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Big Idea:
The ability to read a variety of texts requires independence,
comprehension, and fluency. |
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3.1.8 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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Areas of Focus/Cumulative Progress Indicators |
Comments and Examples |
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1.
Identify and use organizational structures to comprehend
information. (e.g., logical order, comparison/contrast,
cause/effect, chronological, sequential, procedural text). |
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3.1.8 B. Phonological Awareness:
No
additional indicators at this grade level |
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3.1.8 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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Areas of Focus/Cumulative Progress Indicators |
Comments and Examples |
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1.
Distinguish among the spellings of homophones to determine meaning (e.g.
cite, site, sight). |
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2.
Apply
spelling and syllabication rules that aid in decoding and word recognition. |
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3.
Continue
to use structural analysis and context analysis to decode new words. |
Instructional focus:
• Root words
• Prefixes and suffixes
• Polysyllabic wordsASSESS
during teacher observation. |
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4.
Apply knowledge of word structures and patterns to read with automaticity. |
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3.1.8 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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Areas of Focus/Cumulative Progress Indicators |
Comments and Examples |
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1.
Read grade-level text orally with high accuracy and appropriate pacing,
intonation, and expression. |
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2.
Read increasingly difficult
texts silently with comprehension and fluency. |
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3.
Apply
self-correcting strategies automatically to decode and gain meaning from print
both orally and silently. |
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4.
Adjust
reading rate in response to the type of text and level of difficulty (e.g.
recreational reading vs. informational reading). |
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3.1.8 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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Areas of Focus/Cumulative Progress Indicators |
Comments and Examples |
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1.
Monitor reading for understanding by
automatically setting a purpose for reading, making and adjusting
predictions, asking essential questions, and relating new learning
to background experiences |
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2. Use increasingly complex text guides to understand different text
structure and organizational patterns (e.g. chronological sequence or comparison
and contrast). |
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3.1.8 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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Areas of Focus/Cumulative Progress Indicators |
Comments and Examples |
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1.
Develop and refine an
extended vocabulary through listening and exposure to a variety of texts and
independent reading. |
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2.
Clarify word meanings
through the use of a word’s definition, example, restatement, or contrast. |
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3.
Clarify pronunciations,
meanings, alternate word choice, parts of speech, and etymology of words using
the dictionary, thesaurus, glossary, and technology resources. |
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4. Expand
reading vocabulary by identifying and correctly using idioms and words with
literal and figurative meanings in their speaking and writing experiences. |
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5.
Explain relationships between and among words including
connotation/denotation, antonyms/synonyms, and words with multiple meanings. |
Instructional focus:
• Vocabulary instruction
ASSESS through class discussion. |
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3.1.8 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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Areas of Focus/Cumulative Progress Indicators |
Comments and Examples |
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1.
Differentiate between fact/opinion and bias and propaganda in newspapers,
periodicals, and electronic texts. |
Instructional focus:
• Detailed studies of fact and opinion, bias and propaganda through research
and popular media (includes editorials, ad campaigns, celebrity endorsements
from popular culture)
Examples:
• Critique advertising programs, current and historical for use of propaganda
techniques.
• Examine websites for propaganda and bias.
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2.
Compare and analyze several authors’ perspectives of a character,
personality, topic, setting, or event. |
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3.
Analyze ideas and recurring themes found in texts, such as good versus
evil, across traditional and contemporary works. |
Instructional focus:
• Higher order thinking/deductive reasoning (Ask: What character traits make the
novel’s protagonist likeable/not likeable? If the character had not grown up
during the time in which the novel was written/set, in what ways would he/she
have been different?) |
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4.
Locate and analyze the
elements of setting, characterization, and plot to construct understanding of
how characters influence the progression and resolution of the plot. |
Instructional strategies:
• Teacher read alouds
• Literature circles
• Partner reading and discussionASSESS
through class discussion.
Example:
Respond to literature by keeping a journal of a character’s development as a
story progresses. Include references to events in the story that either
influenced the character or which the character influenced. |
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5.
