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(6) Reading/word identification. The student uses a variety of word recognition strategies.
The student is expected to:
(B) use structural analysis to identify words, including knowledge of Greek and Latin roots and prefixes/suffixes (7-8);
(9) Reading/vocabulary development. The student acquires an extensive vocabulary through reading and systematic word study.
The student is expected to:
(A) develop vocabulary by listening to selections read aloud (4-8);
(B) draw on experiences to bring meanings to words in context such as interpreting figurative language idioms, multiple-meaning words, and analogies (6-8);
(10) Reading/comprehension. The student uses a variety of strategies to comprehend a wide range of texts of increasing levels of difficulty.
The student is expected to:
(E) use the text's structure or progression of ideas such as cause and effect or chronology to locate and recall information (4-8);
(F) determine a text's main (or major) ideas and how those ideas are supported with details (4-8);
(G) paraphrase and summarize text to recall, inform, or organize ideas (4-8);
(H) draw inferences such as conclusions or generalizations and support them with text evidence and experience (4-8);
(I) find similarities and differences across texts such as in treatment, scope, or organization (4-8);
(12) Reading/text structures/literary concepts. The student analyzes the characteristics of various types of texts (genres).
The student is expected to:
(F) analyze characters, including their traits, motivations, conflicts, points of view, relationships, and changes they undergo (4-8);
(G) recognize and analyze story plot, setting, and problem resolution (4-8);
(H) describe how the author's perspective or point of view affects the text (4-8);
(I) analyze ways authors organize and present ideas such as through cause/effect, compare/contrast, inductively, deductively, or chronologically (6-8);
(J) recognize and interpret literary devices such as flashback, foreshadowing, and symbolism (6-8); and (K) recognize how style, tone, and mood contribute to the effect of the text (6-8).
(13) Reading/inquiry/research. The student inquires and conducts research using a variety of sources.
The student is expected to:
(A) form and revise questions for investigations, including questions arising from readings, assignments, and units of study (6-8);
(B) use text organizers, including headings, graphic features, and tables of contents, to locate and organize information (4-8);
(C) use multiple sources, including electronic texts, experts, and print resources, to locate information relevant to research questions (4-8);
(E) summarize and organize information from multiple sources by taking notes, outlining ideas, and making charts (4-8);
(G) draw conclusions from information gathered from multiple sources (4-8);
(I) present organized statements, reports, and speeches using visuals or media to support meaning (6-8).
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