HOW TO READ A…Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer The Literacy Concept Organizers* were created to assist teachers in aligning their instruction to the Common Core State Standards in Literacy. These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. These Literacy Concept Organizers are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. Knowledge: Refers to information such as vocabulary terms, definitions, and facts that may or may not need explicit instruction, however, are the foundation on which the lesson will be built. Understandings: Refers to the important ideas, principles, and generalizations that allow students to make connections and see patterns and relationships among content. These are the goals of the instruction, outcomes you expect to achieve. Dos: Refers to demonstration of skills. These are the skills that require explicit instruction. By the completion of a lesson/unit, students should have mastered the selected skill(s). GRADE 6-8 Integration of Knowledge and Ideas Reading Standard 9 For Literacy in History/Social Studies College and Career Ready (CCR) Anchor Reading Standard for Literacy in History/Social Studies (9): Analyze how two or more texts address similar themes or topics in order to build knowledge or to compare the approaches the authors take. CCSS – Grade Level Reading Standard 9 (Literacy in History/Social Studies) This arrow indicates the CCSS of grade level prior to the grade level you are working. This allows you to see the progression of from grade to grade. These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Grade 6: Analyze the relationship between a primary and secondary source on the same topic. Grade 9-10: Compare and contrast treatments of the same topic in several primary and secondary sources. Grade 11-12: Integrate information from diverse sources, both primary and secondary, into a coherent understanding of an idea or event, nothing discrepancies among sources. KNOW UNDERSTAND DO (Factual) (Conceptual) (Procedural & Application) Informational text (both literary Authors of informational texts Develop research studies nonfiction and expository/technical make choices about what to Identify the relationship between a texts) include and how to present primary and secondary source on the information and key details on How to analyze same topic topics depending on their purpose. Identify the corroborating or conflicting Primary source Good readers make meaning of Secondary source information, facts, interpretations informational texts by analyzing Strengths and limitations of primary Identify the authors’ positions in the text how different authors shape their and secondary sources Describe how the authors’ choices reflect presentation of key information Compare/contrast their viewpoints, foci, attitudes, positions or by emphasizing different evidence Author’s viewpoint/ focus/ biases or advancing different attitude/bias Analyze the strengths and limitations of interpretations of facts. Author’s perspective (background) primary and secondary sources Good readers consult a variety of Author’s strategies for shaping sources when investigating a topic Analyze the relationship between a primary presentations (e.g., author’s and secondary source on the same topic or an event. choices to emphasize some information or advance different interpretations of facts) Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity CCSS-Grade Specific Standard 10 (Grade 6-8) By the end of grade 8, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in the grades 6-8 text complexity band independently and proficiently. Informational Text-Literary Nonfiction and Historical, Scientific, and Technical Texts Includes biographies and autobiographies; books about history, social studies, science, and the arts; technical texts, including directions, forms and information displayed in graphs, charts or maps; and digital sources on a range of topics The shaded areas highlight both the College and Career Readiness Anchor Reading Standard Key Ideas and Details and the CCSS for the grade level indicated. This arrow indicates the CCSS of grade level above the grade level you are working. This allows you to see the progression of from grade to grade. The Know, Understand and Do columns align to the shaded grade level. Reading Recursive Strategies: o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards. Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. GRADE 9-10-Key Ideas and Details Reading Standard 1 for Literacy in History/Social Studies College and Career Ready (CCR) Anchor Reading Standard for Literacy in History/Social Studies (1): Read closely to determine what the text says explicitly and to make logical inferences from it; cite specific textual evidence when writing or speaking to support conclusions drawn from the text. CCSS – Grade Level Reading Standard 1 (Literacy in History/Social Studies) Grade 6-8: Cite specific textual Grade 11-12: Cite specific Grade 9-10: Cite specific textual evidence to support analysis of textual evidence to support evidence to support analysis of primary and secondary sources. analysis of primary and primary and secondary sources, secondary sources, connecting attending to such features as the insights gained from specific date and origin of the information. details to an understanding of the text as a whole. Know Understand Do (factual) (conceptual) (procedural & application) Authors include key Differentiate between primary Informational text (historical, details in informational and secondary sources expository/technical texts) texts which can help a Recognize features that impact How to cite specific