LANGUAGE ARTS III - 8
Overview -
MAJOR TOPICS AND CONCEPTS -
Segment One –
- Explaining author’s purpose through diction and syntax
- Examining the ways literary elements interact
- Analyzing plot structure
- Tracking the development of two or more themes in literature
- Determining point of view and perspective
- Identifying symbolism in literary texts
- Uncovering word meanings through context clues
- Determining the central idea of a text
- Writing effective summaries
- Utilizing parallel structure in writing
- Examining informational text structures and features
- Locating credible sources based on bias, origin, and purpose
- Avoiding plagiarism
- Citing sources correctly
- Formatting the Works Cited page
- Using signal phrases and transitions in academic writing
- Writing effective informational introductions, body paragraphs, and conclusions
- Formulating thesis statements for academic writing
- Using precise language and domain-specific vocabulary
- Integrating interesting grammar to enhance voice
- Editing and revising with purpose
- Connecting the use of figurative language devices to a text’s meaning
- Identifying and correcting logical fallacies
- Using semicolons effectively
- Understanding active and passive voice
- Determining word meaning through affixes and root words
Segment One Advance –
- Analyzing sound devices and symbolism in poetry
- Researching and writing about an American folktale
- Paraphrasing rigorous literary texts
- Connecting historical context and setting to literary texts
Segment Two –
- Analyzing how rhetorical appeals and devices support an argument
- Planning and organizing an effective argument
- Identifying elements of an effective claim, counterclaim, and rebuttal
- Effectively supporting a claim with well-researched evidence
- Using elaborative details to communicate and clarify knowledge to an audience
- Analyzing how a poem’s use of structure and poetic devices affect the meaning
- Comparing archetypes across literature
- Identifying various types of narratives
- Clarifying point of view and perspective
- Tracking the development of conflict and theme
- Revising for parallel structure
- Using digital media to create a novel review
- Planning a narrative based on a plot archetype
- Using narrative techniques to enhance creative writing
Segment Two Advance –
- Creating a persuasive presentation using rhetorical appeals and devices
- Composing a narrative poem using poetic devices
- Delivering a student-written speech based on a fictional character’s perspective
Grade Level
Grade 8
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Annual
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None
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Requirements
All students select ONE novel below:
- Copper Sun by Sharon Draper
- The Outsiders by SE Hinton
- The Giver by Lois Lowry
- Hatchet by Gary Paulsen
or one short story below:
- “Cupid and Psyche” by Apuleius
- “The Gift of the Magi” by O. Henry
- “The Golden Touch” by Nathaniel Hawthorne
- “The Open Boat” by Stephen Crane
Advanced students select one additional novel below:
- Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
- Call of the Wild by Jack London
- The Hound of the Baskervilles by Arthur Conan Doyle