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School City of Hobart |
School City of Hobart Language Arts |
Language Arts - 12th Grade |
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Word Recognition, Fluency, Vocabulary
The learner will be able to
apply their knowledge of word origins (words from other languages or from history or literature) to determine the meaning of new words encountered in reading and use those words accurately.
Strand |
Source |
Word Origin |
IDOE |
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12.1.1
The learner will be able to
understand unfamiliar words based on characters or themes in literature or on historical events.
Example: Understand the meaning of words like Dickensian (like characters and behaviors created by Charles Dickens), quisling (a traitor to his country like Vidkun Quisling who helped the Nazis conquer Norway), or Draconian (like severe laws made by Athenian lawmaker Draco).
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Strand |
Source |
Word Origin |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.1.2
The learner will be able to
apply knowledge of Greek, Latin, and Anglo-Saxon roots and word parts to draw inferences about new words that have been created in the fields of science and math (gene splicing, genetic engineering).
Strand |
Source |
Word Origin |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.1.3
The learner will be able to
analyze the meaning of analogies encountered, analyzing specific comparisons as well as relationships and inferences.
Example: Consider what is meant by literary comparisons and analogies, such as Shakespeare's phrases: a sea change or A rose by any other name would still smell as sweet.
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Strand |
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Analogy |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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Reading Comprehension
The learner will be able to
read and understand grade-level-appropriate material. They analyze the organizational patterns and evaluate authors' arguments and positions. The selections in the Indiana Reading List (available online at www.doe.state.in.us/standards/readinglist.html) illustrate the quality and complexity of the materials to be read by students. At Grade 12, in addition to regular classroom reading, students read a wide variety of classic and contemporary literature, poetry, magazines, newspapers, reference materials, technical resources, and online information.
Strand |
Source |
Analyzing |
IDOE |
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12.2.1
The learner will be able to
analyze both the features and the rhetorical (communication) devices of different types of public documents, such as policy statements, speeches, or debates, and the way in which authors use those features and devices.
Example: Evaluate a famous political speech, such as Abraham Lincoln's "Gettysburg Address" or John F. Kennedy's 1960 inaugural address, and describe the rhetorical devices used to capture the audience's attention and convey a unified message.
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Strand |
Source |
Analyzing |
IDOE |
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12.2.2
The learner will be able to
analyze the way in which clarity of meaning is affected by the patterns of organization, repetition of the main ideas, organization of language, and word choice in the text.
Example: Analyze speeches of Winston Churchill to examine the way his language influences the impact of his message.
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Strand |
Source |
Analyzing: Clarity |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.2.3
The learner will be able to
verify and clarify facts presented in several types of expository texts by using a variety of consumer, workplace, public, and historical documents.
Example: Verify information in state and federal work safety laws by checking with an employer about internal company policies on employee safety.
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Strand |
Source |
Analyzing |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.2.4
The learner will be able to
make reasonable assertions about an author's arguments by using hypothetical situations or elements of the text to defend and clarify interpretations.
Example: Read Upton Sinclair's The Jungle and evaluate the validity of Sinclair's arguments for government regulation of the food industry. Evaluate whether this message of social reform was well presented in a fictional context, and how it might have been differently presented as an informational text.
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Strand |
Source |
Argument |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.2.5
The learner will be able to
analyze an author's implicit and explicit assumptions and beliefs about a subject.
Example: After reading excerpts from British physicist Stephen W. Hawking's Black Holes and Baby Universes and Other Essays, evaluate how the author conveys explicit information to the reader. Analyze the author's unstated philosophical assumptions about the subject.
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Strand |
Source |
Assumption |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.2.6
The learner will be able to
critique the power, validity, and truthfulness of arguments set forth in public documents; their appeal to both friendly and hostile audiences; and the extent to which the arguments anticipate and address reader concerns and counterclaims.
Example: Evaluate campaign documents from different candidates for a local or school election or opposing position papers on a policy issue, such as building a new state highway or raising taxes, and critique the arguments set forth. Address such issues as how candidates/supporters of an issue try to persuade readers by asserting their authority on the issues and appealing to reason and emotion among readers.
