Access Point #: LAFS.4.RL.2.AP.5b (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 poem and a story), choose which one represents a poem.
  • Given examples of two types of text (a play and a story), choose which one represents a play.
  • Identify the structure of a poem.
  • Identify verse, rhythm and meter in text.
  • Identify the structure of a play.
  • Identify cast, setting, dialogue and stage directions in text.
  • Describe the differences in structural elements of poems and plays.

Number: LAFS.4.RL.2.AP.5b Category: Access Points
Date Adopted or Revised: 06/14 Cluster: Craft and Structure

Related Standards

Name Description
LAFS.4.RL.2.5: Explain major differences between poems, drama, and prose, and refer to the structural elements of poems (e.g., verse, rhythm, meter) and drama (e.g., casts of characters, settings, descriptions, dialogue, stage directions) when writing or speaking about a text.



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