English/Language Arts - Fifth Grade: Accomplishments
Reading
Accomplishments:
- 5.1.01 Continue to develop oral language and listening skills.
- Listen attentively by facing the speaker, asking questions, and paraphrasing what is said.
- Use established rules for conversation (e.g., do not interrupt, ask questions, provide appropriate feedback).
- Understand, follow, and give oral multi-step directions that may include illustrations.
- Formulate and respond to questions from teachers and other group members.
- Participate in creative responses to text (e.g., choral reading, discussion, dramatization, and oral presentations).
- Summarize orally what has been learned or accomplished after completing an activity or assignment.
- Create and deliver an oral presentation that includes an introduction and conclusion.
- Create and deliver an oral presentation that uses visual aids or props and incorporates several sources.
- Use different voice levels and speech patterns for small groups, informal discussions, and reports.
- Interpret and use a variety of non-verbal communication techniques (e.g., gestures, facial expression, posture).
- Present and/or perform original or published literary work with a group and/or individually.
- Participate in recitations of assigned/self-selected passages.
- 5.1.02 Demonstrate knowledge of concepts of print.
- Use parts of text (e.g., title, title page, table of contents, chapter titles, glossary, appendix, and index).
- Use common text features to enhance understanding (e.g., headings, keywords, graphics, captions, side bars, footnotes).
- Recognize different forms of text (e.g., poems, plays, drama, letters, ads, journalism, historical fiction, biographies, autobiographies).
- 5.1.03 Expand reading skills through phonemic awareness.
- Develop awareness of the sounds of language through repeated exposure to a variety of auditory experiences (e.g., poetry, music lyrics, sound effects, books on tape, read alouds).
- Understand rhyming patterns in printed materials.
- Respond and analyze the effects of sound in language. (e.g., alliteration, onomatopoeia, rhythm, beat).
- 5.1.04 Use decoding strategies to read unfamiliar words.
- Continue to use knowledge of letter-sound correspondence knowledge and structural analysis to decode words.
- Expand understanding and use of root words, prefixes, and suffixes to decode words.
- Use syllabication to decode words.
- Understand, recognize, and use spelling patterns and word families to decode words.
- Decode unknown grade level words utilizing learned strategies and verify word meanings within the context.
- 5.1.05 Read to develop fluency, expression, accuracy, and confidence.
- Increase confidence and poise in reading aloud (e.g., paired reading, shared reading, choral reading, echo reading, and reader's theater).
- Read with fluency and confidence from a variety of text (e.g., poetry, drama, newspapers, novels, textbooks).
- Participate in guided oral reading.
- Read orally using appropriate pronunciation, expression, and rate.
- Adjust speed based on the purpose for reading and reading level.
- Read independently daily.
- 5.1.06 Expand reading vocabulary.
- Build vocabulary by listening to literature, participating in discussions, and reading self-selected texts.
- Build vocabulary through frequent read alouds.
- Infer word meanings using roots, prefixes, and suffixes.
- Determine the meaning of unfamiliar words using context clues, dictionaries, glossaries, and other resources.
- Use appropriate synonyms, antonyms, and homonyms.
- Foster word consciousness (e.g., word play, word walls and word sorts).
- Use context clues and pronunciation cues when appropriate to determine the correct meaning/usage of multiple meaning words.
- Select the correct word to complete an analogy.
- Explore the impact of vocabulary in evaluating ideas, information, and experiences.
- Use word origins to determine the meaning of unknown words (e.g., Latin and Greek roots, meanings of commonly used foreign words).
- Build vocabulary by reading from a wide variety of text and literary genres.
- 5.1.07 Employ pre-reading strategies to facilitate comprehension.
- Set a purpose for reading (e.g., to understand, to interpret, to enjoy, to solve problems, to locate specific information/facts, to discover models for writing).
- Utilize reference sources to build background for reading.
- Organize prior knowledge using a variety of strategies (e.g., webbing, mapping, brainstorming, listing, outlining).
- Explore significant words to be encountered in selected/assigned text.
- Preview text using text features (e.g., illustrations/pictures, captions, graphs, diagrams, and headings).
- Make predictions about text using text features (e.g., title, author, illustrations, and text format).