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Strand |
Source |
Argument |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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Literary Response and Analysis
The learner will be able to
read and respond to grade-level-appropriate historically or culturally significant works of literature that reflect and enhance their study of history and social science. They conduct in-depth analyses of recurrent themes. The selections in the Indiana Reading List (available online at www.doe.state.in.us/ standards/readinglist.html) illustrate the quality and complexity of the materials to be read by students.
Strand |
Source |
Reading Responses: Critical |
IDOE |
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12.3.1
The learner will be able to
evaluate characteristics of subgenres, types of writing such as satire, parody, allegory, and pastoral that are used in poetry, prose, plays, novels, short stories, essays, and other basic genres.
ˇ Satire: using humor to point out weaknesses of people and society
ˇ Parody: using humor to imitate or mock a person or situation
ˇ Allegory: using of fictional figures and actions to express truths about human experiences ˇ Pastoral: showing life in the country in an idealistic - and not necessarily realistic - way
Example: Read and evaluate the allegorical aspects of the novel Animal Farm by George Orwell.
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Strand |
Source |
Satire/Sarcasm/Parody |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.3.2
The learner will be able to
evaluate the way in which the theme or meaning of a selection represents a view or comment on life, using textual evidence to support the claim.
Example: Evaluate the theme of a work, such as The Return of the Native by Thomas Hardy. Locate the words or passages that support this understanding.
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Strand |
Source |
Themes |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.3.3
The learner will be able to
analyze the ways in which irony, tone, mood, the author's style, and the "sound" of language achieve specific rhetorical or aesthetic purposes or both.
Example: Evaluate the use of irony and tone that Jane Austen uses in novels such as Pride and Prejudice or Sense and Sensibility.
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Assessment Resources |
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12.3.4
The learner will be able to
analyze ways in which poets use imagery, personification, figures of speech, and sounds to evoke readers' emotions.
Example: Explore the relationship between the figurative and the literal in texts such as "The Nun's Priest's Tale" and "The Pardoner's Tale" by Geoffrey Chaucer and "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
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Strand |
Source |
Imagery |
IDOE |
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12.3.5
The learner will be able to
analyze recognized works of British literature representing a variety of genres and traditions that:
ˇ trace the development of British literature.contrast the major themes, styles, and trends in each period.
ˇ evaluate the influences (philosophical, political, religious, ethical, and social) of the historical period for a given novel that shaped the characters, plot, and setting.
Example: Read and evaluate works from different periods of British literature, such as Beowulf (Anglo-Saxon), The Prologue: The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer (Medieval), Shakespeare's Sonnets (Renaissance), Paradise Lost by John Milton (Seventeenth Century), A Journal of the Plague Year by Daniel Defoe and "The Tiger" by William Blake (Restoration and the Eighteenth Century), Frankenstein by Mary Shelley and "Ode to the West Wind" by Percy Bysshe Shelley (Romantic Age), "My Last Duchess" by Robert Browning (Victorian Age), and Across the Bridge by Graham Greene (Twentieth Century).
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Strand |
Source |
British Literature |
IDOE |
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12.3.6
The learner will be able to
evaluate the way in which authors have used archetypes (models or patterns) drawn from myth and tradition in literature, film, political speeches, and religious writings.
Example: Explain how the archetype of "the fall," or the banishment of Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden, may be used to interpret Shakespeare's The Tragedy of Macbeth.
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Strand |
Source |
World Literature: Analyze |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.3.7
The learner will be able to
analyze recognized works of world literature from a variety of authors that:
ˇ contrast the major literary forms, techniques, and characteristics from different major literary periods, such as Homeric Greece, Medieval, Romantic, Neoclassic, or the Modern Period.
ˇ relate literary works and authors to the major themes and issues of their literary period.
ˇ evaluate the influences (philosophical, political, religious, ethical, and social) of the historical period for a given novel that shaped the characters, plot, and setting.
Example: Read and evaluate works of world literature, such as The Inferno of Dante by Dante Alighieri (translated by Robert Pinsky), Candide by Voltaire, I Have Visited Again by Alexander Pushkin, Question and Answer Among the Mountains by Li Po, Anna Karenina or War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy, Night by Elie Wiesel, and The Ring by Isak Dinesen.
