Teks Snapshot Reading Writing Grade 08
Teks Snapshot Reading Writing Grade 08
Teks Snapshot Reading Writing Grade 08
Introduction: The English Language Arts and Reading Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) are cumulative - students will continue to address earlier standards
as needed while they attend to standards for their grade. Students will engage in activities that build on their prior knowledge and skills in order to strengthen their
reading, writing, and oral language skills. Students should read and write on a daily basis.
Fig.19(D) make complex inferences about text and use textual evidence to support understanding
Fig.19(E) summarize, paraphrase, and synthesize texts in ways that maintain meaning and logical order within a text and across texts
Fig.19(F) make intertextual links among and across texts, including other media (e.g., film, play), and provide textual evidence
Figure 19
TEKS
Genre
8.6
Fiction
Students understand, make inferences and draw conclusions about the structure and elements of fiction and provide evidence from text to support their understanding.
8.4
Poetry
Students understand, make inferences and draw conclusions about the structure and elements of poetry and provide evidence from text to support their understanding.
8.5
Drama
Students understand, make inferences and draw conclusions about the structure and elements of drama and provide evidence from text to support their understanding.
8.7
Literary
Nonfiction
Students understand, make inferences and draw conclusions about the varied structural patterns and features of literary nonfiction and provide evidence from text to support their understanding.
Media Literacy
(embedded)
Students use comprehension skills to analyze how words, images, graphics, and sounds work together in various forms to impact meaning. Students will continue to apply earlier standards with greater
depth in increasingly more complex texts.
TEKS
Genre
8.10
Expository
Students analyze, make inferences and draw conclusions about expository text and provide evidence from text to support their understanding.
8.11
Persuasive
Students analyze, make inferences and draw conclusions about persuasive text and provide evidence from text to support their analysis.
8.12
8.13
1
Understanding and Analysis
Across Genres
Rptg
Cat
Procedural
(embedded)
Media Literacy
(embedded)
STAAR
Students understand how to glean and use information in procedural texts and documents.
Students use comprehension skills to analyze how words, images, graphics, and sounds work together in various forms to impact meaning. Students will continue to apply earlier standards with greater
depth in increasingly more complex texts.
Readiness Standards
Genre
8.2(A)
10
Across Genres
8.13
8.2(B)
8.2(E)
Supporting Standards
8.3(A)
8.3(B)
8.9(A)
8.11(A)
Figure 19
8.19(F)
[Fig.19(F)]
Figure 19
Rptg
Cat
STAAR
Readiness Standards
Genre
22
8.6(B)
Literary
Drama Poetry
Nonfiction
2
Understanding and Analysis of Literary Texts
Fiction
8.6(A)
Supporting Standards
8.6(C)
8.6 Fig.19(D)
8.6 Fig.19(E)
compare and contrast the relationship between the purpose and characteristics of
different poetic forms (e.g., epic poetry, lyric poetry)
8.4 Fig.19(D)
8.4 Fig.19(E)
8.5(A)
8.5 Fig.19(D)
8.5 Fig.19(E)
8.7(A)
analyze passages in well-known speeches for the authors use of literary devices and
word and phrase choice (e.g., aphorisms, epigraphs) to appeal to the audience
8.7 Fig.19(D)
8.7 Fig.19(E)
20
8.10(C)
8.10(D)
8.10(B)
explain how the values and beliefs of particular characters are affected by the historical
and cultural setting of the literary work
explain the effect of similes and extended metaphors in literary text
evaluate the role of media in focusing attention on events and informing opinion on
issues
evaluate various techniques used to create a point of view in media and the impact on
audience
8.3 Fig.19(D)
8.8 Fig.19(D)
8.13 Fig.19(D)
distinguish factual claims from commonplace assertions and opinions and evaluate
inferences from their logic in text
8.10 Fig.19(D)
8.10 Fig.19(E)
8.11(B)
Persuasive
Expository
8.10(A)
3
Understanding and Analysis of
Informational Texts
analyze different forms of point of view, including limited versus omniscient, subjective
versus objective
8.4(A)
8.13(C)
analyze the use of such rhetorical and logical fallacies as loaded terms, caricatures,
leading questions, false assumptions, and incorrect premises in persuasive texts
8.11 Fig.19(D)
8.11 Fig.19(E)
STAAR
Figure 19
52
8.12 Fig.19(D)
8.13 Fig.19(D)
Writing
Process
Reporting
Category*
Readiness Standards
8.14(B)*
8.17(A)*
8.14(C)*
8.14(D)*
8.19(B)*
2
Revision
1
Composition
8.16(A)*
8.19(C)*
3
Editing
8.21(A)
Supporting Standards
8.15(A)
8.15(B)
8.17(B)
8.17(C)
8.18(A)
8.18(B)
8.18(C)
8.19(A)*
8.20(A)*
8.20(B)*
use and understand the function of the following parts of speech in the context
of [reading], writing, [and speaking]
(i)*
verbs (perfect and progressive tenses) and participles
(ii)
appositive phrases
(iii)* adverbial and adjectival phrases and clauses
(iv)* relative pronouns (e.g., whose, that, which)
(v)* subordinating conjunctions (e.g., because, since)
use conventions of capitalization
use correct punctuation marks
(i)*
commas after introductory structured and dependent adverbial clauses,
and correct punctuation in complex sentences
(ii)* semicolons, colons, hyphens, parentheses, brackets, and ellipse
Genres
Literary
Fiction
Poetry
Personal Narrative
Informational
Expository
Procedural
Persuasive
NOTE: The classification of standards on this TEKS Snapshot represents the reviewed and synthesized input of a sample of Texas Science teachers. This TEKS Snapshot DOES NOT represent a
publication of the Texas Education Agency. District curriculum materials may reflect other classifications.