English Language Arts Courses
All Cal students will take English Language Arts 7 during the 7th grade year, and English Language Arts 8 during the 8th grade year. The CCSS are a continuum of skills and knowledge that build over the courses, grades K-12. Below are the descriptors provided by the state of College and Career Ready Students.
Students Who Are College and Career Ready in Reading, Writing, Speaking and Listening, and Language
The descriptions that follow are not standards themselves but instead offer a portrait of students who meet the standards set out in this document. As students advance through the grades and master the standards in reading, writing, speaking and listening, and language, they exhibit, with increasing fullness and regularity, the following capabilities of the literate individual.
> They demonstrate independence.
Students can, without significant scaffolding, comprehend and
evaluate complex texts across a range of types and disciplines,
and they can construct effective arguments and convey intricate
or multifaceted information. Likewise, students are independently
able to discern a speaker’s key points, request clarification,
and ask relevant questions. They build on others’ ideas,
articulate their own ideas, and confirm they have been
understood. Without prompting, they demonstrate command of
standard English and acquire and use a wide-ranging vocabulary.
More broadly, they become self-directed learners, effectively
seeking out and using resources to assist them, including
teachers, peers, and print and digital reference materials.
> They build strong content knowledge.
Students establish a base of knowledge across a wide range of
subject matter by engaging with works of quality and substance.
They become proficient in new areas through research and study.
They read purposefully and listen attentively to gain both
general knowledge and discipline-specific expertise. They refine
and share their knowledge through writing and speaking.
> They respond to the varying demands of audience,
task, purpose, and discipline.
Students adapt their communication in relation to audience, task,
purpose, and discipline. They set and adjust purpose for reading,
writing, speaking, listening, and language use as warranted by
the task. They appreciate nuances, such as how the composition of
an audience should affect tone when speaking and how the
connotations of words affect meaning. They also know that
different disciplines call for different types of evidence (e.g.,
documentary evidence in history, experimental evidence in
science).
> They comprehend as well as critique.
Students are engaged and open-minded—but discerning—readers and
listeners. They work diligently to understand precisely what an
author or speaker is saying, but they also question an author’s
or speaker’s assumptions and premises and assess the veracity of
claims and the soundness of reasoning.
> They value evidence.
Students cite specific evidence when offering an oral or written
interpretation of a text. They use relevant evidence when
supporting their own points in writing and speaking, making their
reasoning clear to the reader or listener, and they
constructively evaluate others’ use of evidence.
> They use technology and digital media strategically
and capably.
Students employ technology thoughtfully to enhance their reading,
writing, speaking, listening, and language use. They tailor
their searches online to acquire useful information efficiently,
and they integrate what they learn through technology with what
they learn offline. They are familiar with the strengths and
limitations of various technological tools and media and can
select and use those best suited to their communication goals.
> They come to understand other perspectives and
cultures.
Students appreciate that the twenty-first-century classroom and
workplace are settings in which people from often widely
divergent cultures and who represent diverse experiences and
perspectives must learn and work together. Students actively seek
to understand other perspectives and cultures through reading and
listening, and they are able to communicate effectively with
people of varied backgrounds. They evaluate other points of view
critically and constructively. Through reading great classic and
contemporary works of literature representative of a variety of
periods, cultures, and worldviews, students can vicariously
inhabit worlds and have experiences much different from their
own.