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Strand |
Source |
World Literature |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.3.8
The learner will be able to
e\evaluate the clarity and consistency of political assumptions in a selection of literary works or essays on a topic.
Example: Read excerpts from different novels by Charles Dickens and evaluate the treatment of children throughout these works.
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Source |
Analyzing: Clarity |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.3.9
The learner will be able to
evaluate the philosophical arguments presented in literary works and the use of dialogue to reveal character to determine whether the authors' positions have contributed to the quality of each work and the credibility of the characters.
Example: Read Samuel Becket's Waiting for Godot or Shakespeare's Hamlet and evaluate the philosophical approach presented in each, and what each author seems to be saying about the human condition.
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Strand |
Source |
Argument |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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Writing Process
The learner will be able to
write coherent and focused texts that show a well-defined point of view and tightly reasoned argument. The writing demonstrates students' progression through the stages of the writing process (prewriting, writing, editing, and revising).
Strand |
Source |
Essay/Composition |
IDOE |
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12.4.1
The learner will be able to
engage in conversations with peers and the teacher to plan writing, to evaluate how well writing achieves its purposes, and to explain personal reaction to the task.
Strand |
Source |
Collaborative Writing |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.4.2
The learner will be able to
demonstrate an understanding of the elements of discourse, such as purpose, speaker, audience, and form, when completing narrative, expository, persuasive, or descriptive writing assignments.
Strand |
Source |
Organization |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.4.3
The learner will be able to
use point of view, characterization, style, and related elements for specific rhetorical (communication) and aesthetic (artistic) purposes.
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Source |
Point of View |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.4.4
The learner will be able to
structure ideas and arguments in a sustained and persuasive way and support them with precise and relevant examples.
Strand |
Source |
Persuasive: Support |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.4.5
The learner will be able to
enhance meaning by using rhetorical devices, including the extended use of parallelism, repetition, and analogy and the issuance of a call for action.
Strand |
Source |
Writing Strategies |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.4.6
The learner will be able to
use language in creative and vivid ways to establish a specific tone.
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.4.7
The learner will be able to
develop presentations by using clear research questions and creative and critical research strategies, such as field studies, oral histories, interviews, experiments, and Internet sources.
Strand |
Source |
Presentation: Research |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.4.8
The learner will be able to
use systematic strategies to organize and record information, such as anecdotal scripting or annotated bibliographies.
Strand |
Source |
Organization |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.4.9
The learner will be able to
use technology for all aspects of creating, revising, editing, and publishing.
Strand |
Source |
Publishing |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.4.10
The learner will be able to
accumulate, review, and evaluate written work to determine its strengths and weaknesses and to set goals as a writer.
Strand |
Source |
Evaluating Writing |
IDOE |
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12.4.11
The learner will be able to
revise, edit, and proofread one's own writing, as well as that of others, using an editing checklist.
Strand |
Source |
Revising |
IDOE |
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12.4.12
The learner will be able to
further develop unique writing style and voice, improve sentence variety, and enhance subtlety of meaning and tone in ways that are consistent with the purpose, audience, and form of writing.
Strand |
Source |
Revising |
IDOE |
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Writing Applications
The learner will be able to
continue to combine the rhetorical strategies of narration, exposition, persuasion, and description; to produce reflective compositions, historical investigation reports, and job applications and résumés; and to deliver multimedia presentations. Student writing demonstrates a command of Standard English and the research, organizational, and drafting strategies outlined in Standard 4 - Writing Process. Writing demonstrates an awareness of the audience (intended reader) and purpose for writing.
Strand |
Source |
Writing Purposes |
IDOE |
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12.5.1
The learner will be able to
write fictional, autobiographical, or biographical narratives that:
ˇ narrate a sequence of events and communicate their significance to the audience.
ˇ locate scenes and incidents in specific places.
ˇ describe with specific details the sights, sounds, and smells of a scene and the specific actions, movements, gestures, and feelings of the characters; use interior monologue (what the character says silently to self) to show the character's feelings.