- Relate text to prior personal and historical experiences, current events, as well as previously read print and non-print media.
- 5.1.08 Use active comprehension strategies to derive meaning while reading and check for understanding after reading.
- Derive meaning while reading by
- formulating clarifying questions.
- predicting outcomes based upon prior knowledge and adjusting appropriately.
- using metacognitive and self-monitoring reading strategies to improve comprehension (e.g., rereading, identifying miscues, reading ahead, asking for help, and drawing on earlier reading).
- creating mental images.
- expressing reactions and personal opinions to a selection or relating the selection to a personal experience.
- making inferences and recognizing unstated assumptions.
- verifying or modifying the pre-reading purpose.
- drawing conclusions based on evidence gained.
- Check for understanding after reading by
- indicating sequence of events in fiction and nonfiction text.
- selecting main idea and supporting details from text.
- identifying the author's purpose (e.g., to entertain, to inform, to explain, to persuade).
- discussing similarities and differences in events and/or characters using evidence cited in three or more texts.
- selecting, prioritizing, and organizing information to meet a specific purpose.
- stating reasonable generalizations in reference to two or more pieces of text on a similar topic.
- locating information to support opinions, predictions, and conclusions.
- identifying cause and effect relationships.
- distinguishing between fact/opinion and reality/fiction.
- identifying and interpreting figurative language (e.g., idioms, similes, metaphors, hyperboles, personification, imagery).
- recognizing a common theme between two passages.
- reflecting upon comprehension strategies utilized to make meaning from text.
- 5.1.09 Develop appropriate informational skills and study skills to facilitate learning.
- Use and discern appropriate reference sources in various formats (e.g., interviews with family, community leaders and government leaders; encyclopedias, card/electronic catalogs, almanacs, newspapers, and periodicals).
- Use media (e.g., photographs, videos, films, the arts, on-line catalogs, non-fiction books, encyclopedias, CD-ROM references, internet) to view, read, and represent information.
- Use current technology as a research and communication tool for personal interest, research, and clarification.
- Understand a variety of informational texts which include primary sources (e.g., autobiographical sketches, letters, and diaries, directions, and internet sites).
- Utilize the dictionary, glossary, thesaurus, and other word-referenced materials.
- Skim materials to develop a general overview of content or to locate specific information.
- Retrieve, organize, and represent information (e.g., charts, maps, graphs, forms, timelines, and outlines).
- Develop notes that include important concepts, paraphrase, summaries, and identification of reference sources.
- Develop an awareness of the effects of media (e.g., television, print materials, radio, internet, newspapers, periodicals) on daily life.
- Identify the techniques of propaganda (i.e., bandwagon, loaded words, testimonials).
- Gather and record information on a research topic using three or more sources.
- 5.1.10 Develop skills to facilitate reading to learn in a variety of content areas.
- Develop and maintain vocabulary specific to content and to current events.
- Locate information using available text features (e.g., maps, charts, graphics, indexes, glossaries, and tables of contents).
- Apply comprehension skills and strategies to informational text (e.g., pre-reading and active comprehension).
- Use self correction strategies while reading (e.g., pausing, rereading, consulting other sources, asking for help).
- Determine and evaluate the reliability of sources on a given topic (e.g., editorials, newspapers, magazines, biographies, news reports and films).
- 5.1.11 Read independently for a variety of purposes.
- Read for literary experience.
- Read to gain information.
- Read to perform a task.
- Read for enjoyment.
- Read to expand vocabulary.
- Read to build fluency.
- 5.1.12 Experience various literary and media genres.
- Read and recognize various literary (e.g., poetry, novels, historical fiction, nonfiction) and media (e.g. photographs, the arts, film, video) genres.
- Predict and determine the sequence of events in a story including possible problems and solutions.
- Identify the conflict of the plot.
- Interpret a character's feelings and identify his motives.
- Trace changes in the main character and describe how this affects the plot.
- Make inferences about print and non-print text.
- Identify how culture, ethnic, and historical eras are represented in print and non-print texts.
- Compare and contrast events and characters using evidence cited from print and non-print text(s).
- Compare and contrast different versions of the same stories/events that reflect different cultures and/or different perspectives.