Read critically by identifying, analyzing, and applying knowledge of the
purpose, structure, and elements of nonfiction and providing support from the
text as evidence of understanding. |
Instructional strategies:
• Independent reading
• Partner reading and discussion
• Small group guided reading at students’ instructional levels
• Teacher read alouds that include thinking aloud and other uses of
comprehension strategies that make the process of reading nonfiction text
transparent for studentsASSESS through
Problem-Based Learning.
Example:
Students use expository text to research and report on a scientific discovery
made in the last 50 years. Reports can be research papers or media
presentations. |
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6.
Read critically by identifying, analyzing, and applying knowledge of the
theme, structure, style, and literary elements of fiction and providing support
from the text as evidence of understanding. |
Instructional focus:
• Theme and its relevance to the text
• Structure and how it clarifies the reader’s understanding
• Style and how the author chose to tell the story or relate the information
(Ask: Is the style informal? Formal? Does the author connect with you? Why? Why
not? On what level? What would you have done differently if you were to write a
similar piece?)
• Literary elements (Ask: Is this setting relevant or could this story take
place anywhere and at any time? How does the story evolve? Are you sure about
what will happen next? Were you surprised? In what ways does the author use
dialogue to make you a part of the story? Does the dialogue distract from the
story? Is dialect or slang an enhancement or a distraction? Does its use make
you connect to the story/characters?)ASSESS
through class discussion. |
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7.
Respond critically to
text ideas and the author’s craft by using textual evidence to support
interpretations. |
Instructional focus:
• Reflective reading (Ask: How do you interpret this passage/story? How does it
differ from others’ interpretation? What makes that interpretation so different
or so much the same?)ASSESS through class
discussion.
Example:
Discuss your interpretation of a poem or a narrative with a partner. Create a
presentation that demonstrates what led each of you to interpret the text in the
way that you did, and present to the class. |
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8.
Identify and analyze literary techniques and elements, such as figurative
language, meter, rhetorical, and stylistic features of text. |
Instructional strategy
Ask:
• What particular features of the text make it easy or difficult to read?
Explain.ASSESS through journal writing. |
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9.
Identify and analyze
recurring themes across literary works. |
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10.
Read critically and analyze poetic forms (e.g., ballad, sonnet, couplet). |
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11.
Identify and understand the author’s use of idioms, analogies, metaphors, and similes in prose and
poetry. |
Instructional focus:
• Figurative language
ASSESS through writing assignments
(responding to and creating prose and poetry).
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12.
Understand
perspectives of authors in a variety of interdisciplinary works. |
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13.
Interpret text ideas
through journal writing, discussion, and enactment. |
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14.
Demonstrate the use of everyday texts (e.g., train schedules,
directions, brochures) and make judgments about the importance of such
documents. |
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15.
Compare and analyze the various works of writers through an author’s
study. |
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3.1.8
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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Areas of Focus/Cumulative Progress Indicators |
Comments and Examples |
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1.
Produce written and oral work that demonstrates comprehension of
informational materials. |
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2.
Analyze a work of literature, showing how it reflects the heritage,
traditions, attitudes, and beliefs of its authors. |
Instructional strategies:
• Teacher read alouds with attention to author’s intent, views, culture and
beliefs
• Guided reading, with teacher as facilitator, to improve comprehension at
student’s instructional level
• Independent reading by students and subsequent demonstration of each student’s
understanding of author’s point of view, historical references and cultural
biases
• Demonstration of understanding of an author’s point of view through multimedia
projects and activities and other project-based learning
• Integration of the study of an author’s point of view with a focus on the
historical perspective during the time in which the piece was written
ASSESS through student writing
assignments.
Example:
Write an essay that explains how a tradition found in a literary passage
reflects the attitudes or beliefs of its author |
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3.
Collect materials for a portfolio that reflect personal career choices. |
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4.
Self-select materials appropriately related to a research project. |
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5.
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). |
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