District 11 Educational Support Services
Literacy & Language Arts


English 3, Overview
Course Number: EN.ENG3

Overview

Your sophomore year English course will include literature that presents different views of the world and people's experiences in the world around you. These multiple perspectives might come in the form of literature from different cultures and ethnicities, from different regions of the world, or from different philosophical views within our own borders. You will study texts of different genres -- from poetry and short stories, to novels, to nonfiction texts. As you explore these texts, you will also develop your own voice with a variety of writing opportunities: from writing your own personal narrative to writing persuasive papers or researching an aspect of the world around you, you'll "...write what should not be forgotten…"
~ Isabel Allende


Prerequisite: English 1, 2
Course Length: 2 semesters   Period Length: 1  Grade Level:  10   Credit per Semester: 1

 

For Teachers
Semester 3
Semester 4
Prerequisite
Next Course

Standards

Enduring Understandings - important ideas that students should carry with them years beyond the instruction received this year.

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Essential Questions - most important “big picture” questions students should be able to answer after completing learning activities.

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Colorado State Reading Standards

By the end of the sophomore year, students will be proficient and above in the following skills:

 

Standard 1 Students read and understand a variety of materials.

a Compare and contrast text with different themes or ideas.

b Interpret and critically read a variety of text (for example, essays, speeches, biography, literary, informative

and technical text).

c Analyze main ideas, supporting details, sequence of events or procedures, facts and opinions in literary,

expository, and technical texts.

d Infer by making connections within and among texts.

e Summarize, synthesize, and evaluate literary, expository, and technical texts.

f Determine meanings of words, including those with multiple meanings, by using context clues (for example,

synonyms, comparisons) and structural clues (for example, roots, suffixes, prefixes).

g Locate and recall information in text with different text structures (for example, cause and effect,

problems/solution, or compare/contrast).

Standard 4 Students apply thinking skills to their reading, speaking, listening, and viewing.

a Identify author's viewpoint, purpose, and historical/cultural context from information presented in the text.

b Use reading and writing to define a problem, evaluate options, and propose a solution.

c Evaluate the reliability, accuracy, and relevance of various texts (for example, literature, nonfiction, film, and

speeches).

d Analyze a variety of text (for example, editorials, political cartoons, advertisements, and essays) in order to

make predictions and draw conclusions.

e Evaluate the quality of ideas in a text by applying criteria and supporting the conclusion.

f Differentiate fact from opinion in a variety of text.

Standard 5 Students read to locate, select, and make use of relevant information from a variety of media, references, and technological sources.

a Use organizational features of printed text (for example, prefaces, appendices, annotations, citations, and

bibliographic references) to locate relevant information.

b Use organizational features of electronic text (for example, database keyword searches, Internet search

engines and e-mail addresses) to locate relevant information.

c Paraphrase, summarize, organize and synthesize information from a variety of sources.

d Evaluate information for specific needs, validity, credibility, and bias.

e Give credit for others' ideas, images, or information in an appropriate form.

f Locate meanings, pronunciations, and derivations of unfamiliar words using dictionaries, glossaries, and other sources.

Standard 6 Students read and recognize literature as a record of human experience.

a Read and respond to classic and contemporary novels, poetry, plays, short stories, non-fiction, essays and

speeches, from a variety of cultures and historical periods that are familiar and unfamiliar.

b Apply literary terminology and knowledge of literary techniques (including, but not limited to, rising action, style, mood,

setting, protagonist, antagonist, point of view, foreshadowing, personification, or flashback) to understand text.

c Read a given text, identify the theme, and provide support from the text.

d Develop and support a thesis about the craft and significance of particular works of literature.

Sample Units

August - September Unit

September Unit

October Personal Narrative Unit

October Expository Unit

November Unit

December Unit

Parents

 

Teacher Resources

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