- Summarize selected passages.
- Retell a story from a different point of view.
- Understand the way in which figurative language is used to derive meaning from text (e.g., personification, simile, metaphor, imagery, hyperbole).
- 5.1.13 Develop and sustain a motivation for reading.
- Visit libraries/media centers and book fairs to explore books.
- Use personal criteria to select reading material (e.g., personal interest, knowledge of authors, text difficulty, text, genres, recommendation of others).
- Read daily from self-selected materials.
- Relate literary experiences (e.g., book discussions, literacy circles, writing, oral presentations, artistic expressions).
- Maintain a personal reading list or reading log/journal to reflect reading progress and accomplishments.
- Experience and develop an awareness of literature that reflects a diverse society.
- Choose to read as a leisure activity.
Writing
Accomplishments:
- 5.2.01 Engage in prewriting using a variety of strategies.
- Generate and focus ideas through brainstorming and peer discussions.
- Use print and non-print materials along with prior knowledge to provide background for writing.
- Arrange ideas by using graphic organizers (e.g., listing, clustering, story maps, and webs).
- Develop notes that include important concepts.
- Construct an outline with main ideas and supporting details.
- Select and refine a topic.
- Determine appropriate audience.
- Establish a purpose for writing.
- 5.2.02 Write for a variety of audiences and purposes.
- Compose narratives (e.g., to entertain, to inform, to report)
- Write frequently in the narrative mode.
- Write in response to a standard prompt and/or select a prompt from a varied group.
- Write to inform a particular audience about a specific issue.
- Write a descriptive paragraph to create a visual image.
- Explore and experience frequent opportunities for writing in the expository mode.
- Write to acquire knowledge (e.g., clarify thinking, take notes, synthesize information, enhance communication).
- 5.2.03 Show evidence of drafting and revision with written work.
- Select format based on purpose.
- Write with a sense of audience.
- Develop a paragraph with a topic sentence, supporting details, and a concluding sentence.
- Maintain focus of topic with specific relevant supporting details.
- Explain and/or illustrate key ideas.
- Demonstrate syntactic variety.
- Arrange multi-paragraph work in a logical and coherent order.
- Write using appropriate time order words or transitional words/phrases.
- Use correct page format (e.g., paragraphs, margins, indentations, and titles).
- Revise to clarify thought, to refine ideas and to distinguish between important and unimportant information.
- Use precise language including vivid words and figurative language.
- Produce multiple drafts.
- 5.2.04 Include editing before the completion of finished work.
- Edit for elements of language
- Proofread using reference materials and technology.
- Create readable documents.
- 5.2.05 Evaluate own and others' writing.
- Develop and use classroom rubrics for written work.
- Use the state assessment rubric to make appropriate suggestions for improvement.
- Participate in peer review and editing.
- Review personal collection to determine progress.
- Acknowledge and discuss diversity of individual writing styles.
- 5.2.06 Experience numerous publishing opportunities.
- Produce a variety of written works (e.g., literature response, essays, "published" books, literary collections).
- Incorporate photos, illustrations, charts, tables, or graphs.
- Use technology for publishing individual and group work.
- Identify and explore opportunities for publication (e.g., local and national contests, internet web sites, newspapers/periodicals).
- 5.2.07 Write narrative accounts.
- Write in response to narrative prompts, including frequent opportunities for timed writing.
- Write with developed characters, setting, and plot.
- Write with well-developed organizational structure, sequence of events, and details.
- Maintain focus of topic with specific relevant supporting details.
- Elaborate through the use of sensory details, vivid words, and figurative language to establish a context that enables readers to visualize an event or experience.
- Explain and/or illustrate key ideas.
- Demonstrate syntactic variety (i.e., vary sentence structure).
- Demonstrate facility in use of language (i.e., unique word choice).
- Develop an identifiable voice.
- Use classroom/state rubric as a guide for writing narrative accounts.
- 5.2.08 Write frequently across all content areas.
- Produce a variety of creative works utilizing knowledge from the content areas (e.g., journals, letters to the editor, historical fiction).
- Compose and respond to original questions and/or problems from all content areas.