textual reader ask and answer the reliability of a source (e.g., evidence (e.g., offer proof from questions. date, origin of information ) primary and secondary sources) Describe the connection between Features that reflect the reliability Authors of informational the audience and the text of a source (e.g., date, origin of text(s) make specific Describe the connection between information) choices about the selection the author’s purpose and the text How to analyze (e.g., bias, of sources and use of Identify/cite and explain credibility, point of view, evidence. information from primary perspective) sources Audience Good readers/researchers Identify/cite and explain Purpose analyze the reliability of information from secondary Primary sources (including the information within a sources strengths and limitations) document/text. Supply strong and thorough Secondary sources (including textual support for analysis of a strengths and limitations) Good readers/researchers text Difference between primary and differentiate between Identify/cite appropriate text secondary sources strong and weak textual support for inferences evidence. Analyze primary sources for bias, credibility, point of view, Good readers/researchers perspective, purpose, date, and Reading Recursive Strategies: 2 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. respond to a variety of texts by drawing conclusions and citing textual evidence to show an understanding of what they read and how it connects to their lives. origin of information Analyze secondary sources for bias, credibility, point of view, perspective, purpose, date and origin of information Cite specific textual evidence to support analysis of primary and secondary sources, attending to such features as the date and origin of the information CCSS-Grade Specific Standard 10 (Grade 9-10) By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in the grades 9-10 text complexity band independently and proficiently. Informational Text-Literary Nonfiction and Historical, Scientific, and Technical Texts Includes biographies and autobiographies; books about history, social studies, science, and the arts; technical texts, including directions, forms and information displayed in graphs, charts or maps; and digital sources on a range of topics Reading Recursive Strategies: 3 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. GRADE 9-10-Key Ideas and Details Reading Standard 2 for Literacy in History/Social Studies College and Career Ready (CCR) Anchor Reading Standard for Literacy in History/Social Studies (2): Determine central ideas or themes of a text and analyze their development; summarize the key supporting details and ideas. CCSS – Grade Level Reading Standard 2 (Literacy in History/Social Studies) Grade 6-8: Determine the central Grade 11-12: Determine the Grade 9-10: Determine the ideas or information of a primary central ideas or information of a central ideas or information of a or secondary source; provide an primary or secondary source; primary or secondary source; accurate summary of the source provide an accurate summary that provide an accurate summary of distinct from prior knowledge or makes clear the relationships how key events or ideas develop opinions. among the key details and ideas. over the course of the text. Know Understand Do (factual) (conceptual) (procedural & application) Authors select Recognize how ideas are Informational text (historical, organizational patterns and organized in an informational expository/technical texts) support to convey their text Primary source(s) central idea(s). Identify primary sources Secondary source(s) Identify secondary sources Central/main idea Good readers/researchers Determine the central idea of an Key events/details use information from informational text Prior/background knowledge primary and secondary Describe or graphically Difference between central/main sources in informational represent the relationship ideas and key details/events in an text(s) to identify the between central ideas and informational text central idea(s). details/events Patterns of organization(e.g. sequence/ chronological order, Explain how the central ideas Good readers/researchers classification, definition, simple are supported by key details develop accurate process, description, comparison) Summarize the central ideas in summaries that capture the Different purposes for graphic an informational text, capturing central ideas of organizers, based on structure of the most important parts of the informational text and text excludes personal opinions piece distinct from personal Characteristics of an effective or judgments opinions or judgments summary (e.g., objective vs. Determine the central ideas or subjective) for informational information of a primary or texts secondary source; provide an accurate summary of how key events or ideas develop over the Reading Recursive Strategies: 4 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. course of the text. CCSS-Grade Specific Standard 10 (Grade 9-10) By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in the grades 9-10 text complexity band independently and proficiently. Informational Text-Literary Nonfiction and Historical, Scientific, and Technical Texts Includes biographies and autobiographies; books about history, social studies, science, and the arts; technical texts, including directions, forms and information displayed in graphs, charts or maps; and digital sources on a range of topics Reading Recursive Strategies: 5 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. GRADE 9-10-Key Ideas and Details Reading Standard 3 for Literacy in History/Social Studies