• The student uses the conventions and mechanics of written English to communicate clearly (1)
    • Employ written conventions appropriately such as capitalizing and punctuating for various forms.

    • Use correct spelling.

    • Produce error-free writing by demonstrating control over grammatical elements such as subject-verb agreement, pronoun-antecedent agreement, and appropriate verb forms.

    • Use varied sentence structures to express meanings and achieve desired effect.

    • Use appropriate vocabulary.

  • The student uses recursive writing processes as appropriate for self-initiated and assigned writing (2)
    • Apply prewriting strategies to generate ideas and plan.

    • Develop drafts by organizing ideas such as paragraphing, outlining, adding, and deleting.

    • Use vocabulary, sentence structure, organization, and rhetorical devices appropriate to audience and purpose.

    • Use effective sequence and transitions to achieve coherency.

    • Revise drafts by rethinking content, organization, and style to better accomplish the task.

    • Edit as appropriate for the conventions of standard written English such as grammar, spelling, punctuation, capitalization, and sentence structure in the final draft.

    • Use resources such as texts and other people as needed for proofreading, editing, and revising.

    • Use available technology for creating, revising, editing, and publishing texts.

  • The student reads and writes for a variety of audiences and purposes (3)
  • The student evaluates his/her own writing and the writing of others (4)
    • Evaluate how well writing achieves its purposes.

    • Analyze and discuss published pieces as writing models.

    • Review written work to determine its strengths and weaknesses and to set goals as a writer.

  • The student analyzes informational text (5)
    • Use effective reading strategies to determine a written work's purpose and intended audience.

    • Identify explicit and implicit textual information, including main ideas and author's purpose.

    • Draw and support complex inferences from text to distinguish facts from opinions.

    • Analyze the author's quality of evidence for an argument.

    • Evaluate the use of both literal and figurative language.

    • Analyze the audience and purpose of informational and persuasive text.

    • Analyze how an author's use of language creates imagery and mood.

    • Analyze insights gained from text to text, text to self, and text to world. August 2020 Update Page 31 §110.C. High School.

  • The student understands new vocabulary and concepts and uses them accurately in reading, speaking, and writing (6)
    • Apply knowledge of roots and affixes to infer the meanings of new words.

    • Use reference guides to confirm the meanings of new words and concepts.