Maine State Standards for Language Arts: Grade 7

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ME.A. Reading: Students read to comprehend, interpret, analyze, evaluate, and appreciate literary and expository texts by using a variety of strategies. They connect essential ideas, evaluate arguments, and analyze the various perspectives and ideas presented in a variety of literary and expository texts.

A.1. Interconnected Elements: Comprehension, Vocabulary, Alphabetics, Fluency: Students read and make generalizations from texts, within a grade appropriate span of text complexity, by applying their knowledge and strategies of comprehension, vocabulary, alphabetics, and fluency.

A.1.a. Use a range of before, during, and after reading strategies to deepen their understanding of text(s).

A.1.b. Demonstrate ownership of appropriate vocabulary by effectively using a word in different contexts and for different purposes.

A.1.c. Determine the meaning of unknown words by using a variety of strategies including understanding and explaining that similar and related words can express different shades of meaning.

A.1.d. Use the origins and meanings of foreign words that are frequently used in English to aid comprehension as they read.

A.1.e. Fluently and accurately read text, within a grade appropriate span of text complexity, using appropriate pacing, phrasing, intonation, and expression.

A.1.f. Demonstrate comprehension by summarizing, generalizing, drawing conclusions, making judgments, and making connections between prior knowledge and multiple texts.

A.2. Literary Texts: Students read fiction, nonfiction, drama, and poetry, within a grade appropriate span of text complexity, and analyze the characteristics noting how structural features and common literary devices help shape the reader's response.

A.2.a. Analyze an author's characterization techniques including the character's thoughts, words, and actions; the narrator's description; and the thoughts, words, and actions of other characters.

A.2.b. Identify events that advance the plot and determine how each event explains past or present action or foreshadows future action.

A.2.c. Contrast points of view including first person, third person, limited and omniscient in a literary text.

A.2.d. Identify the relationship between the use of literary devices and a writer's style to understand the text.

A.2.e. Compare how similar themes are presented in different works.

A.2.f. Identify how meaning is conveyed in poetry through word choice, sentence structure, line length, and punctuation.

A.2.g. Analyze the characteristics of various genres of literature and their purposes.

A.3. Informational Texts: Students read various informational texts, within a grade appropriate span of text complexity, making decisions about usefulness based on purpose, noting how the text structures affect the information presented.

A.3.a. Create and revise questions that can be answered by using text structures and information found within texts.

A.3.b. Analyze the amount of coverage and organization of ideas in varied informational materials.

A.3.c. Draw conclusions about a text and its purpose, and support them with evidence from the text.

A.3.d. Make comparisons about information from several passages or articles from different texts.

A.3.e. Follow multi-step instructions in a technical manual or content area text to complete a task or use a simple device.

A.4. Persuasive Texts: Students evaluate the information in persuasive texts, within a grade appropriate span of text complexity, noting how the structural features and rhetorical devices affect the information and argument(s) presented in these texts.

A.4.a. Recognize organizational patterns of compare/contrast, proposition/support, and problem/solution in an argument to aid comprehension.

A.4.b. Identify and use ways to detect bias.

A.4.c. Identify problems with an author's use of figures of speech, logic, or reasoning.

A.4.d. Make reasonable judgments about a text through accurate, supporting evidence.

A.4.e. Identify purpose and intended audience of a text.

A.4.f. Identify rhetorical devices an author uses to persuade the reader including bandwagon, peer pressure, repetition, testimonial, hyperbole, and loaded words.

ME.B. Writing: Students write to express their ideas and emotions, to describe their experiences, to communicate information, and to present or analyze an argument.

B.1. Interconnected Elements: Students use a writing process to communicate for a variety of audiences and purposes.

B.1.a. Determine a purpose for writing.

B.1.b. Decide which information is included to achieve the desired purpose.

B.1.c. Revise drafts to improve focus, effect, and voice incorporating peer response when appropriate.

B.1.d. Edit for correct grammar, usage, and mechanics.

B.1.e. Write to achieve a specific purpose.

B.1.f. Create legible final drafts.

B.2. Narrative: Students write narratives that convey complex ideas, observations, events, or reflections.

B.2.a. Establish a plot or other narrative structure, point of view, setting, and conflict.

B.2.b. Develop characters.

