Independently and proficiently read and comprehend texts representing a balance… | Students read full novels, essays, and articles on their own at an 11th-grade level, covering a range of subjects, voices, and backgrounds. The focus is on building the reading stamina and skill needed for college-level work. | 11-12.RC.1 |
Regularly engage in a volume of reading, texts independently, with peers | Students read widely around the topics they're studying, on their own or with a partner, to build real knowledge and vocabulary. The reading itself is the work. | 11-12.RC.2 |
Draw and cite strong and thorough evidence from grade-level texts to support… | Students pull direct quotes and details from a text to back up what they say about it. They also notice when an author's argument has a hole in it or contradicts itself. | 11-12.RC.3 |
Read grade-level text with accuracy, automaticity, appropriate rate | Students practice reading grade-level passages aloud until the words come smoothly and the pacing fits the meaning. Reading with that kind of fluency helps comprehension click into place. | 11-12.RC.4 |
Use evidence from literature to demonstrate understanding of grade-level texts | Students read a piece of literature and pull specific lines or details from the text to back up what they say about it. The focus is on showing their thinking with proof from the story or poem, not just stating an opinion. | 11-12.RC.5 |
Compare the development of a universal theme over the course of two texts… | Students read two works of literature and trace how both build toward the same big idea, such as loss or justice, watching how each author's specific details push that idea in a different direction. | 11-12.RC.5.a |
Evaluate the choices authors make regarding how to develop and relate several… | Students look at how an author builds characters and sequences events, then judge whether those choices make the story work. This includes asking why a character is introduced early or late and how the order of events shapes the reader's experience. | 11-12.RC.5.b |
Evaluate how authors structure texts to distinguish what is directly stated in… | Authors sometimes say the opposite of what they mean. Students learn to spot when a writer uses satire, sarcasm, or irony to make a point that isn't spelled out on the page. | 11-12.RC.5.c |
Relate literary works and their authors' points of view to the political events… | Students connect novels, poems, and plays to the political events and big ideas of their time, explaining how a writer's historical moment shaped what they wrote and how they saw the world. | 11-12.RC.5.d |
Compare and contrast how works of literary or cultural significance, including… | Students read two or more stories, myths, or cultural tales and explain what they share. They look at how different works use the same kind of hero, conflict, or pattern of events to tell a deeper truth. | 11-12.RC.5.e |
Use evidence from nonfiction works to demonstrate understanding of grade-level… | Students read nonfiction articles, essays, and speeches, then point to specific lines or details that support their understanding of what the text means. | 11-12.RC.6 |
Compare texts that express similar central ideas and analyze in detail how… | Students read two nonfiction pieces on the same topic, then explain how each one builds its argument differently. They also summarize the key ideas each text develops along the way. | 11-12.RC.6.a |
Evaluate various explanations of concepts and ideas and determine which… | Students read multiple sources on the same topic, then decide which explanation holds up best against the actual evidence in the text. They also note where sources contradict each other. | 11-12.RC.6.b |
Evaluate the effectiveness of the structure | Students read opinion pieces and articles, then judge whether the author's structure and word choices actually make the argument clear and convincing, or whether a different approach might have worked better. | 11-12.RC.6.c |
Analyze the hypotheses, data, analysis | Students read an argument that uses data or research and check whether the numbers hold up. They then compare the author's conclusions to other sources to decide if those conclusions are actually supported. | 11-12.RC.6.d |
Evaluate the premises and purposes in works of public advocacy | Students read speeches, editorials, and open letters to figure out what the author wants and whether the reasons given actually support that goal. | 11-12.RC.6.e |