Write arguments to support claims in an analysis of substantive topics or… | Students write a formal argument on a real topic or text, backing their position with clear reasoning and specific evidence that actually supports the point they're making. | W.11-12.1 |
Introduce precise, knowledgeable claim | Students open an argument by stating a clear position, explaining why it matters, and acknowledging what someone on the other side might say. The rest of the piece follows a logical order that holds the whole argument together. | W.11-12.1.a |
Develop claim(s) and counterclaims fairly and thoroughly, supplying the most… | Students build their argument by backing up their main position with solid evidence, then honestly addressing the strongest objection to it. They consider what the reader already believes and where that reader might push back. | W.11-12.1.b |
Use words, phrases, and clauses as well as varied syntax to link the major… | Students choose words and sentence structures that connect a claim to its supporting reasons and push back against opposing views. The goal is for a reader to follow the argument without getting lost. | W.11-12.1.c |
Establish and maintain a formal style and objective tone while attending to the… | Students keep their writing formal and objective from start to finish, matching the tone and conventions expected in that subject area, whether history, science, or another discipline. | W.11-12.1.d |
Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from and supports the… | The final paragraph ties back to the argument and leaves the reader with a clear sense of why it matters. Students don't just stop writing; they close with something that holds the whole piece together. | W.11-12.1.e |
Write informative/explanatory texts to examine and convey complex ideas… | Students write essays or reports that explain a complex topic clearly, using well-chosen facts and examples organized to help the reader actually follow the thinking. | W.11-12.2 |
Introduce a topic; organize complex ideas, concepts | The opening of an informational piece sets up the topic and maps out what follows. Students organize ideas so each paragraph builds on the last, then add headings, charts, or other visuals where they help a reader follow along. | W.11-12.2.a |
Develop the topic thoroughly by selecting the most significant and relevant… | Students pick the details that actually matter for their readers, cutting anything that doesn't help the audience understand the topic. That means choosing the right facts, quotes, and examples, not just any that fit. | W.11-12.2.b |
Use appropriate and varied transitions and syntax to link the major sections of… | Students choose transition words and vary their sentence structure to connect big ideas across a piece of writing, so the logic flows from one section to the next without gaps. | W.11-12.2.c |
Use precise language, domain-specific vocabulary | Students choose words carefully when explaining a complex topic, reaching for specific terms from the subject and comparisons like metaphors or analogies to make the idea land clearly for a reader. | W.11-12.2.d |
Establish and maintain a formal style and objective tone while attending to the… | Students practice writing in a neutral, professional voice that fits the subject, whether that's a lab report, a literary analysis, or a history essay. The tone stays consistent and avoids personal opinion unless the assignment calls for it. | W.11-12.2.e |
Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from and supports the… | Students end an informational piece with a conclusion that wraps up the explanation and says why the topic matters, not just that the paper is finished. | W.11-12.2.f |
Use narrative writing to develop real or imagined experiences or events using… | Students write a story or personal narrative with a clear sequence of events, specific details that bring scenes to life, and techniques like dialogue or pacing to hold the reader's attention. | W.11-12.3 |
Engage and orient the reader by setting out a problem, situation | Narrative writing that pulls readers in from the first line. Students open with a clear situation or problem that matters, establish who's telling the story, and build events in an order that feels natural and keeps readers moving forward. | W.11-12.3.a |
Use narrative techniques, such as dialogue, pacing, description, reflection | Students use tools like dialogue, pacing, and description to make a story feel real. Characters breathe, scenes slow down or speed up, and events connect in ways that hold a reader's attention. | W.11-12.3.b |
Use a variety of techniques to sequence events so that they build on one… | Students arrange scenes and details in an order that builds tension or feeling as the story moves forward. Each moment sets up the next, so the ending lands with weight. | W.11-12.3.c |
Use precise words and phrases, telling details | Students choose words that put the reader inside the scene: a cold that stings, a voice that goes quiet, a room that smells like rain. The goal is writing specific enough that a stranger can picture exactly what happened. | W.11-12.3.d |
Provide a conclusion that follows from and reflects on what is experienced… | Students write an ending that grows naturally out of what happened in the story. The conclusion doesn't just stop the narrative; it shows what the events meant. | W.11-12.3.e |
Produce clear and coherent writing in which the development, organization, style | Students write pieces that match the job: the topic, the reader, and the format all fit together. A college-level argument looks different from a personal essay, and students learn to make those choices on purpose. | W.11-12.4 |
Develop and strengthen writing as needed by planning, revising, editing… | Students plan, draft, revise, and edit their writing with a clear sense of who will read it and why. Each round of changes focuses on what matters most for that reader and purpose. | W.11-12.5 |
Use technology, including the Internet, to produce, publish | Students use online tools to publish writing and revise it over time as they get new feedback, new facts, or stronger arguments to work with. | W.11-12.6 |
Conduct short as well as more sustained research projects to answer a question | Students research a question in depth, pulling from multiple sources to build a real answer. They adjust the focus as they go, narrowing or widening the question when the evidence calls for it. | W.11-12.7 |
Gather relevant information from multiple authoritative print and digital… | Students find reliable sources, weigh what each one does and doesn't prove, then weave the strongest details into their writing. Every borrowed idea is cited, and no single source does all the work. | W.11-12.8 |
Draw evidence from literary or informational texts to support analysis… | Students pull direct quotes and specific details from books, articles, or other sources to back up their own thinking in a piece of writing. The evidence has to connect clearly to the point they are making. | W.11-12.9 |
Apply grades 11–12 Reading standards to literature | Students read older American literature, such as stories or essays from the 1700s through early 1900s, and write about how two works from the same era handle a shared theme. The writing shows they understood the reading. | W.11-12.9.a |
Apply grades 11–12 Reading standards to literary nonfiction | Students read landmark speeches, court opinions, and essays, then use those same sources as evidence in their own writing. They trace the author's reasoning, test its logic, and show in writing whether the argument holds up. | W.11-12.9.b |
Write routinely over extended time frames | Students write regularly, both in quick single-sitting assignments and in longer projects that take days of planning and revision. The goal is comfort and flexibility across different topics, purposes, and readers. | W.11-12.10 |