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Descriptive Statement:
A primary reading goal is for students at all grades to
read independently with fluency and comprehension so that
they become lifelong readers and learners. In order to achieve
this goal, students benefit from "daily opportunities
to read books they choose for themselves, for their own purposes,
and their own pleasures" (Calkins, 2001). Students should
read grade-appropriate or more challenging classic and contemporary
literature and informational readings, both self-selected
and assigned. In order to grow as readers and deepen their
understanding of texts, students need many opportunities to
think about, talk about, and write about the texts they are
reading. A diversity of reading material (including fiction
and nonfiction) provides students with opportunities to grow
intellectually, emotionally, and socially as they consider
universal themes, diverse cultures and perspectives, and the
common aspects of human existence.
In early reading instruction, children need to know about
sounds, letters and words, and their relationships. Phonemic
awareness, knowledge of the relationships between sounds and
letters, and an understanding of the features of written English
texts are essential to beginning reading. Direct, systematic
phonics instruction enables many students to develop their
knowledge of phonics, and provides a bridge to apply this
knowledge in becoming independent and fluent readers. Systematic
phonics instruction typically involves explicitly teaching
students a pre-specified set of letter-sound relations and
having students read text that provides practice using these
relations to decode words (National Reading Panel, 2000).
It is important to help students become fluent readers in
the early years, and then help them expand their literacy
abilities as they progress through the middle and high school
grades.
The reading process requires readers to respond to texts,
both personally and critically, and relate prior knowledge
and personal experiences to written texts. Students apply
literal, inferential and critical comprehension strategies
before, during, and after reading to examine, construct, and
extend meaning. In becoming fluent readers, students must
draw on the word meaning and sentence structure of text and
sound/symbol relationships, and use these cueing systems interchangeably
in order to gain meaning. Students need to recognize that
what they hear, speak, write, and view contributes to the
content and quality of their reading experiences.
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Descriptive Statement:
Writing is a complex process that begins with the recording
of one's thoughts. It is used for composition, communication,
expression, learning, and engaging the reader. Proficient
writers use a repertoire of strategies that enables them to
vary form, style, and conventions in order to write for different
purposes, audiences, and contexts. Students should have multiple
opportunities to craft and practice writing, to generate ideas,
and to refine, evaluate, and publish their writing. In a successful
writing program, students develop and demonstrate fluency
in all phases of the writing process, including prewriting,
drafting, revising, editing of multiple drafts, and postwriting
processes that include publishing, presenting, evaluating,
and/or performing.
Students should be helped to understand the recursive nature
and shifting perspectives of the writing process, in moving
from the role of writer to the role of reader and back again.
It is important for students to understand that writers write,
then plan and revise, and then write again. They will learn
to appreciate writing not only as a product, but also as a
process and mode of thinking and communicating. "By the
mysterious alchemy of the written word, we range over time
and space, expanding our experiences, enriching our souls,
and ultimately becoming more fully, more consciously human"
(Keene, 1999). Students should recognize that what they hear,
speak, read, and view contributes to the content and quality
of their writing.
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| A. |
Concepts About
Print/Text |
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1.
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Identify and use
common textual and graphic features and organizational
structures to comprehend information. These include:
textual features (e.g., paragraphs, topic sentence,
index, table of contents); graphic features (e.g., charts,
maps, diagrams) and organizational structure (e.g.,
logical order, comparison/contrast, cause/effect). |
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B.
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Phonological
Awareness |
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No additional
indicators at this grade level. |
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C.
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Decoding
and Word Recognition |
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1.
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Distinguish
among the spellings of homophones (e.g. cite, site,
and sight). |
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2.
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Apply
spelling rules that aid in correct spelling. |
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3.
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Continue
to use structural analysis and context analysis to decode
new words. |
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D.
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Fluency |
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1.
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Read
aloud in selected texts reflecting understanding of
the text and engaging the listener. |
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2.
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Read
increasingly difficult texts silently with comprehension
and fluency. |
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3.
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Apply
self-correcting strategies automatically to decode and
gain meaning from print both orally and silently. |
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4.
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Reread
informational text for clarity. |
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E.
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Reading
Strategies (before, during, and after reading) |
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1.
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Monitor reading
for understanding by automatically setting a purpose
for reading, asking essential questions, and relating
new learning to background experiences. |
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2.
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Use increasingly
complex text guides, maps, charts, and graphs to assist
with reading comprehension. |
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F.
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Vocabulary
and Concept Development |
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1.
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Develop an
extended vocabulary through both listening and reading
independently. |
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2.
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Clarify word
meanings through the use of a word's definition, example,
restatement, or contrast. |
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3.
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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.
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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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G.
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Comprehension
Skills and Response to Text |
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1.
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Speculate
about text by generating literal and inferential questions. |
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2.
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Distinguish
between essential and nonessential information. |
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3.
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Differentiate
between fact/opinion and bias and propaganda in newspapers,
periodicals, and electronic texts. |
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4.
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Articulate
the purposes and characteristics of different genres. |
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5.
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Analyze
ideas and themes found in texts. |
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6.
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Compare several
authors' perspectives of a historical character, setting,
or event. |
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7.
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Locate and
analyze the elements of setting, characterization, and
plot to construct understanding of how characters influence
the progression and resolution of the plot. |
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8.
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Read
critically by identifying, analyzing, and applying knowledge
of the purpose, structure, and elements of nonfiction
and provide textual evidence of understanding. |
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9.