ˇ pace the presentation of actions to accommodate changes in time and mood.
Example: After reading from Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, write your own version of a traveler's tale.
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Strand |
Source |
Narrative |
IDOE |
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12.5.2
The learner will be able to
write responses to literature that:
ˇ demonstrate a comprehensive understanding of the significant ideas in works or passages.
ˇ analyze the use of imagery, language, universal themes, and unique aspects of the text.
ˇ support important ideas and viewpoints through accurate and detailed references to the text and to other works.
ˇ demonstrate an understanding of the author's style and an appreciation of the effects created.
ˇ identify and assess the impact of perceived ambiguities, nuances, and complexities within the text.
Example: Analyze the events, point of view, and characterization in Virginia Woolf's novel Mrs. Dalloway. Write an essay arguing whether or not criticism of her work is valid.
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Strand |
Source |
Writing Responses: Literature |
IDOE |
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12.5.3
The learner will be able to
write reflective compositions that:
ˇ explore the significance of personal experiences, events, conditions, or concerns by using rhetorical strategies, including narration, description, exposition, and persuasion.
ˇ draw comparisons between specific incidents and broader themes that illustrate the writer's important beliefs or generalizations about life.
ˇ maintain a balance in describing individual incidents and relate those incidents to more general and abstract ideas.
Example: Write a reflective essay for fellow students on the significance of family in one's life or on growing up at the turn of the 21st century. Make personal observations, but connect them to a larger theme of interest to your audience.
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Strand |
Source |
Writing Responses: Personal |
IDOE |
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12.5.4
The learner will be able to
write historical investigation reports that:
ˇ use exposition, narration, description, argumentation, or some combination of rhetorical strategies to support the main argument.
ˇ analyze several historical records of a single event, examining critical relationships between elements of the topic.
ˇ explain the perceived reason or reasons for the similarities and differences in historical records with information derived from primary and secondary sources to support or enhance the presentation.
ˇ include information from all relevant perspectives and take into consideration the validity and reliability of sources.
ˇ include a formal bibliography.
Example: Write a historical investigation report on the death of Diana, Princess of Wales. Include perspectives from newspapers or accounts of witnesses. Place the event into the larger societal context of the time, and indicate how or if the event has impacted the British and people from around the world.
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Strand |
Source |
Expository |
IDOE |
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12.5.5
The learner will be able to
write job applications and résumés that:
ˇ provide clear and purposeful information and address the intended audience appropriately.
ˇ use varied levels, patterns, and types of language to achieve intended effects and aid comprehension.
ˇ modify the tone to fit the purpose and audience.
ˇ follow the conventional style for that type of document (a résumé or cover letter of application) and use page formats, fonts (typefaces), and spacing that contribute to the readability and impact of the document.
Example: Respond to a classified advertisement for a position in a field of interest or complete an application for college. Include a résumé and a detailed cover letter, outlining your skills and their match to the requirements of the position or the school.
12.5.6 Use varied and extended vocabulary, appropriate for specific forms and topics.
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Strand |
Source |
Writing Purposes |
IDOE |
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12.5.6
The learner will be able to
use varied and extended vocabulary, appropriate for specific forms and topics.
Example: Avoid colloquialism in most formal writing because it borders on informality and may not be understood by all. Write: Residents were extremely upset when they saw their tornado-damaged neighborhood. Avoid writing the informal: Residents were pretty much beside themselves when they saw their tornado-damaged neighborhood.
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12.5.7
The learner will be able to
use precise technical or scientific language when appropriate for topic and audience.
Example: Use the vocabulary of a particular trade, profession, or group only when writing for that specific audience. An attorney would write: Wherefore, said Executrix prays that the Court enter an order authorizing the sale of said personal property pursuant to the provisions of I.C. 29-1-15-8. The same sentence without legal language would say: As the person appointed to handle the estate of someone who has died, I am asking the court for permission to sell some property that person owned.
