TEKS: Chapter 110. English Language Arts and Reading See All Teacher Resources
110.32.b.25
(25) Listening and Speaking/Speaking. Students speak clearly and to the point, using the conventions of language. Students will continue to apply earlier standards with greater complexity. Students are expected to advance a coherent argument that incorporates a clear thesis and a logical progression of valid evidence from reliable sources and that employs eye contact, speaking rate (e.g., pauses for effect), volume, enunciation, purposeful gestures, and conventions of language to communicate ideas effectively.
Aligned Resources
Courses
- Course: ELA 10: World Literature, Unit 2: Ye Olde Blockbusters of Ancient Epic Lesson 8: Big Sandals to Fill
- Course: ELA 10: World Literature, Unit 4: Hamlet, Power, and Corruption Lesson 8: Odd Couple
Teaching Guides
- Teaching Fences: Making a Collage – Bearden Style
- Teaching A Tale of Two Cities: Serial Publishing
- Teaching All Quiet on the Western Front: Oh The Humanity!
- Teaching Jane Eyre: Making Poetry Out of Cover Art
- Teaching Jane Eyre: Jane Says
- Teaching Life of Pi: From Text to Pictures and Back Again
- Teaching Life of Pi: Book vs. Movie
- Teaching Macbeth: Performing Macbeth in Under Eight Minutes
- Teaching Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass: Poetry Inspired by Douglass’s Narrative
- Teaching Night: Virtual Field Trip
- Teaching Oliver Twist, or, the Parish Boy’s Progress: What's Your Story?
- Teaching Oliver Twist, or, the Parish Boy’s Progress: Oliver Twist: It's a Tale of Two Cities
- Teaching Death of a Salesman: Selling the American Dream
- Teaching Dracula: Diaries and Strange News Stories
- Teaching Esperanza Rising: Everything Esperanza: A Dramatic Presentation
- Teaching Frankenstein: Breaking News: Stormy Weather Puts the Science Back in Fiction
- Teaching The Wave: You are Getting Very Sleepy: Cults Throughout the Ages
- Teaching Things Fall Apart: Things May Fall Apart, but Art Connects
- Teaching Things Fall Apart: Ibo Art and Culture in Things Fall Apart
- Teaching Thirteen Reasons Why: The Writing on the Wall
- Teaching Wuthering Heights: Isn't It Byronic?
- Teaching The Iliad: The Recitation
- Teaching The Scarlet Letter: Create a Travel Guide to the Puritan Settlement in New England