RL.LCS.11.1

Description: Analyze and provide evidence of how the author’s choice of point of view, perspective, and purpose shape content, meaning, and style. Analyze how point of view and author’s perspective and purpose shape content, meaning, and style; supports rhetorical or aesthetic purposes; and conveys cultural experience.
Maps to Reading Plus skills: 1A, 4C

Exemplars

1A: Recalling Explicit Details

1A: Recalling Explicit Details

Description: Identifying explicit details including character, time, setting and speaker

SeeReader
✓ standard met

Selection: L-9

L-9

Grade level: 12
Word count: 2379 words
Author: Francois Coppee
Synopsis: A discarded crust of bread transforms the lives of two soldiers.
Excerpt: So much the worse for me! Now I am going to commence to be devoured by hunger again for, believe me friend, if you will, I have suffered from hunger all my life."

The words were startling, especially to a duke who had just been dreamily longing for the kitchen of the Cafe Anglais, and Henri de Hardimont regarded his companion in almost terrified amazement.

Question: What about Jean-Victor strikes Hardimont as "startling"?
  1. Jean-Victor's struggle with starvation
  2. Jean-Victor's obsession with war
  3. Jean-Victor's preoccupation with poverty
  4. Jean-Victor's fascination with history

Writing
✓ standard met

Writing prompt: What are some clues you found in a selection that let you know when and where the selection takes place even though the author does not overtly state this information?

Evaluator

Organization: Certica Solutions

4C: Visualizing

4C: Visualizing

Description: Visualizing

SeeReader
✓ standard met

Selection: L-23

L-23

Grade level: 12
Word count: 3221 words
Author: Stephen Crane
Synopsis: What will happen to the four men who have been shipwrecked for more than 30 hours?
Excerpt: When he achieved safe ground he fell, striking the sand with each particular part of his body. It was as if he had dropped from a roof, but the thud was grateful to him. It seems that instantly the beach was populated with men with blankets, clothes, and flasks, and women with coffeepots and all the remedies sacred to their minds. The welcome of the land to the men from the sea was warm and generous, but a still and dripping shape was carried slowly up the beach, and the land's welcome for it could only be the different and sinister hospitality of the grave.

Question: Based on this excerpt, which expression would you expect to see on the correspondent's face when he reaches the shore?
  1. pained but relieved
  2. calm and confident
  3. anguished and angry
  4. nervous but satisfied

Writing
✓ standard met

Writing prompt: How has visualizing helped you understand a selection when an author changes a point of view? Describe your visualization of the same scene through the eyes of different characters.

Evaluator

Organization: Certica Solutions