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Strand |
Source |
Technical |
IDOE |
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12.5.8
The learner will be able to
deliver multimedia presentations that:
ˇ combine text, images, and sound and draw information from many sources, including television broadcasts, videos, films, newspapers, magazines, CD-ROMs, the Internet, and electronic media-generated images.
ˇ select an appropriate medium for each element of the presentation.
ˇ use the selected media skillfully, editing appropriately, and monitoring for quality.
ˇ test the audience's response and revise the presentation accordingly.
Example: Prepare a commencement presentation that will appeal to fellow graduates as well as their relatives and friends and to other students in the audience. Include clips of television broadcasts, videos, films, and music that were significant in some way to the class.
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Strand |
Source |
Media Aids: Multimedia |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.6.1
The learner will be able to
demonstrate control of grammar, diction, paragraph and sentence structure, and an understanding of English usage.
Strand |
Source |
Mechanics |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.6.2
The learner will be able to
produce writing that shows accurate spelling and correct punctuation and capitalization.
Strand |
Source |
Punctuation |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.6.3
The learner will be able to
apply appropriate manuscript conventions in writing including title page presentation, pagination, spacing and margins, and integration of source and support material, by citing sources within the text, using direct quotations, and paraphrasing.
Strand |
Source |
Publishing: Format |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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Listening and Speaking Skills
The learner will be able to
formulate thoughtful judgments about oral communication. They deliver focused and coherent presentations that convey clear and distinct perspectives and demonstrate solid reasoning. Students deliver polished formal and extemporaneous presentations that combine traditional speech strategies of narration, exposition, persuasion, and description. They use gestures, tone, and vocabulary appropriate to the audience and purpose. Students use the same Standard English conventions for oral speech that they use in their writing.
Strand |
Source |
Speech |
IDOE |
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12.7.1
The learner will be able to
summarize a speaker's purpose and point of view, discuss, and ask questions to draw interpretations of the speaker's content and attitude toward the subject.
Strand |
Source |
Speech |
IDOE |
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12.7.2
The learner will be able to
use rhetorical questions (questions asked for effect without an expected answer), parallel structure, concrete images, figurative language, characterization, irony, and dialogue to achieve clarity, force, and artistic effect.
Strand |
Source |
Presentation: Prepare |
IDOE |
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12.7.3
The learner will be able to
distinguish between and use various forms of logical arguments, including:
ˇ inductive arguments (arguments that are highly likely, such as All of these pears are from that basket and all of these pears are ripe, so all of the pears in the basket are ripe) and deductive arguments (arguments that are necessary conclusions based on the evidence, such as If all men are mortal and he is a man, then he is mortal). ˇ syllogisms and analogies (assumptions that if two things are similar in some ways then they are probably similar in others.)
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Strand |
Source |
Persuasion: Argument |
IDOE |
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12.7.4
The learner will be able to
use logical, ethical, and emotional appeals that enhance a specific tone and purpose.
Strand |
Source |
Main Idea/Support |
IDOE |
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12.7.5
The learner will be able to
use appropriate rehearsal strategies to pay attention to performance details, achieve command of the text, and create skillful artistic staging.
Strand |
Source |
Presentation: Prepare |
IDOE |
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12.7.6
The learner will be able to
use effective and interesting language, including informal expressions for effect, Standard English for clarity, and technical language for specificity.
Strand |
Source |
Language Conventions |
IDOE |
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12.7.7
The learner will be able to
use research and analysis to justify strategies for gesture, movement, and vocalization, including dialect, pronunciation, and enunciation.
Strand |
Source |
Speaking Strategies |
IDOE |
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12.7.8
The learner will be able to
evaluate when to use different kinds of effects (including visuals, music, sound, and graphics) to create effective productions.
Strand |
Source |
Presentation: Creative |
IDOE |
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12.7.9
The learner will be able to
analyze strategies used by the media to inform, persuade, entertain, and transmit culture (including advertisements; perpetuation of stereotypes; and the use of visual representations, special effects, and language).
Strand |
Source |
Mass Media |
IDOE |
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12.7.10
The learner will be able to
analyze the impact of the media on the democratic process (including exerting influence on elections, creating images of leaders, and shaping attitudes) at the local, state, and national levels.