College and Career Ready (CCR) Anchor Reading Standard for Literacy in History/Social Studies (3): Analyze how and why individuals, events, or ideas develop and interact over the course of a text. CCSS – Grade Level Reading Standard 3 (Literacy in History/Social Studies) Grade 6-8: Identify key steps in a Grade 9-10: Analyze in detail a Grade 11-12: Evaluate various text's description of a process explanations for actions or events series of events described in a related to history/social studies and determine which explanation text; determine whether earlier (e.g., how a bill becomes law, how events caused later ones or best accords with textual evidence, interest rates are raised or acknowledging where the text simply preceded them. lowered). leaves matters uncertain. Know Understand (factual) (conceptual) Authors of informational Informational text text(s) present (historical, expository/technical information/details in a texts) manner that reflects their How to analyze relationship(s) Cause/effect relationships Graphic Organizers/Aids (e.g., timelines, maps, graphs, pictures) Authors control information and their Patterns of organization (e.g., message through their chronological, sequential, choices of how cause/effect, problem/solution) information is presented Text features (e.g., bold, italics, and connected. color, captions, headings, subheadings, titles) Good readers/researchers How to identify the relationship analyze the relationships between events between/ among events in Connections and interactions order to determine whether (e.g., one event “explains” earlier events caused later another or influences another) ones or simply preceded Words that assist analysis and them. explanation (e.g., because, then, as a consequence, in contrast) of informational text(s) CCSS-Grade Specific Standard 10 (Grade 9-10) Do (procedural & application) Identify patterns of organization in informational and technical text(s) Identify text features Identify the sequence of events Interpret graphic organizers/aids (e.g., time line, maps, graphs, pictures) Identify the difference between cause and effect and how an effect can become a cause Identify causal relationships between/among events Make and explain logical inferences concerning cause/effect Analyze in detail a series of events described in a text; determine whether earlier events caused later ones or simply preceded them Reading Recursive Strategies: 6 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in the grades 9-10 text complexity band independently and proficiently. Informational Text-Literary Nonfiction and Historical, Scientific, and Technical Texts Includes biographies and autobiographies; books about history, social studies, science, and the arts; technical texts, including directions, forms and information displayed in graphs, charts or maps; and digital sources on a range of topics Reading Recursive Strategies: 7 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. GRADE 9-10-Craft and Structure Reading Standard 4 for Literacy in History/Social Studies College and Career Ready (CCR) Anchor Reading Standard for Literacy in History/Social Studies (4): Interpret words and phrases as they are used in a text, including determining technical, connotative, and figurative meanings, and analyze how specific word choices shape meaning or tone. CCSS – Grade Level Reading Standard 4 (Literacy in History/Social Studies) Grade 6-8: Determine the Grade 11-12: Determine the Grade 9-10: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as meaning of words and phrases as meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including they are used in a text, including they are used in a text, including vocabulary specific to domains analyzing how an author uses and vocabulary describing political, related to history/social studies. refines the meaning of a key term social, or economic aspects of over the course of a text (e.g., how history/social studies. Madison defines faction in Federalist No. 10). Know Understand Do (factual) (conceptual) (procedural & application) Authors of informational Read and reread other Informational text (historical, text(s) use domain- specific sentences, paragraphs, and nonexpository/technical texts) vocabulary to clarify linguistic images in an Word choice concepts. informational text to identify Context clues context clues that can be used Vocabulary specific to history Authors make purposeful to determine the meaning of (e.g., perspective, bias, word choices to achieve an unknown words credibility, point of view) intended effect within Use context clues to unlock the Vocabulary specific to geography informational text(s). meaning of unknown (e.g., hierarchy, accessibility, words/phrases diffusion, complementarity) Identify, determine the meaning Vocabulary specific to economics Good readers/researchers of, and use domain-specific (e.g., monetary policy, fiscal seek the meaning of terms policy, business cycle) unknown words/phrases to Determine the appropriate Vocabulary specific to civics deepen their understanding definition of words that have (e.g., ideology, public policy, of informational text(s). more than one meaning political parties) Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including vocabulary describing political, social, or economic aspects of Reading Recursive Strategies: 8 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. history/social studies CCSS-Grade Specific Standard 10 (Grade 9-10) By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in the grades 9-10 text complexity band independently and proficiently. Informational Text-Literary Nonfiction and