(a) |
Write clear multi-paragraph compositions (e.g., three to five paragraph report or essay of at least 300 words) that focus on a central idea, reflect awareness of the audience(s) and purpose(s), contain clear introductions and conclusions, and include paragraphs in a logical sequence. |
(b) |
Select and flexibly use appropriate strategies (before, during, and after) to communicate meaning when writing. |
(c) |
Understand and apply relevant pragmatic, textual, syntactical, semantic/lexical/morphological, graphophonic, and other cues and conventions to communicate meaning when writing. |
(d) |
Write narrative compositions that develop a situation or plot and point of view, describe the setting, and present an ending. |
(e) |
Write expository compositions that establish a topic, include important ideas or events in a logical order, provide details and transitional expressions that clearly link one paragraph to another, and offer a concluding paragraph that summarizes important ideas. |
(f) |
Write expository reports that explore key ideas, issues, or events in response to questions that direct an investigation, establish a controlling idea or topic sentence, and develop the topic with simple facts, details, examples, and explanations. |
(g) |
Use various note-making strategies (paraphrasing, summarizing, highlighting, graphic organizers, outlining) to glean information and ideas for expository or informational writing. |
(h) |
Create documents by using electronic media and employing computer features (e.g., topic searches, thesaurus, spell checks). |
(i) |
Write persuasive letters or compositions that state a clear position, support that position with relevant evidence, follow a simple organizational pattern, and address the reader's need for clarity. |
(j) |
Experiment with different forms including poems, short scripts, and journal entries to communicate and demonstrate understanding. |