Strand |
Source |
Mass Media |
IDOE |
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12.7.11
The learner will be able to
interpret and evaluate the various ways in which events are presented and information is communicated by visual image-makers (such as graphic artists, documentary filmmakers, illustrators, and news photographers).
Strand |
Source |
Mass Media |
IDOE |
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12.7.12
The learner will be able to
critique a speaker's use of words and language in relation to the purpose of an oral communication and the impact the words may have on the audience.
Strand |
Source |
Critical Listening |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.7.13
The learner will be able to
identify logical fallacies used in oral addresses including ad hominem (appealing to the audience's feelings or prejudices), false causality (falsely identifying the causes of some effect), red herring (distracting attention from the real issue), overgeneralization, bandwagon effect (attracting the audience based on the show rather than the substance of the presentation).
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Strand |
Source |
Critical Listening |
IDOE |
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12.7.14
The learner will be able to
analyze the four basic types of persuasive speech (propositions of fact, value, problem, and policy) and understand the similarities and differences in their patterns of organization and the use of persuasive language, reasoning, and proof.
Strand |
Source |
Persuasion |
IDOE |
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12.7.15
The learner will be able to
analyze the techniques used in media messages for a particular audience to evaluate effectiveness, and infer the speaker's character (using, for example, the Duke of Windsor's abdication speech).
Strand |
Source |
Media Message |
IDOE |
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12.7.16
The learner will be able to
deliver reflective presentations that:
ˇ explore the significance of personal experiences, events, conditions, or concerns, using appropriate speech strategies, including narration, description, exposition, and persuasion.
ˇ draw comparisons between the specific incident and broader themes and to illustrate beliefs or generalizations about life.
ˇ maintain a balance between describing the incident and relating it to more general, abstract ideas.
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Strand |
Source |
Presentation: Descriptive |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.7.17
The learner will be able to
deliver oral reports on historical investigations that:
ˇ use exposition, narration, description, persuasion, or some combination of those to support the thesis (the position on the topic).
ˇ analyze several historical records of a single event, examining each perspective on the event.
ˇ describe similarities and differences between research sources, using information derived from primary and secondary sources to support the presentation.
ˇ include information on all relevant perspectives and consider the validity (accuracy and truthfulness) and reliability (consistency) of sources.
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Strand |
Source |
Presentation: Expository |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.7.18
The learner will be able to
deliver oral responses to literature that:
ˇ demonstrate a comprehensive understanding of the significant ideas of literary works and make assertions about the text that are reasonable and supportable.
ˇ present an analysis of the imagery, language, universal themes, and unique aspects of the text through the use of speech strategies, including narration, description, persuasion, exposition, or a combination of those strategies.
ˇ support important ideas and viewpoints through specific references to the text and to other works.
ˇ demonstrate an awareness of the author's style and an appreciation of the effects created.
ˇ identify and assess the impact of ambiguities, nuances, and complexities within the text.
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Strand |
Source |
Speaking Responses |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.7.19
The learner will be able to
deliver multimedia presentations that: ˇ combine text, images, and sound by incorporating information from a wide range of media, including films, newspapers, magazines, CD-ROMs, online information, television, videos, and electronic media-generated images.
ˇ select an appropriate medium for each element of the presentation.
ˇ use the selected media skillfully, editing appropriately, and monitoring for quality.
ˇ test the audience's response and revise the presentation accordingly.
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Strand |
Source |
Media Aids: Multimedia |
IDOE |
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Instructional Resources |
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Assessment Resources |
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12.7.20
The learner will be able to
recite poems, selections from speeches, or dramatic soliloquies with attention to performance details to achieve clarity, force, and aesthetic effect and to demonstrate an understanding of the meaning (for example, stage a presentation of Hamlet's soliloquy "To Be or Not to Be" or Portia's soliloquy "The Quality of Mercy Is Not Strained" from The Merchant of Venice).
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Strand |
Source |
Poetry |
IDOE |
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Written English Language Conventions
The learner will be able to
write using Standard English conventions.
Strand |
Source |
Mechanics |
IDOE |
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