Historical, Scientific, and Technical Texts Includes biographies and autobiographies; books about history, social studies, science, and the arts; technical texts, including directions, forms and information displayed in graphs, charts or maps; and digital sources on a range of topics Reading Recursive Strategies: 9 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. GRADE 9-10-Craft and Structure Reading Standard 5 for Literacy in History/Social Studies College and Career Ready (CCR) Anchor Reading Standard for Literacy in History/Social Studies (5): Analyze the structure of texts, including how specific sentences, paragraphs, and larger portions of the text (e.g., a section, chapter, scene, or stanza) relate to each other and the whole. CCSS – Grade Level Reading Standard 5 (Literacy in History/Social Studies) Grade 6-8: Describe how a text Grade 11-12: Analyze in detail how Grade 9-10: Analyze how a presents information (e.g., a complex primary source is text uses structure to sequentially, comparatively, structured, including how key emphasize key points or causally). sentences, paragraphs, and larger advance an explanation or portions of the text contribute to the analysis. whole. Know Understand Do (factual) (conceptual) (procedural & application) Authors select specific Informational text (historical, Identify text structures patterns of organization to Identify patterns of organization expository/technical texts) convey information. How to analyze Make connections between Difference between explain and author’s choice of text structure Author’ choices, including analyze and the text’s purpose, key patterns of organization, points, and central idea(s) Key points structure, and text features, Explain how organization, Various text structures (e.g., control the central idea structure and/or features enhance sentences, paragraph, chapter, and the readers’ text’s purpose and central idea section) perceptions. Analyze how a text uses structure Various patterns of organization to emphasize key points or ( e.g., sequence/chronological Good readers/researchers advance an explanation or order, classification, definition, use their knowledge of analysis process, description, comparison, organizational patterns in problem/ solution, simple informational text(s) in cause/effect, conflict/resolution) order to make meaning. Various text features (e.g., title, author, cover, pictures, captions, maps, chapter headings, information from charts and graphs, illustrations, glossaries, indices) Difference between patterns of organization and text features Reading Recursive Strategies: 10 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. Relationships between parts of text and whole text (as indicated by text features and structures) CCSS-Grade Specific Standard 10 (Grade 9-10) By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in the grades 9-10 text complexity band independently and proficiently. Informational Text-Literary Nonfiction and Historical, Scientific, and Technical Texts Includes biographies and autobiographies; books about history, social studies, science, and the arts; technical texts, including directions, forms and information displayed in graphs, charts or maps; and digital sources on a range of topics Reading Recursive Strategies: 11 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. GRADE 9-10-Craft and Structure Reading Standard 6 for Literacy in History/Social Studies College and Career Ready (CCR) Anchor Reading Standard for Literacy in History/Social Studies (6): Assess how point of view or purpose shapes the content and style of a text. CCSS – Grade Level Reading Standard 6 (Literacy in History/Social Studies) Grade 6-8: Identify aspects of a text Grade 9-10: Compare the point Grade 11-12: Evaluate authors' that reveal an author's point of view of view of two or more authors differing points of view on the or purpose (e.g., loaded language, same historical event or issue by for how they treat the same or inclusion or avoidance of particular similar topics, including which assessing the authors' claims, facts). reasoning, and evidence. details they include and emphasize in their respective accounts. Know Understand Do (factual) (conceptual) (procedural & application) Authors use distinctive Informational text Explain the author’s overall language (e.g., rhetorical (historical, expository/technical purpose (to inform, to devices) to influence the texts) persuade, to explain how) for audience and/or create an writing a text How to compare effect that will enhance their Explain how the author’s How to contrast purpose. choices reflect his/her Relevant details viewpoint, focus, attitude, Informational text (both literary Good readers recognize that position or bias nonfiction and authors use rhetoric to Compare/contrast the point of expository/technical texts) advance the viewpoint or view of two or more authors How to analyze purpose of informational on the same or similar topics Author’s purposes (to inform, to text(s). Explain how point of view, persuade, to explain how) for viewpoint, purpose and writing a text Authors achieve their perspective affect an Point of view (e.g., first person, purpose by controlling what informational text (controls the third person, limited, omniscient) the reader knows through the message/information) Author’s viewpoint/focus/ choices they make (e.g., Analyze the impact of attitude/ bias content, point of view, style, including and emphasizing Author’s perspective word choice). certain details into two or (background) more accounts of the same or Author’s strategies for Good readers/ researchers similar topics developing viewpoint and analyze informational text(s) Analyze the author’s use of purpose (e.g., author’s choices to better understand and persuasive techniques, about when and how to develop evaluate the author’s rhetorical devices, logical Reading Recursive Strategies: 12 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. information; what information to include or exclude) Conflicting evidence or viewpoints Responses to opposing viewpoints (e.g., acknowledge, concede, rebut) viewpoint/attitude and purpose. fallacies, etc. Determine an author's point of view or purpose in a text and analyze how an author uses rhetoric to advance that point of view or purpose Compare the point of view of two or more authors for how they treat the same or similar topics, including which details they include and emphasize in their respective accounts. Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity CCSS-Grade Specific Standard 10 (Grade 9-10) By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in the grades 9-10 text complexity band independently and proficiently. Informational Text-Literary Nonfiction and Historical, Scientific, and Technical Texts Includes biographies and autobiographies; books about history, social studies, science, and the arts; technical texts, including directions, forms and information displayed in graphs, charts or maps; and digital sources on a range of topics Reading Recursive Strategies: 13 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. GRADE 9-10- Integration of Knowledge and Ideas Reading Standard 7 for Literacy in History/Social Studies College and Career Ready (CCR) Anchor Reading Standard for Literacy in History/Social Studies (7): Integrate and evaluate content presented in diverse formats and media, including visually and quantitatively, as well as in words. CCSS – Grade Level Reading Standard 7 (Literacy in History/Social Studies) Grade 6-8: Integrate visual Grade 11-12: Integrate and evaluate Grade 9-10: Integrate information (e.g., in charts, graphs, multiple sources of information quantitative or technical photographs, videos, or maps) with presented in diverse formats and analysis (e.g., charts, other information in print and digital media (e.g., visually, quantitatively, research data) with texts. as well as in words) in order to qualitative analysis in print address a question or solve a or digital text. problem. Know Understand Do (factual) (conceptual) (procedural & application) Develop and use research Informational text (both literary Authors make decisions strategies nonfiction and about their presentation of Distinguish between relevant and expository/technical texts) information in order to irrelevant information convey a specific message. How to analyze Compare how different Difference between relevant and text/media present information Good readers’ and viewers’ irrelevant information about the same subject understandings and Quantitative and/or technical Identify aspects of text/media perceptions of a topic or analysis (e.g., numbers, data, that reveal an author’s idea are affected by the statistics) purpose/intention ways in which information Qualitative analysis (e.g., human Analyze the way quantitative and or details are selectively behavior, reasons, non-numerical) technical analysis support the presented. Text and topic/message qualitative analysis Author’s purpose /intention Analyze the details included Creators and presenters of Audiences’ needs (and excluded) in different written and visual text versions of an account choose details to present a Integrate quantitative or technical particular topic or idea analysis with qualitative analysis relevant for a specific in print or digital text audience and purpose. Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity CCSS-Grade Specific Standard 10 (Grade 9-10) By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in the grades 9-10 text complexity band independently and proficiently. Reading Recursive Strategies: 14 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. Informational Text-Literary Nonfiction and Historical, Scientific, and Technical Texts Includes biographies and autobiographies; books about history, social studies, science, and the arts; technical texts, including directions, forms and information displayed in graphs, charts or maps; and digital sources on a range of topics Reading Recursive Strategies: 15 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. GRADE 9-10- Integration of Knowledge and Ideas Reading Standard 8 for Literacy in History/Social Studies College and Career Ready (CCR) Anchor Reading Standard for Literacy in History/Social Studies (8): Delineate and evaluate the argument and specific claims in a text, including the validity of the reasoning as well as the relevance and sufficiency of the evidence. CCSS – Grade Level Reading Standard 8 (Literacy in History/Social Studies) Grade 6-8: Distinguish among fact, Grade 11-12: Evaluate an author's Grade 9-10: Assess the opinion, and reasoned judgment in a premises, claims, and evidence by extent to which the text. corroborating or challenging them reasoning and evidence in a with other information. text support the author's claims. Know Understand Do (factual) (conceptual) (procedural & application) Authors sometimes use Identify the author’s argument Informational text (both literary fallacious or invalid and specific claims nonfiction and reasoning, irrelevant Identify (e.g., by telling, expository/technical texts) and/or insufficient writing, graphically How to trace/delineate an evidence, and/or false representing) author’s argument and specific statements to support reasons/examples/evidence that claims their arguments