Texas Administrative Code
Title 19 - EDUCATION
Part 2 - TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY
Chapter 110 - TEXAS ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS FOR ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS AND READING
Subchapter B - MIDDLE SCHOOL
Section 110.25 - English Language Arts and Reading, Reading (Elective Credit)
Universal Citation: 19 TX Admin Code ยง 110.25
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) Introduction.
(1) Reading offers students an opportunity to
read with competence, confidence, and understanding through instruction in
comprehension strategies, word recognition, and vocabulary. Middle school
students read, write, listen, speak, and view to learn more about the world
around them and to create, clarify, critique, and appreciate ideas and
responses. Middle school students complete research projects or locate answers
to questions using multiple texts and resources. In addition, middle school
students continue to read on their own or listen to texts read aloud for the
purpose of enjoyment. Middle school students read both printed texts and
electronic media independently, bringing with them various strategies to aid in
comprehension. Significant blocks of time are provided for reading both
independent and instructional-level material for varied purposes such as
collecting information, learning about and appreciating the writer's craft, and
discovering models for their own writing. Middle school students respond to
texts through various avenues such as talk, print and electronic formats,
connecting their knowledge of the world with the text being read. For middle
school students whose first language is not English, the students' native
language serves as a foundation for English language acquisition and language
learning.
(2) The essential
knowledge and skills as well as the student expectations for Reading, an
elective course, are described in subsection (b) of this section.
(b) Knowledge and skills.
(1) The student uses a variety of word
recognition strategies. The student is expected to:
(A) apply knowledge of letter-sound
correspondences, language structure, and context to recognize words;
and
(B) use dictionaries,
glossaries, and other sources to confirm pronunciations and meanings of
unfamiliar words.
(2)
The student acquires vocabulary through reading and systematic word study. The
student is expected to:
(A) expand vocabulary
by reading, viewing, listening, and discussing;
(B) determine word meaning by using
context;
(C) use spelling, prefixes
and suffixes, roots, and word origins to understand meanings;
(D) use reference aids such as a glossary,
dictionary, thesaurus, and available technology to determine meanings and
pronunciations; and
(E) identify
analogies, homonyms, synonyms/antonyms, and connotation/denotation.
(3) The student reads with fluency
and understanding in increasingly demanding texts. The student is expected to:
(A) read silently for a variety of purposes
with comprehension for sustained periods of time;
(B) adjust reading rate based on purposes for
reading; and
(C) read orally at a
rate that enables comprehension.
(4) The student comprehends selections using
a variety of strategies. The student is expected to:
(A) use prior knowledge and experience to
comprehend;
(B) determine purpose
for reading;
(C) self-monitor
reading and adjust when confusion occurs by rereading, using resources, and
questioning;
(D) summarize texts by
identifying main ideas and relevant details;
(E) make inferences such as drawing
conclusions and making generalizations or predictions, supporting them with
prior experiences and textual evidence;
(F) analyze and use both narrative and
expository text structures: sequence, description, problem/solution,
compare/contrast, and cause/effect;
(G) make connections and find patterns,
similarities, and differences across texts;
(H) construct visual images based on text
descriptions;
(I) determine
important ideas from texts and oral presentations;
(J) manage text by using practices such as
previewing, highlighting, making marginal notes, notetaking, outlining, and
journaling; and
(K) use questioning
to enhance comprehension before, during, and after reading.
(5) The student reads texts to
find information on self-selected and assigned topics. The student is expected
to:
(A) generate relevant, interesting, and
researchable questions;
(B) locate
appropriate print and non-print information using text and technical
resources;
(C) organize and record
new information in systematic ways to develop notes, charts, and graphic
organizers;
(D) communicate
information gained from reading;
(E) use compiled information and knowledge to
raise additional unanswered questions; and
(F) use text organizers such as overviews,
headings, and graphic features to locate and categorize information.
(6) The student reads for
different purposes in varied sources, both narrative and expository. The
student is expected to:
(A) read to enjoy, to
complete a task, to gather information, to be informed, to solve problems, to
answer questions, to analyze, to interpret, and to evaluate;
(B) read sources such as literature, diaries,
journals, textbooks, maps, newspapers, letters, speeches, memoranda, electronic
texts, and technical documents; and
(C) understand and interpret visual
representations.
(7) The
student formulates and supports responses to various types of texts. The
student is expected to:
(A) respond actively
to texts in both aesthetic and critical ways;
(B) respond to text through discussion,
journal writing, performance, and visual representation; and
(C) support responses by using prior
knowledge and experience and/or citing textual evidence which may consist of a
direct quotation, paraphrase, or specific synopsis.
(8) The student reads critically to evaluate
texts in order to determine the credibility of sources. The student is expected
to:
(A) evaluate the credibility of
informational sources and their relevance for assigned and self-selected
topics;
(B) evaluate how a writer's
motivation, stance, or position may affect text credibility, structure, or
tone;
(C) analyze aspects of text,
such as patterns of organization and choice of language, for persuasive
effect;
(D) recognize modes of
reasoning, such as induction and deduction; and
(E) recognize logical and illogical arguments
in text.
(9) The student
reads to increase knowledge of own culture, the culture of others, and the
common elements of cultures. The student is expected to:
(A) compare text events with personal and
other readers' experiences; and
(B)
recognize and discuss literary themes and connections that cross
cultures.
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