Knowledge and Skills Statement
Response skills: listening, speaking, reading, writing, and thinking using multiple texts. The student responds to an increasingly challenging variety of sources that are read, heard, or viewed.
Demonstrated Proficiency of ELA.2.7.E
Ask students to complete one of the following tasks to illustrate understanding and interaction with a text.
- Make a pamphlet for the book that would make someone want to read the book.
- Create a book review to share with others.
- Create a diorama of a book that clearly displays character, setting, plot, and problem/resolution.
Teacher prompts to elicit interactions with a text:
- Do you like the text? Why or why not?
- Draw your favorite part of the story.
- Draw your favorite character.
- What was the funniest part of the text?
- Draw something that you read in the text.
- Write about how changing the setting could change the text.
- Draw a new character that could fit in the text.
Notes:
- This SE is less about the quality of the work than about interacting with text in a meaningful way. If students are able to express what they are writing or drawing in a legible manner and show enthusiasm for responding to the text, they have met this SE.
- If students require guidance on expectations for work, a quality rubric could be used to encourage meaningful responses instead of impulsive responses, but that rubric would not be an assessment of this SE specifically. Rather, it would be an assessment of quality.
Supporting Information for ELA.2.7.E