- Explain procedures used to solve problems encountered in content areas (e.g., science experiments, math problems, map and globe activities).
- Investigate content specific topics to gather information and write.
- Use experiences from the arts to write creatively and expressively.
- 5.2.09 Write expressively using original ideas, reflections, and observations.
- Express thoughts and feelings using colorful, fully elaborated descriptions.
- Incorporate vivid words and figurative language.
- Write poems and stories based upon personal reflections, observations, and experiences.
- View, read, or listen to examples of various writing styles.
- 5.2.10 Write in response to literature.
- Write a letter to/as a character in a written work.
- Create an optional ending for a story.
- Retell a story from a different point of view.
- Compare and contrast literary works.
- Write a reader's response to a literary work.
- Write creative, imaginative, and original responses to literature (e.g., poems, raps, songs, stories).
- 5.2.11 Write in a variety of modes and genres.
- Write narratives with vivid, sensory details.
- Write descriptive papers which include vivid words and figurative language.
- Write expository paragraphs that include multiple steps or examples to support explanation.
- Write an essay to compare/contrast two or more people, places, things or ideas.
- Create a variety of poems.
- Write a research report using multiple sources and notes taken from those sources citing titles and authors.
- Write friendly and business letters.
- Write journalistic articles.
- Use journal entries to demonstrate level of understanding.
- Write an autobiographical account.
Elements of Language
Accomplishments:
- 5.3.01 Demonstrate knowledge of standard English usage.
- Use nouns appropriately (e.g., common/proper, singular/plural; possessives; predicate nouns).
- Use verbs appropriately (e.g., action/linking, regular/irregular; "be"/"have," verb phrases, agreement with subject in person and number).
- Use pronouns appropriately (e.g., agreement with antecedent, reflexive, possessive, correct pronoun case).
- Use adjectives appropriately (e.g., common/proper, predicate adjectives, demonstrative adjectives, proper comparative forms).
- Use prepositions appropriately (e.g., place prepositional phrases in correct location within the sentence).
- Use adverbs appropriately (e.g., proper comparative forms, adverbs of degree {too, very}).
- Use conjunctions appropriately (e.g., coordinating).
- Use interjections appropriately.
- Recognize usage errors (e.g., double negatives, troublesome words {affect/effect, sit/set, lie/lay, may/can, leave/let, teach/learn}).
- Recognize and appreciate cultural and regional differences signaled by word usage and vocabulary.
- 5.3.02 Demonstrate knowledge of standard English mechanics.
- Capitalize correctly sentence beginnings, proper nouns and adjectives, titles, abbreviations, quotations, parts of friendly letters and business letters.
- Use correct end of sentence punctuation (e.g., period, question mark).
- Demonstrate knowledge of comma rules, colons (between the hour and minute and after the greeting of a business letter), semicolons (in combining sentences), and quotation marks in titles.
- Demonstrate the correct use of quotation marks in conversation, including their use with capitalization, end marks, and explanatory material.
- Form contractions and possessives using apostrophes.
- Abbreviate words correctly.
- Continue to write legibly.
- 5.3.03 Demonstrate knowledge of standard English spelling.
- Spell high-frequency words correctly.
- Spell correctly commonly misspelled words as appropriate to grade level.
- Spell correctly words commonly used in content specific vocabulary.
- Recognize misspelled words in the context of sentences.
- Spell plurals and possessives correctly.
- Use knowledge of root words, prefixes, suffixes, and structural analysis to spell words correctly.
- Determine correct spelling of words utilizing electronic and print tools (e.g., spell checkers, dictionaries, lists, word walls, charts).
- Identify correctly spelled homonyms within the context of sentences or phrases.
- Proofread and edit for accuracy of spelling using appropriate strategies to confirm spelling and to correct errors.
- Develop a consciousness toward correct spelling across all subject areas.
- 5.3.04 Demonstrate knowledge of correct sentence structure.
- Use appropriate language structure in oral and written communication (e.g., subject-verb agreement in simple and compound sentences, correct word order, correct placement of modifiers).
- Recognize and edit incomplete sentences and run-on sentences.
- Combine simple sentences into compound sentences.
- Combine sentences using compound subjects and/or predicates.