Standards
Enduring Understandings - important ideas that students should carry
with them years beyond the instruction received this year.
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Different strategies and skills are required to
understand a variety of materials.
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People apply critical thinking skills when reading,
writing, speaking, listening, and viewing.
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People access, read, evaluate, and use a variety of
resources to get information.
Essential Questions - most important “big picture” questions students should
be able to answer after completing learning activities.
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What does it mean to "understand"? Why do we need to understand what we read
or hear?
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How do we use strategies and skills to
understand a variety of materials?
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What is critical thinking? Why is critical thinking important?
How do we apply critical thinking skills?
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Why do I need a variety of resources? How do I access
information and use it responsibly? How do I evaluate resources?
CSAP
Tested Standards
Highest Frequency
High
Frequency
Other
Standards & E-skills
Fluency:
Use
word recognition skills, strategies (e.g., predict) and resources to
include, context clues, phonemic awareness, and structural analysis to
decode. Apply word attack to read new and unfamiliar words.
Standard 1: Comprehension
Students read and understand a variety of materials.
c. Locate and
paraphrase the key/main ideas and supporting details in fiction and
non-fiction.
d. Infer using
contextual clues.
f. Locate and recall
information in text with different structures (for example, cause and
effect, enumeration, and time order).
g. Identify the
meaning or unfamiliar words in context using word recognition skills and
context clues.
Students
will use a range of strategies to build oral and reading vocabulary to
include sight words and multi-syllabic words.
Fifth
grade students will read all Kindergarten, First Grade, Second Grade, Third
Grade, Fourth Grade and: At the end of quarter two, students will be able to
read 110 of these sight words.
Standard 4: Thinking Skills
Students apply thinking skills to their reading, speaking,
listening, and viewing.
a. Determine
author’s purpose.
c.
Differentiate fact from opinion.
d. Make
predictions and draw conclusions from text in various genre.
Standard 5: Research 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, page numbering, alphabetizing,
glossaries, chapter heading, changes in print, table of contents, indexes,
captions) to locate information.
b. Use organizational
features of electronic information (for example, keyword searches and icons)
to locate information.
c. Summarize and
organize information about a topic in a variety of ways (for example,
graphic organizer, Venn diagram, outline, time line) from references,
technical sources, and media.
Standard 6: Literature
Students read and recognize literature as a record of human
experience.
b. Identify
characters, setting, problem/conflict, action/plot/events,
resolution/solution, theme, and sequence in literature.
c. Use knowledge
of literary techniques and terminology (for example, foreshadowing and
figurative language) to understand the text.
State Standards and Frameworks for Writing
Standard 2:
a. Write in a
variety of modes such as narrative, expository or descriptive for various
audiences and purposes (for example, to entertain or to inform).
b. Organize writing
using a logical arrangement of ideas.
c.
Select and use clear and precise language.
d. Plan, draft, revise,
and edit for a final copy.
e.
Use transitions to link ideas.
f.
Select and use a variety of sentence structures.
Standard 3:
b. Use correctly
subject/verb agreement, nouns, verbs, pronouns, and adjectives.
c.
Write in complete sentences.
d. Use conventions correctly (for example, commas, quotation marks in
dialogue, end marks, apostrophes in contractions, capitalization, and
abbreviations).
Know and use
capitalization and punctuation: in a simple sentence, in a quotation, commas
and end punctuation.
e.
Identify and use accurate spelling; spelling errors in writing do not impede
communication.
Go to
4th/5th Grade Rubric
During the 2007-2008 school year, Literacy Resource Teachers and
classroom teachers will be correlating textbook pages to the emphasized standards
for each month. Also, teachers will be developing District 11
Diamond Lessons for each quarter.
Reading Programs
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McMillan McGraw Hill |
Open Court |
Scholastic |
Scott Foresman |
Pearson |
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Writing Programs
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Writers Advantage |
Lucy Calkins |
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