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Read
critically by identifying, analyzing, and applying knowledge
of the theme, structure, style, and literary elements
of fiction and provide textual evidence of understanding. |
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10.
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Respond
critically to text ideas and craft by using textual
evidence to support interpretations. |
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11.
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Locate and
analyze literary techniques and elements (such as figurative
language, meter, rhetorical and stylistic features,
etc.) of text. |
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12.
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Identify
and analyze recurring themes across literary works. |
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13.
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Read critically
and analyze poetic forms (e.g., ballad, sonnet, couplet). |
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14.
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Identify
and understand the author's use of idioms, analogies,
metaphors, and similes in prose and poetry. |
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15.
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Understand
perspectives of authors in a variety of interdisciplinary
works. |
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16.
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Interpret
text ideas through journal writing, discussion, and
enactment. |
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17.
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Demonstrate
familiarity with everyday texts (e.g., train schedules,
directions, brochures) and make judgments about the
importance of such documents.
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H.
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Inquiry
and Research |
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1.
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Produce written
and oral work that demonstrates comprehension of informational
materials. |
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2.
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Analyze a work of literature,
showing how it reflects the heritage, traditions, attitudes,
and beliefs of its authors. |
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3.
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Begin to develop and collect
materials for a portfolio that reflect possible career
choices. |
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4.
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Self-select materials
appropriately related to a research project. |
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5.
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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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A.
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Writing as a
Process (prewriting, drafting, revising, editing, postwriting) |
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1.
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Engage in the full
writing process (from prewriting through post-writing)
by writing daily and for sustained amounts of time. |
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2.
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Revise drafts by rereading
for meaning, narrowing focus, elaborating, deleting,
reorganizing, creating sentence variety as needed, maintaining
consistency of voice, and reworking introductions, transitions,
conclusions, and awkward passages. |
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3.
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Review and edit
work for spelling, usage, clarity, organization, and
fluency. |
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4.
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Demonstrate understanding
of a scoring rubric to improve and evaluate writing. |
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5.
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Compose, revise,
edit, and publish writing using appropriate word processing
software. |
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B.
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Writing
as a Product (resulting in a formal product or publication) |
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1.
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Extend knowledge
of specific characteristics, structures, and appropriate
voice and tone of selected genres and use this knowledge
in creating written work, considering the purpose, audience,
and context of the writing. |
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2.
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Write pieces
that contain narrative elements, such as short stories,
biography, autobiography, or memoir. |
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3.
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Write reports
and subject-appropriate nonfiction pieces across the
curriculum based on research and including citations,
quotations, and a bibliography or works cited page.
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4.
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Write
a range of essays, including persuasive, descriptive,
personal, or issue-based. |
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C.
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Mechanics,
Spelling, and Handwriting |
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1.
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Use
Standard English conventions in all writing (sentence
structure, grammar and usage, punctuation, capitalization,
spelling). |
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2.
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Use a variety
of sentence types correctly, including combinations
of independent and dependent clauses, prepositional
and adverbial phrases, and varied sentence openings
to develop a lively and effective personal style. |
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3.
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Understand
and use parallelism, including similar grammatical forms,
to present items in a series or to organize ideas for
emphasis. |
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4.
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Experiment
in using subordination, coordination, apposition, and
other devices to indicate relationships between ideas. |
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5.
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Use transition
words to reinforce a logical progression of ideas. |
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6.
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Edit writing
for correct grammar, usage, capitalization, punctuation,
and spelling. |
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7.
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Use a variety
of reference materials, such as a dictionary, grammar
reference, and/or internet/software resources to edit
written work. |
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8.
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Write legibly
in manuscript or cursive to meet district standards. |
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D.
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Writing
Forms, Audiences, and Purposes (exploring a variety
of forms) |
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1.
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Gather,
select, and organize the most effective information
appropriate to a topic, task, and audience. |
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2.
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Apply
knowledge and strategies for composing pieces in a variety
of genres (narrative, expository, persuasive, poetic,
and everyday/ workplace or technical writing, etc.). |
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3.
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Write
responses to literature and develop insights into interpretations
by connecting to personal experiences and referring
to textual information. |
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4.
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Write
personal narratives, short stories, memoirs, poetry,
and persuasive and expository text that relate clear,
coherent events or situations through the use of specific
details. |
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5.
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Use
narrative and descriptive writing techniques (e.g.,
dialogue, sensory words and phrases, background information,
thoughts and feelings of characters, and comparison
and contrast of characters.) |
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6.
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Use
a variety of primary and secondary sources to understand
the value of each when writing a research report. |
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7.
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Write
reports based on research and include citations, quotations,
and a works cited page. |
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8.
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Explore
the central idea or theme of an informational reading
and support analysis with details from the article and
personal experiences. |
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9.
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Demonstrate
writing clarity and supportive evidence when answering
open-ended and essay questions across the curriculum.
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10.
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State
a position clearly and convincingly in a persuasive
essay by stating the issue, giving facts, examples,
and details to support the position, and citing sources
when appropriate. |
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11.
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When
writing persuasive essays, present evidence, examples,
and justification to support arguments. |
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12.
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Choose
an appropriate organizing strategy such as cause/effect,
pro and con, parody, etc. to effectively present a topic,
point of view, or argument. |
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13.
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Use
personal style and voice effectively to support the
purpose and engage the audience of a piece of writing. |
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14.
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Develop
a collection of writing (e.g., a literacy folder, a
literacy portfolio). |
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