Standards Detail
Search using a saved search preference or by selecting one or more content areas and grade levels to view standards, related Eligible Content, assessments, and materials and resources.
Limit your search to no more than three grades, subjects, or courses, and ensure that you have selected at least one grade and subject or one course.
English Language Arts
- Standard Area - CC.1.3: Reading Literature: Students read and respond to works of literature - with emphasis on comprehension, making connections among ideas and between texts with focus on textual evidence.
- Grade Level - CC.1.3.9-10: GRADES 9-10
Analyze how words and phrases shape meaning and tone in texts.
- Standard Area - CC.1.3: Reading Literature: Students read and respond to works of literature - with emphasis on comprehension, making connections among ideas and between texts with focus on textual evidence.
- Assessment Anchor - L.F.2:
Analyzing and interpreting literature—Fiction
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.1.1 Make inferences and/or draw conclusions based on analysis of a text.
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.1.2 Cite evidence from a text to support generalizations
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.2.1 Analyze how literary form relates to and/or influences meaning of a text.
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.2.2 Compare and evaluate the characteristics that distinguish fiction from literary nonfiction.
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.2.3 Explain, interpret, compare, describe, analyze, and/or evaluate connections between texts.
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.2.4 Compare and evaluate the characteristics that distinguish narrative, poetry, and drama.
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.3.1
Explain, interpret, compare, describe, analyze, and/or evaluate character in a variety of fiction:
Note: Character may also be called narrator or speaker.
- the actions, motives, dialogue, emotions/feelings, traits, and relationships among characters within fictional text
- the relationship between characters and other components of a text
- the development by authors of complex characters and their roles and functions within a text
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.3.2
Explain, interpret, compare, describe, analyze, and/or evaluate setting in a variety of fiction:
- the relationship between setting and other components of the text (character, plot, and other key literary elements)
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.3.3
Explain, interpret, compare, describe, analyze, and/or evaluate plot in a variety of fiction:
Note: Plot may also be called action.
- elements of the plot (e.g. exposition, conflict, rising action, climax, falling action, and/or resolution)
- the relationship between elements of the plot and other components of the text
- how the author structures plot to advance the action
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.3.4
Explain, interpret, compare, describe, analyze, and/or evaluate theme in a variety of fiction:
- the relationship between the theme and other components of the text
- comparing and contrasting how major themes are developed across genres
- the reflection of traditional and contemporary issues, themes, motifs, universal characters, and genres
- the way in which a work of literature is related to the themes and issues of its historical period
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.3.5
Explain, interpret, compare, describe, analyze, and/or evaluate voice, tone, style, and mood in a variety of fiction:
- the relationship between the tone, style, and/or mood and other components of the text
- how voice and choice of speaker (narrator) affect the mood, tone, and/or meaning of the text
- how diction, syntax, figurative language, sentence variety, etc., determine the author’s style
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.3.6
Explain, interpret, compare, describe, analyze, and/or evaluate point of view in a variety of fiction:
- the point of view of the narrator as first person or third person point of view
- the impact of point of view on the meaning of the text as a whole
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.4.1 Interpret and analyze works from a variety of genres for literary, historical, and/or cultural significance.
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.5.1 Identify, explain, interpret, describe, and/or analyze the effects of personification, simile, metaphor, hyperbole, satire, foreshadowing, flashback, imagery, allegory, symbolism, and irony in a text.
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.5.2
Identify, explain, and analyze the structure of poems and sound devices.
-
Eligible Content - L.F.2.5.3 Identify and analyze how stage directions, monologue, dialogue, soliloquy, and dialect support dramatic script.