and support the author’s argument How to evaluate/assess an claims in order to and specific claims author’s argument and specific promote their ideas or Differentiate between claims claims agenda. which are supported by Relevant vs. irrelevant details reasons/evidence and those Relevant, sufficient reasons/ Good readers recognize which are not evidence when and why authors Differentiate between valid and Sound/logical/justified reasoning use fallacious reasoning invalid claims Rhetorical strategies for and false statements in Identify sound reasoning persuasion (e.g., logos, ethos, their arguments. Identify false statements and pathos) fallacious reasoning in an Relevant, sufficient evidence argument Arguments Recognize when irrelevant Valid vs. invalid claims evidence is introduced False statements Explain how an author uses Persuasive techniques/fallacious reasons and evidence to support reasoning (e.g., loaded particular arguments and language/emotional words, specific claims in a text, testimonial, snob appeal, identifying which reasons and repetition, name calling Reading Recursive Strategies: 16 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. bandwagon, red herring, propaganda, appeal to authority) evidence support which point(s) Assess the extent to which the reasoning and evidence in a text support the author's claims Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity CCSS-Grade Specific Standard 10 (Grade 9-10) By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in the grades 9-10 text complexity band independently and proficiently. Informational Text-Literary Nonfiction and Historical, Scientific, and Technical Texts Includes biographies and autobiographies; books about history, social studies, science, and the arts; technical texts, including directions, forms and information displayed in graphs, charts or maps; and digital sources on a range of topics Reading Recursive Strategies: 17 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. GRADE 9-10- Integration of Knowledge and Ideas Reading Standard 9 for Literacy in History/Social Studies College and Career Ready (CCR) Anchor Reading Standard for Literacy in History/Social Studies (9): Analyze how two or more texts address similar themes or topics in order to build knowledge or to compare the approaches the authors take. CCSS – Grade Level Reading Standard 9 (Literacy in History/Social Studies) Grade 6-8: Analyze the relationship Grade 11-12: Integrate information Grade 9-10: Compare and between a primary and secondary from diverse sources, both primary contrast treatments of the source on the same topic. and secondary, into a coherent same topic in several understanding of an idea or event, primary and secondary noting discrepancies among sources. sources. Know Understand Do (factual) (conceptual) (procedural & application) Authors of informational Develop research strategies Informational text (both literary texts make choices about Identify the relationship between nonfiction and what to include and how a primary and secondary source expository/technical texts) to present information on the same topic How to analyze and key details on topics Identify the corroborating or Primary source depending on their conflicting information, facts, Secondary source purpose. interpretations Strengths and limitations of Identify the authors’ positions in primary and secondary sources Good readers make the text Compare/contrast meaning of informational Describe how the authors’ choices Author’s viewpoint/ focus/ texts by analyzing how reflect their viewpoints, foci, attitude/bias different authors shape attitudes, positions or biases Author’s perspective their presentation of key Analyze the strengths and (background) information by limitations of primary and Author’s strategies for shaping emphasizing different secondary sources presentations (e.g., author’s evidence or advancing Compare and contrast treatments choices to emphasize some different interpretations of the same topic in several information or advance different of facts. primary and secondary sources interpretations of facts) Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity CCSS-Grade Specific Standard 10 (Grade 9-10) By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in the grades 9-10 text complexity band independently and proficiently. Informational Text-Literary Nonfiction and Historical, Scientific, and Technical Texts Includes biographies and autobiographies; books about history, social studies, science, and the arts; technical texts, including directions, forms and information displayed in graphs, charts or maps; and digital sources on a range of Reading Recursive Strategies: 18 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012 Delaware Literacy Concept Organizer These Literacy Concept Organizers are not replacements for teachers’ individual units. They are deconstructions of the Common Core State Standards. They are a resource from which teachers can select appropriate Knowledge, Understandings, and Dos to develop their own unit(s) of instruction. topics Reading Recursive Strategies: 19 o Assimilating prior knowledge o Rereading to clarify information o Seeking meaning of unknown vocabulary o Making and revising predictions o Using critical and divergent thinking and assimilating prior knowledge to draw conclusions o Making connections and responding to text These recursive strategies are the basic reading strategies that students must know and use to become successful readers. Some of the strategies are not explicitly stated in the Common Core State Standards for ELA. Reformatted by the Oregon Department of Education February, 2012