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8.1 The student will demonstrate an ability to understand and analyze a variety of written texts across reading genres.
- 8.1.2 Students understand new vocabulary and use it when reading and writing.
- 8.1.2.A determine the meaning of grade-level academic English words derived from Latin, Greek, or other linguistic roots and affixes;
- 8.1.2.B use context (within a sentence and in larger sections of text) to determine or clarify the meaning of unfamiliar or ambiguous words or words with novel meanings;
- 8.1.2.E use a dictionary, a glossary, or a thesaurus (printed or electronic) to determine the meanings, syllabication, pronunciations, alternate word choices, and parts of speech of words.
- 8.1.3 Students analyze, make inferences and draw conclusions about theme and genre in different cultural, historical, and contemporary contexts and provide evidence from the text to support their understanding.
- 8.1.3.A analyze literary works that share similar themes across cultures;
- 8.1.3.B compare and contrast the similarities and differences in mythologies from various cultures (e.g., ideas of afterlife, roles and characteristics of deities, purposes of myths).
- 8.1.9 Students analyze, make inferences and draw conclusions about the author’s purpose in cultural, historical, and contemporary contexts and provide evidence from the text to support their understanding.
- 8.1.9.A analyze works written on the same topic and compare how the authors achieved similar or different purposes.
- 8.1.11 Students analyze, make inferences and draw conclusions about persuasive text and provide evidence from text to support their analysis.
- 8.1.11.A compare and contrast persuasive texts that reached different conclusions about the same issue and explain how the authors reached their conclusions through analyzing the evidence each presents.
- 8.1.Figure 19 Students use a flexible range of metacognitive reading skills in both assigned and independent reading to understand an author’s message. Students will continue to apply earlier standards with greater depth in increasingly more complex texts as they become self-directed, critical readers.
- 8.1.Figure 19.F make intertextual links among and across texts, including other media (e.g., film, play), and provide textual evidence.
8.2 The student will demonstrate an ability to understand and analyze literary texts.
- 8.2.3 Students analyze, make inferences and draw conclusions about theme and genre in different cultural, historical, and contemporary contexts and provide evidence from the text to support their understanding.
- 8.2.3.C explain how the values and beliefs of particular characters are affected by the historical and cultural setting of the literary work.
- 8.2.4 Students understand, make inferences and draw conclusions about the structure and elements of poetry and provide evidence from text to support their understanding.
- 8.2.4.A compare and contrast the relationship between the purpose and characteristics of different poetic forms (e.g., epic poetry, lyric poetry).
- 8.2.5 Students understand, make inferences and draw conclusions about the structure and elements of drama and provide evidence from text to support their understanding.
- 8.2.5.A analyze how different playwrights characterize their protagonists and antagonists through the dialogue and staging of their plays.
- 8.2.6 Students understand, make inferences and draw conclusions about the structure and elements of fiction and provide evidence from text to support their understanding.
- 8.2.6.A analyze linear plot developments (e.g., conflict, rising action, falling action, resolution, subplots) to determine whether and how conflicts are resolved;
- 8.2.6.B analyze how the central characters’ qualities influence the theme of a fictional work and resolution of the central conflict;
- 8.2.6.C analyze different forms of point of view, including limited versus omniscient, subjective versus objective.
- 8.2.7 Students understand, make inferences and draw conclusions about the varied structural patterns and features of literary nonfiction and provide evidence from text to support their understanding.
- 8.2.7.A analyze passages in well-known speeches for the author’s use of literary devices and word and phrase choice (e.g., aphorisms, epigraphs) to appeal to the audience.
- 8.2.8 Students understand, make inferences and draw conclusions about how an author’s sensory language creates imagery in literary text and provide evidence from text to support their understanding.
- 8.2.8.A explain the effect of similes and extended metaphors in literary text.
- 8.2.13 Students use comprehension skills to analyze how words, images, graphics, and sounds work together in various forms to impact meaning. Students will continue to apply earlier standards with greater depth in increasingly more complex texts.
- 8.2.13.A evaluate the role of media in focusing attention on events and informing opinion on issues;
- 8.2.13.C evaluate various techniques used to create a point of view in media and the impact on audience.
- 8.2.Figure 19 Students use a flexible range of metacognitive reading skills in both assigned and independent reading to understand an author’s message. Students will continue to apply earlier standards with greater depth in increasingly more complex texts as they become self-directed, critical readers.
- 8.2.Figure 19.D make complex inferences about text and use textual evidence to support understanding;
- 8.2.Figure 19.E summarize, paraphrase, and synthesize texts in ways that maintain meaning and logical order within a text and across texts.
8.3 The student will demonstrate an ability to understand and analyze informational texts.
- 8.3.10 Students analyze, make inferences and draw conclusions about expository text and provide evidence from text to support their understanding.
- 8.3.10.A summarize the main ideas, supporting details, and relationships among ideas in text succinctly in ways that maintain meaning and logical order;
- 8.3.10.B distinguish factual claims from commonplace assertions and opinions and evaluate inferences from their logic in text;
- 8.3.10.C make subtle inferences and draw complex conclusions about the ideas in text and their organizational patterns;
- 8.3.10.D synthesize and make logical connections between ideas within a text and across two or three texts representing similar or different genres and support those findings with textual evidence.
- 8.3.11 Students analyze, make inferences and draw conclusions about persuasive text and provide evidence from text to support their analysis.
- 8.3.11.B analyze the use of such rhetorical and logical fallacies as loaded terms, caricatures, leading questions, false assumptions, and incorrect premises in persuasive texts.
- 8.3.12 Students understand how to glean and use information in procedural texts and documents.
- 8.3.12.B evaluate graphics for their clarity in communicating meaning or achieving a specific purpose.
- 8.3.13 Students use comprehension skills to analyze how words, images, graphics, and sounds work together in various forms to impact meaning. Students will continue to apply earlier standards with greater depth in increasingly more complex texts.
- 8.3.13.A evaluate the role of media in focusing attention on events and informing opinion on issues;
- 8.3.13.C evaluate various techniques used to create a point of view in media and the impact on audience.
- 8.3.Figure 19 Students use a flexible range of metacognitive reading skills in both assigned and independent reading to understand an author’s message. Students will continue to apply earlier standards with greater depth in increasingly more complex texts as they become self-directed, critical readers.
- 8.3.Figure 19.D make complex inferences about text and use textual evidence to support understanding;
- 8.3.Figure 19.E summarize, paraphrase, and synthesize texts in ways that maintain meaning and logical order within a text and across texts.