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Readiness Profile and Course Expectations for English 8:
Honors Criteria:
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Be
GATE Qualified at elementary school
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Possess strong writing skills
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Score at the Advanced Level on the California Standards Test
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Be
an avid reader of high-level books
Guidelines for class placement:
Students contemplating placement in an
appropriate English class should carefully read the following
statements below and ask: “Which column best describes me?”
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College Prep English Student:
q
May be strong academically in English
q
Hard working, self-motivated
q
Appreciates thorough presentation and
practice of new concepts
q
May enjoy challenges, but also needs some
assistance and practice with complex, critical-thinking
and non-routine strategies
q
Needs or prefers guidance to learn, apply,
and extend new concepts.
q
Can participate in a classroom environment
of sharing ideas as a medium for deeper analysis in
reading, writing and discussion of literature. |
Honors English Student:
q
English is one of his/her gifts or
passions
q
Exceptional work ethic, highly
self-motivated
q
Masters concepts quickly; requires
faster-paced, rigorous curriculum
q
Loves the challenges of complex,
critical-thinking opportunities; can achieve this
without assistance and can often take ideas to a higher
level.
q
Is inquiry-driven; asks “Why?” and “What
if…?” Can recognize the figurative as well as the
literal.
q
Seeks out and actively contributes in a
classroom environment as a medium for critical reading,
analytical writing, and thought-provoking discussion of
literature. |
Course
Expectations for English 8:
The eighth grade courses study literature
organized around the themes of “The Search for Justice”(8). The
curriculum includes study of short stories, novels, drama, poetry,
expository texts, and grammar. Students participate in meaningful
class discussions, creative projects, speeches and theater arts.
With an understanding of the fundamentals of literary analysis,
students will be able to construct a multi-paragraph essay as well
as experiment with a variety of writing types. In addition, all
eighth grade students will participate in the District Writing
Assessment, which prompts students to write a persuasive essay.
The course curriculum is based on the
California State Standards for Language Arts available at:
http://www.cde.ca.gov/cdepress/standards-pdfs/english-language-arts.pdf
Works typically read in English 8
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College Prep English:
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Holt Anthology (short stories, poetry,
expository selections)
Ø
“Flowers for Algernon,” Keyes
Ø
“I Have a Dream” speech, King
Ø
To Kill a Mockingbird, Lee
Ø
The Diary of Anne Frank (the play
by Goodrich and Hackett)
Ø
Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry,
Taylor
Ø
Holes, Sacher |
Honors English:
Ø
Holt Anthology (short stories, poetry,
expository selections)
Ø
“Flowers for Algernon,” Keyes
Ø
“I Have a Dream” speech, King
Ø
To Kill a Mockingbird, Lee
Ø
The Diary of Anne Frank (the play
by Goodrich and Hackett)
Ø
At least one of the following: The
Martian Chronicles, Bradbury, The Twelfth Night,
Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice,
Shakespeare or The Call of the Wild, London |
* In order to achieve the one million
words per year reading goal recommended in the California Language
Arts Standards, students will self-select, and report on, outside
reading works as follows:
College Prep
English: At least 2
self-selected novels Honors English: At least 3
self-selected novels
Writing types covered in English 8:
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College Prep English:
Ø
Research Report (with bibliography)
Ø
Personal Narrative
Ø
Response to Literature
Ø
Persuasive Essay
Ø
Technical Documents
Ø
Career Documents |
Honors English:
The same writing types as College
Prep English with greater depth and complexity and more
independence. Written arguments may be longer, more
sophisticated and/or better researched. |
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