Standard #: LAFS.910.RL.2.5 (Archived Standard)


This document was generated on CPALMS - www.cpalms.org



Analyze how an author’s choices concerning how to structure a text, order events within it (e.g., parallel plots), and manipulate time (e.g., pacing, flashbacks) create such effects as mystery, tension, or surprise.


General Information

Subject Area: English Language Arts
Grade: 910
Strand: Reading Standards for Literature
Date Adopted or Revised: 12/10
Date of Last Rating: 02/14
Status: State Board Approved - Archived
Assessed: Yes

Test Item Specifications

    Item Type(s): This benchmark may be assessed using: TM , MC , OR , GR , SHT item(s)
    N/A

    Assessment Limits :
    Items can be overarching questions about the structure of the entire text or about specific structural devices. Items should ask the student to analyze, not just determine, the author’s choices. However, a two-part item may ask the student to determine and then analyze.
    Text Types :
    Items assessing this standard may be used with one or more grade-appropriate literary texts. Texts may vary in complexity.
    Response Mechanisms :
    The Technology-Enhanced Item Descriptions section on pages 3 and 4 provides a list of Response Mechanisms that may be used to assess this standard (excluding the Editing Task Choice and Editing Task item types). The Sample Response Mechanisms may include, but are not limited to, the examples below.
    Task Demand and Sample Response Mechanisms :

    Task Demand

    Analyze the way in which an author creates a given effect through structural decisions.

    Sample Response Mechanisms

    Selectable Hot Text

    • Requires the student to select sentences or phrases in the text that create a given effect.
    • Requires the student to select a structural device used by an author and then to determine the effect of this device on the work as a whole. 

    Multiple Choice

    • Requires the student to select the correct analysis of an author’s structural choice. 

    Open Response

    • Requires the student to explain, in one or two sentences, how the author’s choices regarding structure contribute to the meaning of a text. 

    GRID

    • Requires the student to drag into a diagram plot elements that work to create a certain effect. 

    Table Match

    • Requires the student to complete a table by matching an author’s structural choices with the effects they create.


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Student Resources

Original Student Tutorials

Name Description
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Name Description
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