Access Point #: LAFS.3.RL.2.AP.5c (Archived Access Point)


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Identify how the structure of a play is different than the structure of a story (e.g., text includes props; dialogue without quotation marks acts/scenes instead of chapter).

Clarifications:

Essential Understandings

  • Given examples of two types of text (a play and a story), choose which one represents a play.
  • Identify the structure of a play (scenes).
  • Distinguish between the structure of a play and a story.

Number: LAFS.3.RL.2.AP.5c Category: Access Points
Date Adopted or Revised: 06/14 Cluster: Craft and Structure

Related Standards

Name Description
LAFS.3.RL.2.5: Refer to parts of stories, dramas, and poems when writing or speaking about a text, using terms such as chapter, scene, and stanza; describe how each successive part builds on earlier sections.



Related Courses

Name Description
5010010: English for Speakers of Other Languages-Elementary
5010020: Basic Skills in Reading-K-2
5010050: Reading-Elementary
5010060: Integrated Language Arts-Elementary
5010044: Language Arts - Grade Three
7710014: Access Language Arts - Grade 3