Elsinore High School

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9-6

Course Description

DESCRIPTION:

English 9 expands students’ reading, writing, listening, and speaking skills in alignment with Common Core State Standards. In addition, this course will provide extensive development of the writing process aligned with the Modern Language Association (MLA) format, critical literary response and analysis skills and cross-curricular study. Students will learn and perfect WICOR (Writing, Inquiry, Collaboration, Organization, and Reading) strategies, including Socratic Seminars, Philosophical Chairs, close reading, and other strategies that promote rigor in order to support the College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards.

Posts

This is a mini fact sheet to help when doing a work cited, or using MLA.  Basics only.  For details, go to Purdue OWL.  Print it out if it helps during writing.

Speaking and Listening Category

Critical Thinking, Socratic Seminars, Academic Discussions, Novel Discussions, and various other learning discussions, are assignments that our class works on each semester.  To understand what we students are to be able to do, I have copied the section from the LEUSD course descriptions for 9th grade English.
 

Speaking and Listening Standards

Comprehension and Collaboration

  1. Initiate and participate effectively in a range of collaborative discussions (one-on-one, in groups, and teacher-led) with diverse partners on grades 9–10 topics, texts, and issues, building on others’ ideas and expressing their own clearly and persuasively.

    1. Come to discussions prepared, having read and researched material under study; explicitly draw on that preparation by referring to evidence from texts and other research on the topic or issue to stimulate a thoughtful, well-reasoned exchange of ideas.

    2. Work with peers to set rules for collegial discussions and decision-making (e.g., informal consensus,taking votes on key issues, presentation of alternate views), clear goals and deadlines, and individual roles as needed.

    3. Propel conversations by posing and responding to questions that relate the current discussion to broader themes or larger ideas; actively incorporate others into the discussion; and clarify, verify, or challenge ideas and conclusions.

    4. Respond thoughtfully to diverse perspectives, summarize points of agreement and disagreement, and, when warranted, qualify or justify their own views and understanding and make new connections in light of the evidence and reasoning presented.

  2. Integrate multiple sources of information presented in diverse media or formats (e.g., visually, quantitatively, orally) evaluating the credibility and accuracy of each source.

  3. Evaluate a speaker’s point of view, reasoning, and use of evidence and rhetoric, identifying any fallacious reasoning or exaggerated or distorted evidence.