B.2.c. Use a range of narrative strategies for effect including dialogue and suspense.

B.2.d. Use stylistic devices including figurative language and point of view to clarify, enhance, and develop ideas.

B.3. Argument/Analysis: Students write academic essays that state a clear position, supporting the position with relevant evidence.

B.3.a. Summarize and paraphrase and/or explain information from reading, listening, or viewing.

B.3.b. Write essays that support an idea and build a logical argument excluding extraneous information and differentiating between facts and opinions.

B.4 Persuasive: Students write persuasive essays addressed to a specific audience for a particular purpose.

B.4.a. Employ a variety of persuasive techniques, including presenting alternate views objectively or addressing potential counterclaims, in an essay that supports an idea using facts, supported inferences, and/or opinions appropriate to the audience and purpose and is intended to influence the opinions, beliefs, or positions of others.

B.5. Practical Application: Students write simple business letters and documents related to career development.

B.5.a. Write information purposefully and succinctly to meet the needs of the audience.

B.5.b. Write to convey specific requests for detailed information.

B.5.c. Follow a conventional format for writing resumes, memoranda, and/or proposals.

B.5.d. Write multi-step directions, with annotation where appropriate, for completing a task.

ME.C. Research: Students engage in inquiry by developing research questions, accessing and verifying a variety of sources, communicating findings, and applying the conventions of documentation. Students present findings orally, in writing, or using mixed media.

C.1. Research: Students propose and revise research questions, collect information from a wide variety of primary and/or secondary sources, and follow the conventions of documentation to communicate findings.

C.1.a. Determine the nature and extent of information needed.

C.1.b. Locate and access relevant information.

C.1.c. Demonstrate facility with note-taking, organizing information, and creating bibliographies.

C.1.d. Distinguish between primary and secondary sources.

C.1.e. Evaluate and verify the credibility of the information found in print and non-print sources.

C.1.f. Use additional sources to resolve contradictory information.

C.1.g. Summarize and interpret information presented in varied sources, and/or from fieldwork, experiments, and interviews.

C.1.h. Present findings by paraphrasing, quoting sources, and using proper citation.

C.1.i. Use information ethically and legally.

ME.D. Language: Students write and speak using the conventions of Standard American English. They apply knowledge of grammar and usage when reading to aid comprehension. They know and apply rules of mechanics and spelling to enhance the effectiveness and clarity of communication.

D.1. Grammar and Usage: Students manipulate the parts of speech effectively and employ a variety of sentence structures to communicate.

D.1.a. Use forms of nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives and their modifiers, adverbs, prepositions, transitions, conjunctions, and interjections correctly.

D.1.b. Use compound complex sentences.

D.1.c. Use active and passive voices effectively.

D.2. Mechanics: Students apply the rules of capitalization, punctuation, and spelling to communicate effectively.

D.2.a. Use correct capitalization and punctuation including commas and semi-colons.

D.2.b. Correctly spell frequently misspelled words and common homophones.

ME.E. Listening and Speaking: Students listen to comprehend and speak to communicate effectively.

E.1. Listening: Students adjust listening strategies to understand formal and informal discussion, debates or presentations and then apply the information.

E.1.a. Ask appropriate clarifying questions.

E.1.b. Summarize and apply information presented.

E.1.c. Acknowledge and build upon the ideas of others.

E.2. Speaking: Students adjust speaking strategies for formal and informal discussions, debates, or presentations appropriate to the audience and purpose.

E.2.a. Organize and present information logically.

E.2.b. Adjust volume, tone, eye contact, and gestures to suit the audience.

E.2.c. Use conventions of Standard American English.

E.2.d. Seek feedback and revise to improve effectiveness of communication.

E.2.e. Select appropriate media, relevant to audience and purpose that support oral, written, and visual communication.

ME.F. Media: Students recognize and can explain the effects that both print and non-print sources have on listeners, viewers, and readers, in order to develop an awareness of the effects that the media have on forming opinions and making decisions.

F.1. Analysis of Media: Students identify the various purposes, techniques, and/or effects used to communicate auditory, visual, and written information found in different forms of media.

F.1.a. Describe and evaluate the text features of visual and non-visual media.

F.1.b. Explain the role of the media in shaping opinions.

F.1.c. Note instances of bias, stereotyping, and propaganda.

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