials for a portfolio that reflect a specific career choice. |
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3. Develop increased ability to critically select works to support a
research topic. |
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4. Read and critically
analyze a variety of works, including books and other print materials
(e.g., periodicals, journals, manuals), about one issue or topic, or books by a
single author or in one genre, and produce evidence of reading. |
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5. Apply information gained
from several sources or books on a single topic or by a single author to foster
an argument, draw conclusions, or advance a position. |
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6. Critique the validity and logic of arguments advanced in public
documents, their appeal to various audiences, and the extent to which they
anticipate and address reader concerns. |
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7. Produce
written and oral work that demonstrates synthesis of multiple informational and
technical sources. |
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8. Produce
written and oral work that demonstrates drawing conclusions based on evidence
from informational and technical text. |
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9. Read
and compare at least two works, including books, related to the same genre,
topic, or subject and produce evidence of reading (e.g., compare central ideas,
characters, themes, plots, settings) to determine how authors reach similar or
different conclusions. |
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